Ohio IOLTA Trust Account Bookkeeping and Reconciliations
As a CPA firm specializing in legal financial management, we understand the unique challenges Ohio law firm owners face with IOLTA trust account compliance. While Ohio Revised Code Section 4705.09 establishes clear regulatory requirements, we observe a significant gap between compliance mandates and practical implementation guidance.
Ohio law firms are expected to generate monthly three-way trust account reconciliations, but very few resources provide a direct example of the required reporting. It can also be a struggle to find a concise summary of IOLTA reporting rules and other requirements.
This page fills that gap by pointing to a real example and providing clear references to the rules and resources.
See An Example: What Trust Compliance Looks Like
We created a video that walks you through an actual Ohio IOLTA trust account reconciliation package. The example includes the three-way summary page, the client ledger, the general ledger, and bank account reconciliation reports. The example also explains how the client balance, general ledger balance, and reconciled bank account balance must all match.
Why It Matters: Firms Must Maintain Accurate Trust Account Reconciliations.
Firm owners often ignore the recordkeeping requirements and then find their trust accounting records are incorrect. It's common for us to work with firms that have lost control of their trust accounts. At this point, we don’t get excited about overdrawn IOLTA accounts until the overdrawn amount exceeds six figures.
Ohio IOLTA Account Regulations Are Found In Two Rules:
- Ohio Revised Code Section 4705.09 outlines the structure and operation of Ohio IOLTA trust accounts.
- Ohio Rules of Professional Conduce 1.15 covers the safekeeping of client property, IOLTA record keeping requirements, and the monthly three-way reconciliation.
IOLTA Trust Accounting Guide
The Ohio Supreme Court provides a brief guide on Managing Client Files and Trust Accounts. For a more robust guide to IOLTA account management, the Handbook on Client Trust Accounting for California Attorneys is one of the most complete guides.
Bookkeeping Reconciliation: Where Firms Struggle
Most law firms do not struggle with the ethics of trust accounting. They struggle with the logistics. When dozens—or hundreds of client transactions flow through a single pooled IOLTA trust account, things get messy fast. A missed entry here or a mislabeled transfer there can throw off the entire reconciliation.
And when the bookkeeping reconciliation is off, everything is off. Even if you have not misused a dollar, you will have no way to prove that you comply.
That is why reconciliation is not a luxury. It is a necessity.
We Handle This For Firms Like Yours
We manage Ohio IOLTA trust account bookkeeping and reconciliation for law firms across the country. Our team understands the Ohio-specific rules, the mechanics of three-way reconciliations, and the reporting expectations that auditors look for.
If trust accounting gives you a headache—or if you are just not sure your current system would pass an audit—we can help.
👉 Schedule a consultation to discuss our trust accounting services.
Clarity is a phone call away.