In many cases, yes. Public Access, also called Direct Access, can allow a client to instruct an authorised barrister directly, but suitability depends on the work needed and the complexity of the case.
Direct Access means you may be able to contact and instruct a barrister yourself, without first instructing a solicitor. The Bar Standards Board explains that not every barrister offers Public Access work, and those who do must meet the relevant requirements.
For clients, the attraction is usually direct specialist input. You may want advice on prospects, help preparing for a hearing, drafting of legal documents, representation in court or tribunal, or strategic guidance before deciding your next step.
A Direct Access barrister may advise, draft documents and represent you. In many disputes, that is exactly the help a client needs at a defined stage.
Examples include preparing for an employment tribunal hearing, obtaining advice on a commercial dispute, representation in a family court hearing, advice on a motoring allegation or drafting a formal document in a civil claim.
Direct Access does not automatically mean the barrister runs every administrative part of your case. Depending on the matter, you may remain responsible for filing documents, serving documents, corresponding with the court, keeping deadlines and organising the papers.
If those tasks are too difficult, too urgent or too risky to manage yourself, a barrister may recommend that you also instruct a solicitor or another authorised professional.
A clear enquiry should say what has happened, what stage the case has reached, what you need the barrister to do and whether any deadline is approaching.
Include the court or tribunal name, hearing date, claim number if you have one, key orders, important correspondence and a short summary of the outcome you want. This helps the suitability and fee question to be assessed quickly.
Barristers4U helps clients request a quote from a suitable Direct Access barrister. The information on this page is general information only, not legal advice about your individual circumstances.
If your matter is urgent, include hearing dates, court deadlines, orders and any documents you already have when you submit your enquiry.
Direct Access may allow members of the public and organisations to instruct an authorised barrister directly. Suitability depends on the facts, urgency and complexity of the matter. A barrister may decide that a solicitor or another authorised professional is also required.
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A Direct Access barrister matching service for clients across England and Wales. Enquiries are reviewed before any barrister is instructed and are not a substitute for formal legal advice.