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Home/2026 Cost Benchmarks

Annual Reference

UK Solicitor Cost Benchmarks 2026

Single comprehensive 2026 reference: hourly rates, fixed-fee benchmarks, year-on-year vs 2024, regional variance, plus the regulatory changes affecting fees this year (Civil Justice Council GHR Jan 2026 update, Renters' Rights Act 2026, Probate Registry digitisation).

Not legal advice

These benchmarks are indicative ranges drawn from public sources (Civil Justice Council, SRA, HM Courts and Tribunals Service, Legal Aid Agency, Law Society and Resolution practice surveys). Always obtain a written quote from an SRA-regulated solicitor for your specific matter. This page is general information and not legal advice.

Methodology

The benchmarks on this page draw on six categories of public source. First, the Civil Justice Council Guideline Hourly Rates 2026, published in January 2026, which set the reference hourly rate by band (London 1, London 2, London 3, National 1, National 2) and grade (A senior to D paralegal). Second, the SRA Transparency Compliance Reviews published in 2019, 2020, 2022 and 2023, which audit firms' published fees across covered work categories. Third, HM Courts and Tribunals Service published fee schedules (Form EX50). Fourth, the Legal Aid Agency means test thresholds and fixed fee tables. Fifth, the Law Society and Resolution practice surveys for category-level fee ranges. Sixth, our manual review of published price information from approximately 200 firms across the regulated work categories during the first quarter of 2026.

Numbers are triangulated where possible: a category figure shown as "£2,500 to £7,500" means the lower bound was observed at multiple regional firms in the lower-cost bands (typically National 2) and the upper bound at firms in higher-cost bands (typically London 1 or National 1). Outliers above the upper bound exist (specialist boutique pricing) and outliers below the lower bound exist (online disruptor pricing); these are flagged in notes where relevant.

All figures exclude VAT (currently 20%) unless stated. Disbursements (court fees, Land Registry fees, searches, expert fees) are typically additional. The benchmark figures are intended for orientation, not for binding budget purposes; always obtain a written quote on the heads of your specific matter.

All practice areas at a glance: 2026 reference table

ServiceTypical 2026 rangevs 2024Note
Conveyancing purchase (£300k)£1,000-£2,400+5%Add Land Reg fee, searches £350-£500, SDLT
Conveyancing sale (£300k)£750-£1,500+4%Land Reg title docs free if held electronically
Simple will (single)£175-£425+6%Online providers from £90 fixed
Mirror wills (couple)£275-£625+6%Includes mutual review of intentions
LPA (property and financial)£275-£625 + £82 reg+5%Health and welfare LPA separate
Probate (fixed fee, simple estate)£2,200-£10,500+5%Court fee £300 unchanged
Uncontested divorce (online + solicitor)£500-£1,500 + £593 courtFlatDIY online from £593 (court fee only)
Hourly rate Grade A National 2£261/hr+3.5%Jan 2026 GHR; private market often above
Hourly rate Grade A London 1£579/hr+6%Magic Circle private commonly £750-£1,500/hr
Hourly rate Grade D paralegal Nat 2£140/hr+4%Floor of the GHR scale
Employment tribunal (unfair dismissal)£10,500-£26,000+5%Counsel £2,500-£7,500/day in addition
Settlement agreement review£275-£500 + VATFlatTypically funded by employer
Section 21 accelerated possession (total)£900-£2,500Flat (pre-abolition)Section 21 abolished on Renters' Rights Act commencement
Personal injury (CFA on £25k settlement)25% damages deduction capUnchangedQOCS protection means typically no defendant costs liability
Commercial leasehold acquisition (5yr, mid)£4,500-£8,500+7%Institutional landlord lease typically at top of range
Criminal legal aid (Magistrates)Free if means qualifyThreshold upliftLower threshold uplifted for inflation
Contested Will challenge (resolved pre-trial)£15,000-£35,000+4%Full trial £35k-£100k+

The headline observations from the table: hourly rate inflation tracks broadly with RPI (around 3 to 6 percent year-on-year); fixed fee categories rose similarly except where service efficiency held costs flat (settlement agreement reviews, online divorce); commercial property rose meaningfully more (around 7 percent) reflecting lease complexity and standardisation of institutional landlord standard forms; landlord-tenant work expects to rise substantially following Renters' Rights Act commencement.

