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Reviewed by Jacob Whitmore, Whito · Fact-checked for accuracy

Last Updated on May 21, 2026

Executive Summary

The UK legal services market is worth £44 billion. There are over 10,400 SRA-regulated law firms and 155,000 practising solicitors. Most of those firms are small, and most of them are competing for the same local clients through the same handful of channels.

This page maps out the numbers behind solicitor marketing in the UK. How firms find clients, what they spend, where they waste money, and what actually moves the needle. No upsell, no “book a demo.” Just the data.

£44bnUK Legal Services MarketTotal market value, 2026
10,400+SRA-Regulated FirmsSolicitors Regulation Authority
155,000+Practising SolicitorsHolding current practising certificates

Key Takeaways

  • 68% of people search online before instructing a solicitor. If your firm isn’t visible on Google, you’re invisible to most potential clients.
  • Referrals still account for 45% of new client acquisition. But the firms growing fastest are the ones combining referrals with strong search visibility.
  • 80% of UK law firms have fewer than 10 partners. Most are competing locally, not nationally.
  • Firms with 50+ Google reviews receive 2.5x more enquiries than firms with fewer than 10.
  • The most competitive search terms attract 74,000+ monthly UK searches, yet most firms still have no SEO strategy.
  • Growth-focused firms spend 7-12% of revenue on marketing. Traditional firms spend 2-5%, and it shows.

How to Read This Page

This is a reference page, not a blog post. Use the table of contents to jump to the section that matters to you.

If you want market size data, start at Section 3. If you want to know how clients find solicitors, go to Section 4. If you’re trying to understand what your competitors are doing online, Section 5 has the data.

All figures are in GBP and based on UK market data as of early 2026. Where we’ve estimated or aggregated, the methodology is explained at the bottom of the page.

Market Overview

The UK legal services market is one of the largest in the world, second only to the US. But the majority of firms operating in it are small, local practices competing for the same pool of clients in their area.

£44bnMarket ValueUK legal services, 2026
80%Small FirmsFewer than 10 partners
68%Search Online FirstBefore instructing a solicitor
MetricFigureContext
Total market value£44 billionIncludes all legal services revenue
SRA-regulated firms10,400+Active firms with current SRA registration
Practising solicitors155,000+Holding current practising certificates
Firms with fewer than 10 partners80%The vast majority are small practices
People who search online first68%Before choosing a solicitor
Most law firms are small, local businesses. They compete the same way any local business does, through visibility, reputation, and trust. The firms that treat marketing as an afterthought are the ones losing clients to competitors who don’t.

How Clients Find Solicitors

Despite the growth of online search, referrals remain the single biggest source of new clients for UK law firms. But the gap is closing. Firms that rely solely on word of mouth are leaving a growing share of the market on the table.

Client Acquisition Channels for UK Law Firms

Referrals
45%
Google Search
25%
Repeat Clients
15%
Legal Directories
8%
Social Media / Other
7%
ChannelShare of New ClientsTrend
Referrals45%Stable, but declining for firms without online presence
Google Search (organic + paid)25%Growing year on year, especially for consumer law
Repeat Clients15%Higher for commercial and corporate firms
Legal Directories8%Declining as Google dominates search
Social Media / Other7%LinkedIn growing for B2B, others mostly brand awareness
Referrals are still king. But 68% of people now verify a referral by searching for the firm online before making contact. If your website looks outdated or you have no reviews, the referral dies there.

The Search Landscape

Legal search terms are among the most competitive in UK Google Ads. They also carry some of the highest CPCs. For firms investing in SEO, the organic opportunity is significant because most competitors are still not doing it well.

Most Searched Legal Terms (UK Monthly Volume)

Monthly UK Search Volume

solicitor near me
74,000
conveyancing solicitor
40,000+
divorce solicitor
22,000+
personal injury solicitor
16,000+
employment solicitor
12,000+
will writing solicitor
9,000+
74,000Monthly UK searches for “solicitor near me”The single most searched legal term in the UK. Most firms are not ranking for it.

What High-Growth Firms Do Differently

StrategyDescriptionImpact
Practice area landing pagesDedicated pages for each service area, optimised for local searchHigh. These pages rank for “[service] solicitor [city]” terms
Google Ads for high-intent termsBidding on terms like “divorce solicitor Manchester”High, but expensive. CPCs range from £5 to £30
Client testimonialsPublished with client consent, linked to practice areasBuilds trust and improves conversion rates
Thought leadership contentArticles on legal topics that attract search trafficModerate. Builds authority over time
74,000 people search “solicitor near me” every month in the UK. If your firm doesn’t appear in those results, someone else’s does.

Average Case Values by Practice Area

Marketing costs only make sense in the context of what a client is worth. A conveyancing matter at £800 requires a very different marketing strategy than a commercial dispute worth £50,000. These figures explain why some practice areas attract heavy advertising spend and others don’t.

Practice AreaTypical Case ValueMarketing Implication
Conveyancing£800 – £1,500High volume needed. Price-sensitive clients.
Wills and Probate£500 – £2,000Lower value, but repeat and referral potential.
Personal Injury£2,000 – £5,000No win no fee model changes the economics.
Family Law / Divorce£3,000 – £10,000Emotionally driven. Clients search urgently.
Employment Law£2,000 – £8,000Mix of B2B and B2C. LinkedIn effective.
Commercial Law£5,000 – £50,000+Relationship-driven. Content and reputation matter.
Criminal Defence£1,000 – £5,000Urgent search behaviour. Mobile-first.
£800Low End: ConveyancingNeeds volume to justify ad spend
£10,000Mid Range: Family LawHigh case value, high competition
£50,000+High End: CommercialJustifies significant marketing spend
A commercial law firm can afford to spend £500 acquiring a single client because the matter might be worth £50,000. A conveyancing firm spending £500 to win an £800 case is losing money on every instruction.

