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    Barrister vs solicitor for employment tribunal, which should I use

    Post by Barrister Connect
    March 23, 2026
    Barrister vs solicitor for employment tribunal, which should I use

    If you are involved in an employment tribunal, whether as a claimant or a respondent employer: you will need to decide how to approach your legal representation. The choice between a solicitor and a barrister (or both) depends on your situation, your budget, and what stage your case has reached. This guide explains the difference and helps you make the right decision.

    What Does Each Type of Lawyer Do?

    Solicitors traditionally manage the full conduct of a legal matter. They handle correspondence with the other side and the tribunal, gather evidence, draft documents, advise clients throughout the process, and instruct a barrister if specialist court advocacy is needed. A full-service solicitor will manage every aspect of your case.

    Barristers are specialist advocates. Their core skills are presenting cases in tribunal, cross-examining witnesses, arguing legal points, and drafting legal submissions. Through Direct Access, you can instruct a barrister directly without a solicitor, which removes one layer of cost.

    When Does Using a Solicitor Make Sense?

    Using a solicitor (who then briefs a barrister for the hearing) makes most sense when:

    • Your case is highly complex and involves large volumes of documents
    • You want someone to manage every aspect of the case from start to finish
    • You do not have the time or inclination to manage any of the administration yourself

    The downside is cost. A full-service solicitor-managed employment tribunal case typically costs £5,000 to £20,000 or more, with solicitor time charged at hourly rates of £200 to £400 plus the barrister's fees on top for the hearing.

    When Does Direct Access to a Barrister Make Sense?

    Direct access to an employment barrister is often the better choice when:

    • You can manage your own correspondence and document administration
    • You want specialist advice and representation without paying for a solicitor layer on top
    • Cost is a significant consideration
    • You are at a specific stage of the proceedings and need targeted help. For example,, for the final hearing only, or to draft a witness statement

    Many claimants and respondents handle their own tribunal paperwork: filing the ET1 or ET3, exchanging documents, preparing the hearing bundle, and use a barrister specifically for legal strategy, witness statement guidance, and hearing representation. This unbundled approach is typically significantly cheaper than full solicitor management.

    Is a Barrister Actually Better in Tribunal?

    Barristers are specifically trained as advocates. Cross-examining witnesses, making legal submissions, and presenting a case persuasively to a tribunal judge and panel is what barristers do every day. For the actual hearing, a specialist employment barrister will almost always provide stronger advocacy than a general employment solicitor appearing in their place.

    Summary

    For most employment tribunal matters, using a direct access barrister is more cost-effective than instructing a solicitor to manage the whole case, and gives you access to stronger specialist advocacy at the hearing. A solicitor-managed approach makes most sense for highly complex cases or where you want full case management support. For targeted help at a specific stage, or for end-to-end support at a lower cost, direct access to a barrister through Barrister Connect is typically the right choice.

    To discuss your employment tribunal matter, contact us today.

    Post by Barrister Connect
    March 23, 2026

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