Clio vs Smokeball: Which Is Better for Small Firms?
TLDR
For small law firms, Clio offers more flexibility with month-to-month billing and broader integrations, but fragments features across four products. Smokeball has stronger document automation but locks firms into 3-year contracts and only syncs with Outlook. Neither is purpose-built for firms with 1-20 attorneys — CaelusLaw offers a single product with IOLTA included starting at $20/user/month.
| Feature | Clio | Smokeball | CaelusLaw |
|---|---|---|---|
| Monthly cost (small team) | $39-149/user/mo | $39-219/user/mo | From $20/user/mo |
| Setup fee | Varies | Varies | $0 |
| Contract | Monthly available | 3-year contract | Month-to-month |
| IOLTA trust accounting | Add-on or higher tier | Add-on or higher tier | Included |
Clio vs Smokeball at a Glance
Clio and Smokeball take different approaches to practice management. Clio is the market leader with the broadest feature set and integration ecosystem, split across four products. Smokeball focuses on document automation and automatic time capture, but ties firms to aggressive contract terms and Outlook-only email integration.
For firms with 1-20 attorneys, the decision often comes down to whether document automation or contract flexibility matters more to your practice.
Pricing Comparison
As of March 2026:
Clio: EasyStart $39-49/user/month, Essentials $69-99/user/month, Complete $129-149/user/month. Month-to-month billing available. Annual billing saves roughly 20%. Clio Grow is a separate subscription.
Smokeball: Bill $39/user/month, Boost $89/user/month, Grow $179/user/month, Prosper+ $219/user/month. Requires 3-year contracts. Pricing at renewal is at Smokeball’s discretion.
For a 5-attorney firm on mid-tier plans: Clio Essentials costs $345-495/month with the ability to cancel monthly. Smokeball Boost costs $445/month but you’re locked in for three years — and renewal pricing is not locked.
Key Differences
Contract terms: This is the biggest difference. Clio lets you leave any month. Smokeball locks you in for 3 years. The contract has no early-exit refund provision — prepaid amounts are not returned if you leave before the term ends. For a small firm, this level of financial commitment to a software vendor is risky.
Document automation: Smokeball’s strongest feature. Automatic time capture and document assembly are genuinely useful for high-volume practices. Clio Draft is improving but it’s a separate subscription, which means additional cost.
Email integration: Clio works with Gmail and Outlook. Smokeball only syncs with Outlook. Firms on Google Workspace cannot use Smokeball’s email features.
Invoicing: Neither excels. Clio’s invoicing is more customizable but draws criticism for inconsistent reporting. Smokeball lacks automatic repeat invoicing and split billing.
Price stability: Clio’s prices have crept up but not dramatically in any single year. Smokeball’s renewal pricing is not locked by the original contract — and you can’t leave because you’re in a 3-year term.
What About CaelusLaw?
Clio is moving upmarket with enterprise acquisitions. Smokeball’s contract terms create vendor lock-in that’s unusual in SaaS. Both charge more than they should for what small firms actually need.
CaelusLaw is built for firms with 1-20 attorneys. No multi-year contracts. IOLTA trust accounting included at every tier, starting with Essentials ($20/user/month). Works with both Gmail and Outlook. If you want practice management without the lock-in or the product fragmentation, CaelusLaw is worth evaluating.
| Feature | Clio | Smokeball |
|---|---|---|
| Starting price | $39/user/mo (EasyStart) | $39/user/mo (Bill) |
| Trust accounting | Essentials tier+ ($69+/user/mo) | Boost tier+ ($89/user/mo) |
| Document automation | Clio Draft (separate subscription) | Best-in-class, included |
| Automatic time capture | No — manual entry | Yes |
| Email integration | Gmail and Outlook | Outlook only |
| Contract required | No (monthly available) | Yes — 3-year contract |
| Best for | Flexibility, broad integrations, no lock-in | Document-heavy practices tolerating long contract |
PROS & CONS
Clio
Pros
- More affordable for firms that don't need heavy document automation
- Larger integration marketplace
- Better fit for multi-practice general firms
Cons
- Manual time entry required — no automatic capture
- Document automation via Clio Draft is an add-on cost
- Trust accounting not included in base plan
PROS & CONS
Smokeball
Pros
- Automatic time capture tracks work without manual input
- Best-in-class document automation with pre-filled legal forms
- Strong practice-area specialization for real estate, family, litigation
Cons
- Premium pricing ($99-149+/user/month)
- Overkill for advisory or general practice firms
- High onboarding complexity
Is Smokeball worth the premium over Clio?
For high-volume practices that rely on document automation — real estate, family law, immigration — Smokeball's automatic time capture and document pre-fill can justify the cost. For general practice or advisory-focused firms, Clio or a less expensive alternative is a better fit.
Does Smokeball automatically track time?
Yes. Smokeball's automatic time capture logs work activity in the background without requiring attorneys to run timers. This is its primary selling point and strongest differentiator against Clio.
Source: Clio pricing page (March 2026)
Verdict
Clio is safer from a contract perspective — no multi-year lock-in. Smokeball has better document automation. Both have significant downsides for small firms. CaelusLaw ($20-39/user/month) offers month-to-month terms, IOLTA trust accounting included, and works with both Outlook and Gmail.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does Smokeball require a long-term contract while Clio doesn't?
Which has better document automation — Clio or Smokeball?
Does Smokeball work with Gmail?
How do Clio and Smokeball pricing compare?
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