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Smokeball vs CosmoLex: Which Is Better for Small Firms?

Last updated: March 21, 2026

TLDR

Smokeball has the strongest document automation in the category and automatic time capture. CosmoLex has native legal accounting built in — no QuickBooks required — and the most complete IOLTA compliance tools. Both are expensive relative to alternatives, and Smokeball adds a 3-year contract on top of that. For small firms weighing document automation against built-in accounting, these are genuinely different products solving different problems. CaelusLaw ($20/user/month) offers IOLTA included and month-to-month terms without the premium price of either.

Feature Smokeball CosmoLex CaelusLaw
Monthly cost (small team) $39-219/user/mo $119-149+/user/mo From $20/user/mo
Setup fee Varies Varies $0
Contract 3-year contract Monthly available Month-to-month
IOLTA trust accounting Add-on or higher tier Add-on or higher tier Included

Smokeball vs CosmoLex at a Glance

Smokeball and CosmoLex are both premium-priced legal practice management platforms, but they’re solving different problems. Smokeball is built around document automation and automatic time capture. CosmoLex is built around replacing QuickBooks — it bundles full legal accounting, general ledger, and IOLTA trust accounting into the practice management subscription.

The overlap is smaller than their shared price range suggests. Most firms that end up choosing between these two have already decided that standard-issue tools like MyCase or PracticePanther don’t cover their specific need.

Pricing Comparison

As of March 2026:

Smokeball: Bill $39/user/mo, Boost $89/user/mo, Grow $179/user/mo, Prosper+ $219/user/mo. All plans require a 3-year contract. Renewal pricing is at Smokeball’s discretion.

CosmoLex: Starting at $119/user/mo, with higher tiers at $149+/user/mo. Annual or monthly billing. No multi-year contract.

For a 5-attorney firm: Smokeball Boost costs $445/month but is locked in for 3 years. CosmoLex at the base tier costs $595/month with the ability to cancel. CosmoLex is pricier, but it eliminates the QuickBooks subscription (typically $50-100+/month) — closing some of that gap for firms currently paying for both a practice tool and accounting software.

Key Differences

Built-in accounting: CosmoLex’s core differentiator. It includes a full general ledger, bank reconciliation, expense tracking, and payroll — not just trust accounting. Firms using CosmoLex can cancel QuickBooks. Smokeball does not include general ledger accounting and requires a separate accounting tool for firm financials beyond trust accounts.

Document automation: Smokeball’s core differentiator. Automatic document pre-fill, template libraries, and practice-area-specific packages reduce drafting time for volume work. CosmoLex’s document management stores and organizes files but is not a drafting or automation tool.

Automatic time capture: Smokeball tracks billable activity in the background without requiring timer input. CosmoLex requires manual time entry. For attorneys in practice areas where time is billed granularly, this is a real difference in recovered revenue.

Contract terms: CosmoLex lets you leave with reasonable notice. Smokeball binds you for 3 years. For a firm evaluating new software, the ability to exit without financial penalty is a meaningful difference — especially at Smokeball’s price point.

Email integration: Smokeball is Outlook-only. CosmoLex works with standard email clients. Firms on Google Workspace cannot use Smokeball’s email sync.

Onboarding complexity: Both are more complex to onboard than mid-market alternatives. CosmoLex’s accounting setup requires more time because it involves migrating or setting up a full chart of accounts alongside matter data. Smokeball’s onboarding is also substantial given the depth of its document libraries.

What About CaelusLaw?

CosmoLex’s accounting depth is hard to match, and Smokeball’s document automation is genuinely best-in-class. Both come at a price — either in dollars per month (CosmoLex) or in contract commitment (Smokeball) or both.

CaelusLaw is built for firms with 1-20 attorneys that need the basics done well without enterprise-level complexity. IOLTA trust accounting is included at every tier, starting with Essentials ($20/user/month). No multi-year contracts. No Outlook requirement. If your firm needs practice management with trust accounting — and doesn’t need CosmoLex’s full accounting suite or Smokeball’s document automation — CaelusLaw is worth evaluating before committing to either.

Smokeball vs CosmoLex: Feature Comparison

As of March 2026. Pricing per user per month.