Regional variance 2026

The Civil Justice Council Guideline Hourly Rates set the reference scale across five bands. London 1 (City and West End postcodes) at £579/hr Grade A; London 2 (inner London non-City) at £432/hr; London 3 (outer London) at £361/hr; National 1 (South East excluding London) at £312/hr; National 2 (rest of England and Wales) at £261/hr. The spread from cheapest national band to most expensive London band is approximately 2.2x.

Private market rates compress or expand this spread depending on tier. At the top end, Magic Circle and silver-circle firms in the City of London commonly charge £750 to £1,500/hr at partner level, well above the £579 GHR. At the bottom end, regional high-street firms in the North East and Northern Ireland commonly charge £180 to £220/hr at partner level, below the £261 National 2 GHR. The actual spread in private market rates is closer to 5x to 7x rather than the 2.2x GHR spread.

For consumer-facing work where regional variation is modest (conveyancing, wills, simple probate, summary motoring), the practical regional variance is more like 1.3x to 1.5x: a £700 conveyancing fee in Newcastle vs a £1,400 fee in Central London. For complex commercial work, regional variance approaches the GHR spread because work tends to concentrate at firms charging similar rates to peers. For our 26 city benchmark pages, see our hourly rates index.

2026-only changes affecting fees

Three changes meaningfully shift the 2026 fee landscape compared to 2024. First, the Civil Justice Council Guideline Hourly Rates were uplifted with effect from January 2026 by approximately 3 to 6 percent across grades and bands. The headline Grade A London 1 rate is £579/hr (vs £546 in late 2024). This filters through to court-assessed costs in litigation and indirectly into private market rate-setting.

Second, the Renters' Rights Act 2026 abolishes Section 21 (no-fault) evictions on commencement and replaces them with an expanded Section 8 framework. Landlord solicitor work shifts from straightforward accelerated possession (£900 to £2,500 all in) to contested Section 8 cases (£3,000 to £8,000+ all in for cases that defend). The estimated average cost per landlord eviction is expected to rise by 30 to 60 percent on the new regime, with corresponding effects on rental yields and tenant outcomes. For full analysis see our landlord and tenant page.

Third, the Probate Registry digitisation programme has substantially reduced grant issue timescales. In 2023, grants took typically 14 to 20 weeks. In early 2026, grants are typically issuing within 8 to 10 weeks of submission. This accelerates estate administration but does not materially change solicitor fees: the work is the same, the wait is shorter. The 2026 court fee structure (£300 for estates over £5,000, free below) is unchanged from 2024.

Public vs private funding map 2026

Public funding (legal aid) in 2026 is structured as follows. Police station legal advice: free for all, no means test, under PACE 1984 section 58. Magistrates' Court criminal: means tested (passport from certain benefits, weighted disposable income calculation, lower and upper thresholds with annual inflation uplift). Crown Court criminal: contribution-based for all defendants regardless of means; capped contributions from income and capital. Civil legal aid: largely cut by LASPO 2012; remaining scope includes housing possession defence, immigration with risk of harm, public family (care proceedings), domestic abuse injunctions, mental health tribunals, asylum.

Private funding routes: standard hourly billing, fixed fee, capped fee, CFA (no win no fee with success fee, capped at 25 percent of damages in PI), DBA (damages-based agreement with percentage of damages, 25/35/50 percent cap depending on category), legal expenses insurance (often bundled with home or motor insurance), trade union legal services (for members in employment matters), and third-party litigation funding (typically for high-value commercial claims). For PI claimants the standard route is CFA with QOCS protection.

Cross-coverage of funding routes: the 1971 legal aid means test passports through many benefits but excludes you above modest income thresholds. Where private funding is required, get three written quotes (the SRA Transparency Rules require firms in covered categories to publish indicative ranges to support this), confirm the funding route in writing, and reconcile the quote to the published range. See our SRA Transparency Rules page for the disclosure requirements.

