Backdocket vs Smokeball

Smokeball scores 8.2/10 vs 6.3/10. Best for: Small firms that want automatic time capture and a massive document template library so they can bill more hours without manual tracking.

Backdocket logo

Backdocket

6.3
vs
Smokeball logo

Smokeball

8.2
Better overall

Smokeball scores higher overall at 8.2/10 vs 6.3/10. Smokeball's automatic time tracking genuinely captures revenue that other tools miss. If your firm leaks billable hours because attorneys forget to start timers, this pays for itself. The catch: you need the $149/user Grow plan to get it.

Backdocket
Smokeball

Rank

#34 of 39

Rank

#2 of 39

Features

10/18

Features

17/18

Starting at

$60/mo

Starting at

$29/mo

User reviews

4/5 (20)

User reviews

4.8/5 (500)

What they cost

Backdocket Smokeball
Starting at $60 /mo $29 /mo
Free trial No No
Number of plans 1 3
Backdocket pricing verified: 2026-04-11 Smokeball pricing verified: 2026-04-11

What the pricing really means

At first glance, Smokeball looks cheaper at $29/month vs $60/month. But sticker price is only part of the story. Look at what is included on the base plan, how many users you get, and whether you need add-ons to get the features you actually need. The $99/month plan that requires $200 in add-ons is actually more expensive than the $250/month plan that includes everything.

Where Backdocket wins

  • Simple and clean interface that doesn't overwhelm solo practitioners
  • Single pricing tier at $60/user with no feature gating
  • Intake management included for capturing new client leads
  • Client portal included for document sharing and case updates

Where Smokeball wins

  • Automatic time tracking runs in the background and captures billable activity you'd otherwise forget to log — firms report 20-30% more captured time
  • 1,000+ built-in document templates for common legal forms, which saves hours compared to building templates from scratch
  • G2 and Capterra ratings (4.8/5 on both) are the highest in the category, and reviews back it up with genuine praise
  • Bill plan at $29/user is one of the cheapest entry points if you just need billing and time tracking

Where Backdocket falls short

  • Very limited feature set — no trust accounting, conflict checks, eSignature, mobile app, or document automation
  • Only 20 reviews total, which is a concern for long-term reliability
  • No API limits integration possibilities
  • No free trial — must schedule a demo
  • MyCase starts at $39/user and offers significantly more features for less money

Where Smokeball falls short

  • No free trial — you have to commit based on a demo, which means trusting the sales pitch
  • The Grow plan at $149/user is expensive and you need it for automatic time tracking, which is the main differentiator
  • Smaller integration ecosystem than Clio — about 50 integrations vs 250+
  • No mobile app — desktop-first architecture means attorneys can't access cases from their phone
  • Originally built for Australian and UK markets, so some US-specific workflows feel bolted on

Who is each product built for?

Backdocket

Target: 1-5 attorneys

Backdocket is clean and simple, but MyCase offers more features for $10 less per user. Hard to recommend unless you specifically value Backdocket's interface over everything else.

General PracticeSolo PracticeFamily Law

Smokeball

Target: 1-30 attorneys

Smokeball's automatic time tracking genuinely captures revenue that other tools miss. If your firm leaks billable hours because attorneys forget to start timers, this pays for itself. The catch: you need the $149/user Grow plan to get it.

General PracticeFamily LawReal EstatePersonal InjuryEstate Planning

Feature comparison

Feature Backdocket Smokeball
Case Management
Case / matter management
Contact management
Conflict checks
Client intake forms
Client portal
Documents & Automation
Document management
Document automation
E-signatures
Email management
Billing & Accounting
Time tracking
Billing & invoicing
Trust / IOLTA accounting
Scheduling & Deadlines
Calendar management
Task management
Court rule deadlines
Platform
Reporting / analytics
Mobile app
API access

Common questions

Smokeball scores 8.2/10 vs Backdocket's 6.3/10 in our ranking. Smokeball is the better pick for 1-30 attorneys. Backdocket is better if you need solo attorneys who want a clean, simple practice management tool without the feature bloat and complexity of enterprise-oriented platforms.

Backdocket starts at $60/month. Smokeball starts at $29/month. Watch for add-on costs — the base price often does not include all features. Pricing last verified 2026-04-11.

Backdocket: No free trial. Smokeball: No free trial. Always test with your actual workflow before committing to an annual plan.

Backdocket covers 10 of 18 features we track. Smokeball covers 17 of 18. Smokeball has broader feature coverage, but more features does not always mean better — pick the tool that covers what your business actually needs.

No, Backdocket does not have a mobile app. Smokeball does not have one either.

Yes. The main effort is migrating your data (customer lists, job history, invoices). Plan for 1-2 weeks of overlap where you run both. Most legal practice management tools can import CSV data. Ask both vendors about migration support before you sign.

The bottom line

Pick Backdocket if...

Solo attorneys who want a clean, simple practice management tool without the feature bloat and complexity of enterprise-oriented platforms.

Pick Smokeball if...

Small firms that want automatic time capture and a massive document template library so they can bill more hours without manual tracking.

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