Clio just published their 2026 Legal Trends Report, and it confirms what many of us already suspected about legal software data lock-in. Buried in there is a stat that made me set my coffee down.
71% of lawyers have been held hostage by their software vendors.
That’s their word. Hostage.
The average ransom? $24,861 to get their own files back. Four weeks of downtime while they wait.
The part that kills me
This report comes from a VC-backed cloud software company. They’re sounding the alarm about legal software data lock-in—a problem their entire business model creates.
I’m not saying that to be snarky. I genuinely think it’s worth sitting with for a second.
The call is coming from inside the house.
How legal software data lock-in became normal
Somewhere along the way, “software” stopped meaning “a tool you own” and started meaning “a service you rent.”
And look, I get it. Cloud practice management software is convenient. Updates happen automatically. You can log in from anywhere.
But there’s a trade-off nobody talks about at the sales demo:
Your files live on someone else’s computer.
When everything’s fine, that’s invisible. When you want to leave? Suddenly legal software data lock-in becomes very, very visible.
The math nobody does
Let’s say you’re paying $100/month per user for practice management software. Pretty standard these days.
Three users. Five years.
That’s $18,000.
At the end of those five years, you own nothing. And if you want to leave, apparently you’ll pay another $25,000 and lose a month of productivity getting your own files out.
I don’t know. That math has never made sense to me.
There’s another way
I’ve been building legal practice management software for over 20 years. Old school, I know.
TimeNet Law runs on your Mac. Your files live on your computer. If you want to sync across machines, you can—Dropbox, iCloud, whatever you prefer. Your choice. No cloud required. No data held hostage on someone else’s servers.
You pay once. You own it. Updates and support included for a year, renewals optional after that.
If you decide to stop paying for updates, nothing happens. Your software keeps working. Your data stays yours. We never lock you out.
Because it’s your software. No data lock-in. Ever.
I’m not here to bash anyone
Clio makes good software. So do a lot of cloud providers. This isn’t about them being evil.
It’s about understanding what you’re signing up for. When your data lives on someone else’s servers, you’re in a relationship where they hold more cards than you do. That’s just the reality of legal software data lock-in.
For some firms, the trade-off is worth it. For others, it’s not.
I just think you should get to make that choice with your eyes open.
If the Clio report has you thinking about ownership, here’s what it looks like to actually own your practice management software.
Or just try the free trial and see for yourself. No credit card. No sales call. Just software.
— Perry