Education and organisation Solicitors have their own professional association called
The Law Society, established in 1826. The
Solicitors Act 1843 (
6 & 7 Vict. c. 73) consolidated enactments relating to the profession. In order to become a solicitor, trainees usually take a three-year undergraduate law degree (LL.B.) followed by a one-year
Legal Practice Course and then, assuming the examinations have been passed, are employed for two years as trainee solicitors, a form of
apprenticeship until about 1990 called
articled clerk. Those with a degree other than in law must complete a law conversion (
Graduate Diploma in Law) one-year course after their degree and before their legal practice course (so 5 years of full time study rather than 4) but still followed by 2 years working as a trainee solicitor in a firm of solicitors. There are some schemes permitting qualification without an undergraduate degree but they are the exception, not the rule. For qualified lawyers from recognised foreign jurisdictions, as well as barristers from England and Wales, the
Qualified Lawyers Transfer Scheme (QLTS) was introduced in September 2010 to provide a route to qualify as a solicitor. From 2022 new post-graduate examinations are planned for those who have not started qualification down the current path under which graduates will need to pass examinations known as SQEI and SQEII either before or during a 2-year period of recognised training similar to the training contract. This is not yet in force. Under the current system after being successful in the examinations and completing satisfactorily the two-year training contract, the candidates may request the
Master of the Rolls to admit them as solicitors whereupon they become Solicitors of the Senior Courts of England and Wales.
Areas of practice The field of action of a solicitor is versatile and cannot be easily displayed. A solicitor stays in direct contact to their clients and gives them personal
legal advice. Clients can be members of the public, businesses, voluntary bodies, charities etc. A solicitor prepares the
lawsuit for their clients and represents their parties personally in the lower courts (magistrates' courts, county courts and tribunal). In cases on higher courts (High Court or higher) where a barrister is necessary, a solicitor acts as an agent. Moreover, solicitor's practice is comparable to notary public. Dealing with conveyancing as well as trust businesses, developing last wills, and administrating estates are parts of solicitors' practice. Furthermore, a solicitor oversees contract conclusion and consulting in various fields of law like tax, competition, insurance, and company law. Profitable
real estate businesses makes over 50% of the solicitor's income . Currently there are approximately 160,000 practising solicitors in England and Wales. 25% are in an employer-employee relationship at companies, bigger solicitor offices or administrations. 75% are self-employed .
Sole practitioner A sole practitioner works on his or her own, has no partners, and usually handles smaller cases, most of which dealing with subjects such as
family law,
employment law, and
housing law. == Other legal professions==