Legal fees and access to justice
Economic pressure is changing the conversation about legal fees. Higher borrowing costs, household pressure and business uncertainty make clients less willing to accept open-ended billing. For law firms in England and Wales, the question is not simply whether to offer fixed fees, capped fees or litigation funding. The real question is whether pricing is clear enough for clients to understand the risk before they commit.
Publication snapshot
- Clients are increasingly focused on price certainty, risk allocation and what happens if a matter expands beyond the original scope.
- Fixed fees, capped fees, conditional fee agreements, damages-based agreements and third-party funding can improve access, but each has limits.
- SRA-regulated firms must give clients information they can understand and the best possible information about pricing and likely overall cost.
- The safest funding model is the one the client can explain back: what is included, what is excluded, when more money may be due, and what happens if the case is lost.
The pressure on legal pricing
Legal work is often needed at the exact moment when a person or business is already under pressure: a dispute, dismissal, regulatory problem, debt issue, inheritance conflict, failed transaction, professional complaint or urgent risk. When the wider economy is tight, legal cost becomes part of the dispute strategy itself.
The Bank of England’s Bank Rate remains a useful economic signal because it affects lending and saving rates across the economy. Where borrowing is more expensive and inflation remains a live concern, clients are more likely to ask for certainty before instructing a solicitor. That does not make the work easier or cheaper to deliver, but it does make opaque pricing harder to defend.
The pricing shift
The traditional hourly-rate model is not disappearing. But clients increasingly want to know the likely total cost, the stage-by-stage cost, what is outside scope and what happens if the matter becomes more complex.
The main funding options
Alternative fee arrangements are not a single model. They are tools for allocating risk between client and lawyer. Used well, they can improve predictability and access. Used badly, they can obscure real exposure and create disputes later.
Fixed fees
A fixed price for a defined piece of work. Useful where the task is predictable, but unsafe if the scope is vague or the client assumes all future work is included.
Capped fees
A fee ceiling for a stage or matter. Useful for budgeting, but the client must know what happens when the cap is reached and whether the firm can stop work.
Conditional fee agreements
Often described as “no win, no fee”, but the phrase can be misleading unless the client understands success fees, deductions, disbursements, insurance and adverse-costs risk.
Damages-based agreements
A form of outcome-based fee where payment is linked to recovery. These arrangements are technical and must be checked carefully for enforceability and scope.
Staged fees
Work is priced in stages: advice, letter before claim, response review, application, hearing preparation, settlement or trial. This can reduce surprise bills.
Third-party funding
A funder pays litigation costs in return for a financial return if the claim succeeds. It can unlock claims, but it adds another contract and another interest in the outcome.
What clients need to test
A client should not choose a pricing model because it sounds cheaper. The better test is whether the arrangement makes the risk visible. A fixed fee can be good value if the scope is clear. A “no win, no fee” agreement can still leave the client exposed if deductions, insurance, opponent costs or termination terms are not understood.
The client’s fee-checking questions
- What exact work is included?
- What is excluded?
- What are the key stages and likely timescales?
- What disbursements may be payable?
- Is VAT included or added?
- What happens if the matter settles early?
- What happens if the matter becomes more complex?
- What happens if the case is lost?
- Can the firm stop acting if the fee cap is reached?
- Will any success fee, funder return or deduction come out of damages?
The simplest practical rule is this: if the client cannot explain how the bill will be calculated, the agreement has not been explained clearly enough.
What firms need to control
Alternative fees are not just a marketing tool. They require project management. A firm that offers fixed or capped pricing without controlling scope, evidence, staffing, client decisions and procedural risk may simply move the loss from the client to the firm — or create a later client-care complaint.
Define the work
Set out the task, assumptions, deliverables, exclusions, timetable and what will trigger a revised estimate.
Stage the matter
Break uncertain work into advice, documents, negotiation, application, hearing and review stages so the client can choose whether to continue.
