Law firm cash flow Xero users often face one big problem: the bank balance looks healthy, but the firm still feels unclear about what is truly available to use. When client money, fees billed, disbursements, and operating cash are not clearly separated, one bank balance can make the firm look stronger than it really is.
CFOSg helps law firms use Xero more clearly by separating client money, firm money, and profit decisions, so partners can stop guessing from one balance and start seeing what belongs to clients, what has been earned, and what is actually safe to spend.
But some of that money is still held on behalf of clients and is not the firm’s spending cash.
But it is not always clear what has been earned as fees, what is still held for clients, and what relates to disbursements.
But revenue alone does not tell you whether the firm is collecting well, protecting margin, or using client money correctly.
Which cash belongs to clients and which cash belongs to the firm
Whether client account balances are matching the related liability balances
Whether too much money is being treated as free cash too early
How much has been billed, collected, and still remains outstanding
What needs attention first: cash control, profit leaks, or collection issues
How to stop one bank balance from mixing up client money and operating money
Law firm cash flow Xero setup is not just about bookkeeping. It is about helping the firm separate money held for clients from money earned by the practice. That is why we prefer a simple flow: receive client money into the right client account, match it to the correct liability, transfer only earned fees when appropriate, then manage operating spending from one clean office account.
Record client money into the correct client bank account and link it to the matching client liability account.
Check that the client bank balance and related liability balance agree clearly and regularly.
Move only the earned fee portion to the operating bank when it is properly billed and due.
Pay salaries, rent, and office costs from one clean operating account, not from the client account.
Law firm cash flow Xero reporting can look neat on screen and still leave partners confused. A large balance in the bank does not always mean the firm is flush with usable cash. Some of that money may still belong to clients, may relate to unearned fees, or may be sitting there for disbursements and future work.
The issue is not always the software. The issue is what gets mixed together. If client money and operating money are not clearly separated, the firm can easily overestimate what is available for salaries, drawings, tax, or overhead.
A clearer law firm cash flow Xero setup uses a dedicated client bank, a matching liability account, a clean operating bank, and a regular review process. This makes it easier to see what is held for clients, what has been earned, and what is actually safe for the practice to use.
The client bank tells you what is being held. The liability account tells you what is owed or reserved for clients. The operating bank tells you what the firm can actually use for running the practice.
You can also learn more about CPR Compass by CFOSg and how it helps you look at cash, profit, and revenue more clearly.
Book a call to see how Profit-Ready by CFOSg can help your law firm get clearer on client money, operating cash, profit, and revenue inside Xero, without making the system more complicated than it needs to be.
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