Clio vs SettleWise
Clio is the most widely adopted practice-management platform in family law, handling calendaring, billing, client communication, and document storage across every practice area. SettleWise is purpose-built for family-law financial discovery — it automatically sorts client documents, detects missing statement periods down to the month, and drafts the financial affidavit and marital balance sheet. The two tools are complementary: Clio runs your case workflow; SettleWise runs the financial-discovery workflow Clio was never designed to produce. Firms that use both keep their case hub and eliminate the 16 paralegal hours per case currently spent sorting PDFs and re-typing numbers.
| Feature | SettleWise | Clio |
|---|---|---|
| Automatic document sorting (35+ family-law types) | Uploads are auto-categorized into 35+ document types with consistent file naming — no paralegal sorting required. | Documents are stored and can be manually organized, but Clio does not auto-classify family-law financial documents. |
| Gap detection for missing statement periods | Flags missing statement periods down to the month so the firm can follow up before the next client call. | No gap-detection capability; paralegals must manually audit uploads to identify missing periods. |
| Financial data extraction from statements | Extracts figures from bank statements, tax returns, pay stubs, investment statements, and K-1s into an editable draft for attorney review. | No financial extraction; paralegals re-type numbers from client documents into spreadsheets manually. |
| Auto-drafted financial affidavit and marital balance sheet | Auto-populates the financial affidavit and marital balance sheet from extracted data, ready for attorney review and filing. | No automated affidavit or balance sheet generation; attorneys and paralegals assemble these documents by hand. |
| Case management, billing, and calendaring | Not a case-management system — designed to complement, not replace, your existing case hub. | Comprehensive case management, time tracking, billing, and client communication across all practice areas. |
| Branded client upload portal with task tracking | Branded portal sends clients a task list with progress tracking; firm sees compliance status at a glance. | Client portal for document sharing and communication, but without document-requirement task lists or compliance tracking. |
| Data import from existing tools | Imports data from Clio during onboarding so firms keep their case hub and add the financial-discovery layer. | Clio is the source system; it does not import from SettleWise but works alongside it. |
The difference that matters
SettleWise is the only tool in this comparison that actually understands the documents clients upload — auto-sorting them, finding what is missing, and drafting the financial affidavit from the extracted data. Clio stores documents; SettleWise processes them, cutting paralegal document time from roughly 16 hours per case to about 2.
FAQ
- Do I have to choose between Clio and SettleWise?
- No. They solve different problems. Keep Clio for case management, billing, and calendaring. Add SettleWise for family-law financial discovery — document sorting, gap detection, and affidavit drafting. SettleWise imports data from Clio during onboarding so both tools work from shared case information.
- Is SettleWise cheaper than Clio?
- The two tools are not direct substitutes, so a side-by-side price comparison is not straightforward. Contact SettleWise for current pricing based on your firm's active caseload.
- Can I migrate my existing Clio documents and cases into SettleWise?
- Yes. SettleWise imports data from your existing practice-management tools, including Clio, during onboarding so your team does not start from scratch.
- Will adding SettleWise create more work for paralegals who already use Clio every day?
- The workflow mirrors what paralegals already do — collect documents, check for gaps, populate the affidavit — just with the manual steps automated. Most firms run a real case end-to-end within the first weeks of onboarding.