If you are going through a divorce and considering using a barrister directly, the most pressing question you probably have is: what will it actually cost? This guide explains what you can expect to pay when instructing a direct access barrister for divorce proceedings in England and Wales, what the fees cover, and how the cost compares to using a solicitor.
A direct access barrister, also called a public access barrister, which is a specialist advocate you can instruct directly, without needing a solicitor to act as an intermediary. This route is available for most types of family law work, including financial remedy proceedings, child arrangements hearings, and non-molestation order applications.
Because you are removing the solicitor layer, direct access is often significantly more cost-effective for hearings and specific pieces of work, while still giving you access to the same quality of specialist advocacy.
Fees vary depending on the seniority of the barrister, the complexity of the case, and the type of hearing or work involved. The following gives a general guide to what you can expect to pay.
Most barristers charge between £150 and £350 for an initial telephone or video consultation, typically lasting 30 to 60 minutes. This gives you advice on your position and options before committing to anything further.
If you need a barrister to draft a position statement, consent order, or skeleton argument, costs typically range from £300 to £800 depending on complexity and length.
For hearing representation, fees are usually quoted per hearing or per day. As a general guide:
These are indicative ranges. Senior or highly specialised barristers will charge more. For most straightforward divorce hearings, an experienced junior barrister will provide excellent representation at the lower end of these ranges.
Using a solicitor to manage your entire divorce typically costs significantly more. Solicitor hourly rates range from £200 to £400 or more for an experienced family solicitor, and cases involving financial remedy proceedings regularly reach total costs of £10,000 to £30,000 or higher when managed entirely through a solicitor firm.
Direct access works particularly well for people who can manage their own correspondence and administration, but need specialist representation at specific hearings or for key documents. Many clients instruct a barrister for just the hearings where specialist advocacy makes the biggest difference, keeping overall costs substantially lower.
Yes. Many direct access barristers offer fixed fees for specific pieces of work. Fixed fees are commonly available for:
Fixed fees give you certainty about costs before you commit. Always ask whether a fixed fee is available for the work you need. At Barrister Connect, we will always provide a clear fee quote before any work is instructed.
Direct access barristers work on a privately paid basis. Legal aid is not available through the direct access scheme. If cost is a concern, the following options are worth exploring:
A direct access barrister for divorce in England and Wales will typically cost between £500 and £3,500 for hearing representation depending on the hearing type and barrister seniority. Initial consultations usually cost £150 to £350. Fixed fees are available for many specific tasks and are always worth asking about. Direct access is often significantly more cost-effective than instructing a full-service solicitor, particularly when you only need specialist representation at specific hearings.
If you would like to understand the cost of instructing a barrister for your specific divorce situation, contact Barrister Connect for a no-obligation initial discussion.