For lawyers, time is revenue. Every six-minute unit of chargeable work that is not recorded is fee income that the firm will never recover.

Time recording remains one of the most persistent operational challenges in legal practice. Many firms still rely on memory-based reconstruction, spreadsheets, or end-of-day batch entry—methods that routinely result in:

The challenge is not simply recording time—it is recording it consistently, accurately, and contemporaneously.

Modern legal technology has substantially improved this process, making it practical for practitioners to capture every chargeable unit without materially disrupting their working pattern.

Why Law Firm Time Tracking Often Fails

The majority of time recording failures share a single root cause: delay.

When practitioners postpone recording time, they are forced to reconstruct their activity from:

Reconstruction is inherently imprecise—it results in under-recording, inconsistent entries, and billing figures that clients can legitimately challenge.

Manual recording systems—paper logs, spreadsheets, dictated notes—compound the problem by requiring duplicate entry, manual correction, and significant administrative time to maintain.

Firms that rely on these systems consistently spend more resource managing time records than the process warrants.

Why Digital Time Tracking Matters

Digital time recording addresses these problems by:

Law firm benchmarking data consistently demonstrates that practitioners using manual recording methods under-capture a significant proportion of their chargeable time.

Structured digital time recording systems enable firms to recover that revenue and operate more efficiently without increasing headcount.

10 Effective Ways to Track Lawyer Time More Efficiently

Modern legal practice management software provides a range of flexible recording methods to ensure no chargeable work goes uncaptured. Below are ten practical approaches.

Use a Live Timer While Working

A real-time timer is the most accurate method of time recording available. Activating a timer when commencing work and pausing it when stopping eliminates the need to estimate or reconstruct time entries after the fact.

Why it works:

A running timer records every unit of work in real time—ensuring chargeable activity is captured as it occurs, without interrupting the practitioner’s focus.

Record Time After Completing Work

Where real-time recording is not practicable, contemporaneous logging immediately after completing a task is the next best approach.

Best practice:

This approach balances operational flexibility against the discipline of accurate time recording. End-of-day batch logging is preferable to next-day reconstruction, though real-time recording remains the most accurate method.

Track Time on Mobile Devices

Solicitors spend a significant proportion of working time away from the office—at court, in client meetings, or travelling between sites. Mobile time recording ensures chargeable work is captured wherever it occurs.

Benefits:

Immediate mobile recording eliminates the risk of forgetting chargeable activities that occur outside the office environment.

Convert Calendar Events into Time Entries

Most practitioners maintain detailed calendars, yet calendar events are rarely converted into time entries. This is a straightforward source of recoverable billing.

Why it helps:

Calendar-to-billing integration is particularly valuable on meeting-heavy days, where individual time reconstruction at the end of the day is most likely to produce inaccurate results.

Turn Tasks into Billable Time Entries

Task management tools that integrate with a practice management platform can function simultaneously as time recording systems.

Advantages:

Linking time entries directly to tasks ensures that all chargeable activity is captured against the correct matter and that team productivity is visible to supervisors and management.

Track Time Directly from Email

Email correspondence is one of the most significant sources of chargeable but under-recorded time in legal practice. Short email exchanges add up materially over a working week.

Why this matters:

Email-integrated time recording allows practitioners to log chargeable email time directly from their inbox, without switching to a separate application—reducing friction and improving capture rates.

Use Passive Time Tracking Tools

Passive time recording tools capture work activity automatically in the background, without requiring the practitioner to initiate or maintain manual entries.

Benefits:

At the end of the working day, practitioners review the automatically generated activity log, confirm or adjust the captured entries, and convert them to billable time—reducing total time recording effort while improving completeness.

Log Time Using Voice Commands

Voice-enabled time recording is increasingly available in legal software, allowing hands-free entry without interrupting ongoing work.

How it helps:

Practitioners must, however, give careful consideration to client confidentiality when using voice recording tools—particularly in shared or public environments. Compliance with data protection obligations and the SRA’s confidentiality rules is required.

Use Text or Quick Notes for Time Logging

Quick-note or text-based time recording allows practitioners to capture activity as it occurs with minimal friction—ideal for short tasks where opening a formal time entry form would be disproportionate.

Benefits:

These entries are subsequently reviewed, supplemented with narrative, and converted into formal time records linked to the relevant matter.

Automate Time Capture from Device Activity

Advanced automated capture tools analyse device and application activity logs to identify billable work that would otherwise go unrecorded—without any manual input from the practitioner.

What it does:

Automated capture maximises accuracy and completeness with minimal manual effort—it is particularly effective for practitioners who find manual time recording discipline difficult to maintain.

Why Better Time Tracking Improves Law Firm Profitability

Efficient time recording is not merely an administrative improvement—it has a direct and measurable impact on firm revenue and profitability.

Better tracking leads to:

When every chargeable unit is captured accurately, a firm’s revenue increases without any corresponding increase in the volume of work being done.

Final Thoughts

Time recording does not need to be a burden.

With the right combination of tools and structured habits, law firms can transition from manual, error-prone processes to automated, integrated systems that capture chargeable time accurately and with minimal practitioner effort.

The cumulative effect—across a full working year—is a material increase in recoverable fees and a substantially reduced administrative overhead.

©2026. Casetrak All Rights Reserved.