FAQ

Have solicitor fees gone up in 2026?
Yes, modestly. The Civil Justice Council Guideline Hourly Rates were revised upward in January 2026 by approximately 3 to 5 percent across all grades and bands, reflecting general inflation in professional services. The headline Grade A London 1 rate is now £579/hr (up from £546 in late 2024). Fixed-fee categories (conveyancing, wills, probate, summary motoring) have risen by roughly 4 to 8 percent vs 2024, broadly tracking RPI. The fastest-rising categories in 2026 are commercial property (driven by lease complexity and institutional landlord standardisation costs) and complex civil litigation (driven by court delay and CPR reform costs).
What is the cheapest UK region for a solicitor in 2026?
The North East and Northern Ireland remain the lowest-cost professional services markets on the British mainland. Newcastle Grade A rates sit at the National 2 ceiling of £261/hr; mid-tier rates frequently quoted below the GHR ceiling at £180 to £220/hr. Belfast benchmark rates sit broadly with National 2 figures but with deeper discounts on conveyancing and family work. Welsh rates (Cardiff and the wider valleys) sit at National 2 with limited regional uplift. The most expensive region is the City of London (London 1 band, Grade A £579/hr at GHR, with private market rates frequently £750 to £1,500/hr at Magic Circle firms).
What regulatory changes have affected solicitor fees in 2026?
Three meaningful changes. First, the Civil Justice Council Guideline Hourly Rates Jan 2026 update increased rates by 3 to 5 percent. Second, the Renters' Rights Act 2026 abolishes Section 21 evictions on commencement, shifting landlord-tenant work from straightforward accelerated possession to contested Section 8 cases (raising landlord solicitor cost per case by an estimated 30 to 60 percent). Third, the Probate Registry digitisation programme has reduced grant issue timescales from 16 weeks to typically 8 to 10 weeks, accelerating estate administration but with limited impact on solicitor fees.
Where is the biggest discount opportunity in 2026?
Three categories show meaningful discount potential. First, simple wills and LPAs: online providers (Farewill, Co-op Legal Services, Will Wright) offer fixed-fee simple wills from £90 and LPAs from £150 (vs traditional firm £200 to £500 for wills, £400 to £800 for LPAs). Suitable for straightforward circumstances. Second, online conveyancing: established online firms (Bird and Co, eConveyancer panel) typically quote 20 to 35 percent below traditional high-street rates for standard transactions. Third, online divorce: gov.uk's online divorce service costs only the £593 court fee for the no-fault application; a basic solicitor-assisted no-fault divorce costs £500 to £1,000 plus the court fee.
How accurate are the published benchmarks vs actual quotes?
The Civil Justice Council Guideline Hourly Rates are a published reference rate used by courts in costs assessments, not a market price. Private market rates vary above and below the guideline depending on firm tier, location, and work type. City of London commercial firms typically charge 20 to 100 percent above the London 1 Grade A rate (£579/hr GHR vs £750 to £1,500/hr private). Regional high-street firms typically charge at or below the National 2 ceiling. Get at least three quotes for any non-trivial matter to triangulate against the benchmark.
Does legal aid eligibility change in 2026?
The Legal Aid Agency reviews thresholds annually. The 2026 thresholds preserve the historic structure (passporting through certain benefits, weighted disposable income calculation, Crown Court contribution-based system) with modest inflation uplift to gross income and capital allowances. Scope remains broadly as set by LASPO 2012: most private family law is out of scope (except with domestic abuse evidence); housing possession remains in scope; public family and care proceedings remain in scope without means test for parents; criminal legal aid for Crown Court remains contribution-based for all defendants regardless of means. Resolution and the Law Society continue to lobby for restoration of family legal aid; no statutory change yet in 2026.
What about Scotland and Northern Ireland in 2026?
Scotland and Northern Ireland are separate legal jurisdictions with separate fee scales, regulators, and legal aid systems. Scotland: Law Society of Scotland Table of Fees, Faculty of Advocates fee scales for counsel, Scottish Legal Aid Board (SLAB) for legal aid. Conveyancing is structurally different (no chain, missives system). Edinburgh and Glasgow rates broadly compare to English National 2 with Edinburgh modestly higher for property work. Northern Ireland: Solicitors (Northern Ireland) Order 1976, County Court Rules, Northern Ireland Legal Services Agency. Belfast rates broadly compare to National 2 with deeper discounts in non-commercial categories. Cross-border work (e.g. English client with Scottish property) typically requires solicitors in both jurisdictions.

Related cost guides

Hourly rates 2026 (all cities)How solicitors chargeFixed fee vs hourlySRA transparency rulesCriminal defence costFamily law costLandlord and tenant costCommercial property costCFA and DBA costInheritance disputeComplaining about a solicitorLegal aid 2026

Updated 2026-05-11