Today, over 200,000 solicitors across England and Wales provide essential advice to families, businesses and communities across the country.

Force for growth

The legal services sector, and the solicitor profession that underpins it, is a powerhouse of economic growth. It drives the UK economy and represents one of our country's most profitable exports.

Solicitors working both in-house and in private practice provide essential legal advice that allows multinational corporations, local government, high-street businesses, charities and educational establishments across the country to thrive.

At home, legal services adds billions in value to the economy every year, with half a million people employed directly or indirectly.

Globally, legal services exports have grown by a third in just two years and English law governs over £500 trillion worth of commercial transactions and contracts.

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Quote: Matt Aleksic, litigation lawyer at Hogan Lovells and Law Society Council member for Central London

Force for good

Solicitors are a force for good by supporting individuals, families and local communities to prosper.

Solicitors on high streets across the country provide support at every milestone in a person’s life. This includes getting on the housing ladder and resolving employment or welfare disputes, to getting married, divorced and planning your inheritance.

Solicitors are also often the last source of support for some of the most vulnerable people in society by providing pro bono work or enhancing access to justice by undertaking publicly-funded legal work – often at low rates of pay.

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Quote: Cordella Bart-Stewart OBE, solicitor specialising in family and immigration law and Law Society Council member for the Black Solicitors’ Network

Force for progress

Solicitors have a long history of being a force for enabling legal, scientific and societal progress.

Our digital exhibition celebrating 200 years of legal milestones highlights the pivotal role that solicitors have played in establishing equal rights legislation, housing and welfare reform, and facilitating the global adoption of new and emerging technology.

The solicitor profession has also seen significant change. Once seen as a career open to a small number of privileged men, the majority of solicitors (53%) are now women and 19% of the profession have a black, Asian or minority heritage.

And yet, more needs to be done. 2025 will see the launch of our new approach to address the inequality and bias that continues to shape career paths and that leads to workplace cultures that leave people feeling like they can't bring their full selves to work.

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Quote: Alexandra Wilson, in-house senior director at CBRE and Law Society Council member for Disabled Solicitors

Find out more about the solicitor profession

As we look to the next 200 years, data will be vital to understand how the profession is continuing to change and evolve.

Since 1984, we’ve produced our annual statistics report, which provides insight into the size and shape of our profession, tracking changes to help firms make informed decisions, benchmark performance, and address challenges and opportunities.

Download our 2024 annual statistics report (PDF 463 KB)

Explore findings from previous years: 20232022202120202019 and 2018.