If you need legal representation, you may have assumed you first need to instruct a solicitor. That is no longer necessarily the case. Through a scheme called Direct Access, also known as Public Access: you can in many situations instruct a barrister directly, cutting out the solicitor entirely and accessing specialist legal expertise more efficiently and at lower cost.
The Direct Access scheme was introduced by the Bar Standards Board in 2004 and significantly expanded in 2013. It allows members of the public and businesses to instruct a barrister directly for legal advice, document drafting, and court representation: without first going through a solicitor.
Before this scheme existed, the only way to use a barrister was through a solicitor, who would manage the case and then brief the barrister when court advocacy was needed. That traditional route remains available and is still the right choice in some complex cases. But for a wide range of legal matters, Direct Access provides a faster, simpler, and often substantially more cost-effective alternative.
Both solicitors and barristers are qualified lawyers, but they have traditionally performed different roles within the legal system.
Solicitors handle the day-to-day management of a legal case. They correspond with the other side, gather evidence, manage paperwork and court filing, advise clients throughout the process, and brief a barrister when specialist court advocacy is needed.
Barristers are specialist advocates. They are trained to argue cases in court, cross-examine witnesses, and provide authoritative legal opinions. Barristers typically do not manage the administrative side of a case. They focus on the legal analysis and court work.
Under Direct Access, you engage the barrister directly for the specific work you need, whether that is an initial advice, drafting a key document, or representing you at a hearing: without a solicitor managing the broader case around them.
Direct Access is available to individuals, businesses, and professionals across a wide range of legal matters. Common situations where people use Direct Access include:
A direct access barrister can:
There are some things a barrister acting under Direct Access cannot do, because they are reserved to solicitors. These include:
A good direct access barrister will always tell you at the outset if your case requires a solicitor to be involved, and will not take on work that is not in your best interests.
Direct Access works particularly well when:
If your case is particularly complex, involves managing a large volume of documents, or requires significant ongoing legal management, having a solicitor involved alongside the barrister may be the right approach.
Direct Access allows you to instruct a specialist barrister directly, without needing a solicitor as an intermediary. It is available for a wide range of legal matters and can be significantly more cost-effective than the traditional route. The process is straightforward, fees are often fixed in advance, and you get access to the same quality of specialist legal expertise without the additional overhead.
If you are unsure whether Direct Access is right for your situation, contact us for a no-obligation conversation.