The bar exam and your professional responsibility class are ancient history. You’re not an ethics lawyer, and you don’t file legal malpractice suits. All the more reason we want to spring this pop quiz on you!

Which of these funds do not belong in your clients’ trust accounts?

Earned fees

Personal funds

Real estate escrow funds, such as a down payment on a house

Your firm’s operating funds

Personal injury settlements

Collections

Retainers and advances

Other settlements and judgments

How do you make sure this actually happens, so that you keep your nose clean at all times?

Get an all-in solution like Easy Soft’s Easy TimeBill and Easy Trust. Our trust accounting software gets you in compliance and prepared for a knock on the door from random bar auditorsat all times.

Basically, here’s how it works.

You’re retained by a new client.

The client pays your retainer, which you deposit into your trust account. Our escrow accounting software takes note of this.

You track your hours and bill your clientboth through our legal billing software.

You debit your trust account for the earned portion of the retainer. Then, you move this portion into your law firm’s operating account.

Here’s another question.

What are the five steps to keeping your trust accounting clean?

Step one: keep all of your client’s funds in separate accounts. Step two: make sure your client ledger has a positive balance. Step three: make sure all money is in the proper (trust v. operating) account at all times. Step four: reconcile everything. Step five: keep paper records of your check stubs and expense receipts.

Don’t lose sleep over trust fund accounting . Follow the above rules, and you’ll always be prepared for an audit. Easy Soft products are easy to install and doesnt require technical background or expertise.