If you have a court hearing in the next few days and have suddenly realised you need representation, direct access offers a fast and cost-effective solution. Direct access barristers regularly take on urgent instructions and can usually be brought in at very short notice. This guide explains what is involved, what to prepare and what to expect.
Yes, a direct access barrister can usually be instructed for a hearing within the week. Depending on the case complexity and the availability of specialist counsel, the barrister can be matched within 24 hours and ready to attend the hearing within days. Barrister Connect handles this kind of urgent instruction regularly.
Urgent direct access representation is commonly arranged for:
Some specialised hearings (very high-value commercial trials, complex appellate work) need longer lead times. For most ordinary first-instance hearings, a week or even a few days is enough.
Contact Barrister Connect with a brief summary of your case and the hearing date. We will assess whether the matter falls within the scope of our service and what type of barrister would be suitable.
We identify specialist barristers in our network who:
You receive a fixed-fee quote setting out exactly what is covered. If you agree, the brief is confirmed and the barrister begins work.
A pre-hearing conference is arranged, usually by telephone or video. This typically takes 30 to 60 minutes for a standard hearing or longer for more complex matters.
The barrister reviews the papers, prepares any necessary documents (position statement, skeleton argument), and develops the strategy for the hearing.
The barrister attends the hearing in person or by video link, represents you, and provides a follow-up summary.
To enable an urgent instruction, the barrister needs:
What the case is about, who the parties are, what stage the case is at and what you are trying to achieve.
All relevant court orders, the application that started proceedings, any directions for the upcoming hearing, and any orders made at previous hearings.
If a bundle has been prepared, send it. If not, send the documents that should be in it.
All witness statements (yours and the other side's), any expert reports, and any other key evidence.
Letters and emails between the parties or with the court in the last few weeks.
Whether they are represented and if so by whom.
When you can speak by phone or video for a conference, and what days and times work.
If you are a litigant in person and the bundle has not yet been prepared, the barrister will work from the underlying documents. If the bundle has been prepared by the other side and you have not received it, ask for a copy urgently. Most opposing solicitors will provide it promptly.
Where time is very short, the barrister may need to work from a partial set of documents and absorb additional material on the day of the hearing.
For straightforward enquiries, we aim to provide a quote within 24 hours of your initial contact. For urgent matters with a hearing in days, we can sometimes turn quotes around the same day.
The quote will set out:
The conference is usually the most important part of urgent instructions. In a typical 60-minute call, the barrister will:
Treat the conference as a working session. Be ready to provide information, ask questions and confirm instructions.
For most hearings, the court expects a position statement filed in advance. Where the barrister is instructed very late, the position statement may need to be drafted urgently and filed on the morning of the hearing.
Where there is genuinely no time, an oral opening submission can substitute for a written statement. The court will usually understand the circumstances if the late instruction is explained.
Even with late instructions, a barrister can:
The quality of the result usually depends on how well prepared the case is overall, not solely on how long the barrister has been involved.
If the situation genuinely warrants an adjournment (for example, you do not have the documents, key witnesses are not available, or the case is not ready), the barrister can apply for one at the hearing. The application must be properly supported with reasons. The court will then decide.
Adjournment applications are not always granted. The court will balance the interests of justice against the prejudice to the other side.
For urgent instructions, the barrister will usually require payment in advance. A typical arrangement is:
The payment terms will be set out in the engagement letter you receive at the start.
A direct access barrister can step in to cover the imminent hearing.
You suddenly have less time than expected and need representation quickly.
The case is more complex than you realised and you want professional representation.
The hearing is going ahead and you need to be represented.
A hearing has been listed at short notice and you need to respond.
Some matters are not suitable for last-minute direct access:
Where we cannot help, we will say so clearly. We will not take on instructions we cannot deliver on.
If you have a hearing coming up and are not sure whether you need representation, make the call now. The earlier the contact, the more options remain available. Even a few extra days can make a significant difference to the preparation possible.
Barrister Connect treats urgent hearing enquiries as priorities. We aim to respond the same working day and provide quotes within 24 hours.
Many of the people we help have already done significant work on their case themselves. A direct access barrister can step in at any stage, from initial advice through to representation at a final hearing. Get in touch to discuss your options.