Update the client
Cost information should be revisited as the matter develops, especially where the facts, opponent conduct or court timetable changes.
Record consent
Where pricing, funding, referral arrangements or deductions affect the client’s position, informed consent should be documented in plain language.
Litigation funding and PACCAR
Third-party litigation funding can support claims that would otherwise be unaffordable. It can be particularly important where a claimant faces a better-resourced opponent, a group action, a technically complex claim or heavy disclosure costs.
But litigation funding is not free money. It is a funding contract. The client needs to understand who controls the litigation, what return the funder may receive, what happens on settlement, who pays adverse costs, whether after-the-event insurance is required, and what happens if funding is withdrawn.
Potential value
Funding can improve access to justice, spread risk and allow claims to proceed where the claimant could not otherwise meet the cost of litigation.
Practical risk
Funding adds complexity. The agreement must be checked for enforceability, control, deductions, termination, settlement pressure and conflicts of interest.
The PACCAR litigation-funding litigation has kept this area under close attention. The practical lesson for clients is straightforward: do not treat funding as merely a commercial add-on. Treat it as part of the legal-risk structure of the case.
The ethical test
Fee innovation is useful only if it improves informed choice. A pricing model that looks accessible but hides real exposure can damage trust more than a conventional hourly rate.
Clarity
Can the client understand how the price works without legal or costs expertise?
Scope
Is the client clear about what work is included, excluded and conditional on further payment?
Risk
Has the client been told about disbursements, VAT, opponent costs, insurance, deductions and termination?
Independence
Does the fee structure preserve professional judgement, especially where settlement or risk advice may affect the lawyer’s financial return?
The future of legal pricing in England and Wales will not be won by slogans. It will be won by clear retainers, realistic estimates, disciplined scope control and honest conversations about risk.
Source anchors
Bank of England: Bank Rate
Official Bank of England explanation of Bank Rate, current rate information and how interest rates affect borrowing, saving and inflation.
https://www.bankofengland.co.uk/monetary-policy/the-interest-rate-bank-rateSRA Code of Conduct: client information and pricing
Official SRA duties requiring understandable client information and the best possible information about pricing and likely overall cost.
https://www.sra.org.uk/solicitors/standards-regulations/code-conduct-solicitors/SRA Transparency Rules
Official rules requiring published cost information for specified services, including total or average cost, charging basis, disbursements, VAT, key stages and exclusions.
https://www.sra.org.uk/solicitors/standards-regulations/transparency-rules/Courts and Legal Services Act 1990, section 58AA
Statutory context for damages-based agreements.
https://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/1990/41/section/58AADamages-Based Agreements Regulations 2013
Regulatory framework for damages-based agreements.
https://www.legislation.gov.uk/uksi/2013/609/contentsThe access-to-justice point
Fee reform is not only a business question for law firms. It is an access-to-justice question for clients. A person who cannot understand the cost of advice may delay getting help until the legal problem is worse, more expensive and harder to fix.
The best fee structures do three things at once: they make legal help more accessible, preserve professional independence and tell the client the truth about risk. That is the standard against which fixed fees, capped fees, CFAs, DBAs and litigation funding should be judged.
Legal Lens decision support
Get a free written assessment before signing a legal fee agreement
A preliminary assessment can help you understand the scope, risks, exclusions, likely next steps and questions to ask before committing to a retainer, fixed fee, capped fee, CFA, DBA or litigation-funding arrangement.
What Legal Lens can structure
Fee questions, document checklist, matter chronology, scope concerns, risk map and points to clarify with the solicitor.
What needs legal review
CFAs, DBAs, litigation funding, adverse costs, settlement deductions, termination clauses and limitation risk may need regulated advice.
What to send first
The retainer letter, estimate, CFA/DBA or funding agreement, client-care letter, costs updates, bills and any settlement offer.
Independent Legal Lens consultancy. This is not a regulated solicitors’ firm. A preliminary assessment is decision support and is not a substitute for regulated legal advice where that is needed.