Marketing Spend Benchmarks

How much should a law firm spend on marketing? There’s no single answer, but the data shows a clear split between firms that are growing and firms that are standing still.

2-5%Traditional FirmsOf revenue on marketing
7-12%Growth-Focused FirmsOf revenue on marketing
45%Still Rely on ReferralsAs primary acquisition channel
Firm TypeMarketing Spend (% of Revenue)Primary Channels
Traditional / Established2-5%Referrals, legal directories, some local advertising
Growth-Focused7-12%SEO, Google Ads, content, reviews, LinkedIn
New / Startup Firms10-15%Heavy on PPC and SEO to build initial visibility

The firms spending 7-12% are not spending recklessly. They are investing in channels with measurable returns, primarily SEO, paid search, and client reviews. The firms spending 2-5% are often spending that money on directories and sponsorships with no way to track results.

Spending less on marketing doesn’t save money if it means losing clients to competitors who spend more effectively. The question isn’t how much to spend, but where the spend actually generates instructions.

Reviews and Reputation

Google reviews have become one of the most important factors in how potential clients choose a solicitor. The data is clear: more reviews means more enquiries.

2.5xMore enquiries for firms with 50+ Google reviewsCompared to firms with fewer than 10 reviews
Review CountImpact on EnquiriesTypical Firm Profile
0-5 reviewsSignificantly below averageMost small firms. Often no active review strategy.
6-20 reviewsAround averageFirms that ask occasionally. Inconsistent.
21-50 reviewsAbove averageFirms with a process for requesting reviews.
50+ reviews2.5x more enquiriesFirms that systematically collect reviews after every matter.

The firms winning on reviews are not doing anything complicated. They send a follow-up email after completing a matter and ask the client to leave a Google review. That’s it. The ones with 50+ reviews have simply been doing it consistently for longer.

Reviews also affect Google Maps rankings. Firms with more reviews and higher ratings appear higher in the local map pack, which is the first thing most people see when searching for a solicitor in their area.

SRA Advertising Rules

Solicitors in England and Wales are regulated by the Solicitors Regulation Authority. This affects what you can and cannot say in your marketing. Getting it wrong can result in regulatory action.

RuleWhat It MeansCommon Mistakes
Must not misleadAll advertising must be accurate and not create false expectationsClaiming “guaranteed outcomes” or misleading success rates
Clearly identifiableAdvertising must be clearly recognisable as promotional materialAdvertorials that look like independent editorial content
Price transparencyCertain services require published pricing under SRA Transparency RulesNot publishing prices for conveyancing, probate, and other required areas
Client confidentialityTestimonials and case studies require explicit client consentPublishing case details or client quotes without written permission

The SRA Standards and Regulations replaced the old Solicitors’ Code of Conduct. They are principles-based, meaning there are fewer specific rules and more general obligations. The key principle for marketing is that you must not do anything that could diminish trust in you or the profession.

In practice, this means you can advertise freely, but you need to be truthful, transparent about costs, and careful with testimonials. Most firms have more freedom than they think when it comes to marketing. The restrictions are about honesty, not about limiting promotion.

Red Flags

These are the patterns we see most often in law firms that are wasting their marketing budget or missing growth opportunities.

  • Relying solely on legal directories. Sites like Solicitors.com, The Law Society’s Find a Solicitor, and similar directories are shrinking in influence. Google has replaced them as the first place people look. Directory listings should be a small part of your strategy, not the whole thing.
  • No website analytics. If you don’t know how many people visit your website, where they come from, or what they do when they arrive, you’re flying blind. Google Analytics is free. There is no excuse for not having it installed.
  • Paying for TV advertising at small firm scale. Local TV ads cost thousands per spot and reach a broad audience with no legal need. Unless you’re a large regional firm with significant budget, this money is almost always better spent on search and digital channels.
  • No practice area landing pages. If your website has one generic “Services” page listing everything you do, you’re losing search traffic. Every practice area needs its own optimised page.
  • Ignoring Google reviews. Firms with no reviews or negative reviews that go unanswered are losing potential clients before they even make contact. A simple review collection process costs almost nothing to implement.
  • No way to track where enquiries come from. If you don’t know whether a new client found you through Google, a referral, or a directory listing, you can’t make informed decisions about where to spend your marketing budget.

Methodology

This page is based on a combination of publicly available data from regulatory bodies, industry reports, and search analytics tools.

Sources include:

  • Solicitors Regulation Authority (SRA) published data on regulated firms and solicitors
  • The Law Society annual statistical reports
  • Google Keyword Planner and SEMrush for UK search volume data
  • Published industry benchmarking reports from legal sector analysts
  • Publicly available data from UK law firm marketing surveys

Client acquisition channel data is based on aggregated survey results from multiple UK legal sector studies. Individual firm results will vary based on practice area, location, and firm size.

Case value figures represent typical fee ranges for standard matters and do not account for unusually complex or high-value instructions.

All data reflects the UK market as of Q1 2026. This page is updated periodically. If you spot something outdated, let us know.

About Whito

Whito helps UK businesses figure out what’s working and what’s not in their marketing. We’re not an agency and we don’t sell marketing services to law firms.

We publish independent research, tools, and audits designed to give business owners the information they need to make better decisions, whether that means investing in SEO, hiring an agency, or reallocating budget from channels that aren’t delivering.

We built this page because the legal sector is one of the most competitive and expensive markets for digital marketing in the UK, and most firms are navigating it without good data.

Learn more at whito.co.uk