FeatureSmokeballCosmoLex
Starting price$39/user/mo (Bill, limited)$119/user/mo
Trust accounting (IOLTA)Boost tier+ ($89/user/mo)Included at all tiers
General ledger / replaces QuickBooksNoYes
Document automationBest-in-class, includedStorage only — no drafting
Automatic time captureYesNo — manual entry
Email integrationOutlook onlyStandard email clients
Contract requiredYes — 3-year contractNo (annual or monthly)
Best forDocument-heavy practices on Microsoft 365Firms replacing QuickBooks with legal accounting

PROS & CONS

Smokeball

Pros

  • Automatic time capture logs billable activity without manual input
  • Best document automation and form pre-fill in the category
  • Practice-area specialization for real estate, family law, and litigation
  • Lower starting price than CosmoLex for firms that don't need full accounting

Cons

  • 3-year contract with auto-renewal and no early exit refunds
  • Outlook-only email integration — no Gmail
  • Does not replace QuickBooks — general ledger accounting requires a separate tool
  • Renewal pricing is not locked by the original contract

PROS & CONS

CosmoLex

Pros

  • Built-in general ledger accounting — eliminates the need for QuickBooks
  • Native IOLTA trust accounting with bar audit-ready reporting
  • No multi-year contract required
  • One subscription covers practice management and firm accounting

Cons

  • Highest price in the category — $119-149+/user/month
  • Steep learning curve and complex onboarding
  • Limited integrations with third-party tools
  • Interface described as dated and less intuitive than competitors

Should a small law firm choose Smokeball or CosmoLex?

The answer depends on what your firm's biggest operational pain is. If attorneys lose billable time because they forget to run timers — and your practice involves high document volume in areas like real estate or estate planning — Smokeball's automatic time capture and document assembly address that directly. If your firm's bigger problem is the complexity of managing QuickBooks alongside a practice management tool, and you want everything in one system with full IOLTA compliance, CosmoLex solves that. These are genuinely different products built for different operational priorities.

Does Smokeball include trust accounting like CosmoLex?

Smokeball includes basic trust accounting features at the Boost tier and above. CosmoLex's trust accounting is more complete — it includes a full general ledger, bank reconciliation tied to trust accounts, and compliance reporting designed for bar audits. For firms where IOLTA compliance is a primary concern and someone at the firm is managing the books, CosmoLex's accounting depth is meaningfully greater.

Smokeball ranges from $39 to $219 per user per month as of March 2026

Source: Smokeball pricing page (March 2026)

CosmoLex ranges from $119 to $149+ per user per month as of March 2026

Source: CosmoLex pricing page (March 2026)

Verdict

Smokeball is better for document-heavy practice areas where automatic time capture and document assembly pay off. CosmoLex is better for firms that want to eliminate QuickBooks entirely and manage all financials — billing, payroll, trust accounting, and general ledger — inside one legal-specific tool. Both are expensive. CaelusLaw includes IOLTA without the premium pricing or multi-year contract.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does Smokeball require a long-term contract while CosmoLex doesn't?
Smokeball requires a 3-year contract with auto-renewal. CosmoLex does not require a multi-year commitment — it bills on an annual or monthly basis. Smokeball's contract has no early-exit refund provision — prepaid amounts are not returned if you leave before the 3-year term ends. For a small firm, this is a material risk difference between the two platforms.
Does CosmoLex replace QuickBooks for a law firm?
Yes. CosmoLex includes full general ledger accounting alongside its legal practice management features — billing, expense tracking, payroll, bank reconciliation, and IOLTA trust accounting. Firms using CosmoLex can stop paying for QuickBooks as a separate subscription. Smokeball does not include general ledger accounting and requires QuickBooks or a similar tool for firm financials.
Which is more expensive — Smokeball or CosmoLex?
CosmoLex starts at $119/user/month, making it the more expensive starting point. Smokeball starts at $39/user/month for the Bill tier (very limited) but reaches $219/user/month at Prosper+. For a 5-attorney firm at mid-tier: Smokeball Boost is $445/month, CosmoLex is $595-745/month. CosmoLex is pricier but eliminates the QuickBooks subscription, which runs $50-100+/month for most small firms.
Which has better document automation — Smokeball or CosmoLex?
Smokeball. Its document automation — automatic form pre-fill, template libraries, and practice-area-specific document packages — is the best available in this price range. CosmoLex's document management is functional for storage and organization but not a drafting or automation tool.

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