*puts on lawyer hat*
Hi!
If you want to study to be a lawyer, if you didn't do a law degree but did some other form of degree, you DO NOT HAVE TO DO A NEW DEGREE. This is important, and saves you two years.
You first need to do a CPE (common professional examination) or the new fangled GDL (graduate diploma in law). Full time this takes a year. It's basically a condensed version of a law degree, taking just the 7 modules required by the Law society for you to become a solicitor. (see here:
http://www.lawcareers.net/Courses/CPEGDL.aspx)
HOWEVER - this is a very very hard course, and requires a fair bit of dedication - you're basically doing almost two years' worth of work in 9 months. On a law degree you do 4 modules per year, by comparison.
You can do this part time, which I believe will be two to three years.
The average fee is about 4-5k for the course, whether full or part time I think.
After that, you have to "go to law school", which is the grand name given by twatty lawyers for doing the Legal Practice Course. This is the vocational study requirement for becoming a solicitor (the barristers have their own thing called the Bar Vocational Course, which they stress is very different and much harder. Obviously. It's all that learning to wear a poncy wig. Very very hard, dontcha know). It's a one year course full time and two years part time.
I should point out that the LPC is an utter,
utter piece of piss. I cannot stress enough how easy it is. If you're a moderately bright bloke I can pretty much guarantee that you will pass as long as you turn up. Solicitors regularly bemoan how pointless this makes it, but there we are.
Course fees for a full time LPC are in the region of 8k, and part time is pretty similar, I believe. If you get a training contract sorted out prior to starting, firms will pay this for you (and may also give you some money towards your cost of living for the year, perhaps 2K). If you don't get the training contract sorted out before attending, you can get a professional loan to cover it (I got one from HSBC at a very good rate), and firms will pay it off for you once you do get a training contract.
I would point out though that it is very competitive getting a training contract, particularly in London. So make sure you've got a good CV lined up, and I'd warn you that if you have less than a 2:1 at degree level then you'll find it
exceptionally hard to get a training contract at a decent sized firm. Not such a handicap at high street type firms, but we'll get onto that in a moment.
Training contracts are two years long, and the good money is only in London for trainees. Outside, you may be looking at earning a fairly average wage for the first year (as low as 17k in some places), and a bit more in the second year. After that, of course, it goes up quite a bit. This website has some info on trainee salaries -
http://www.rollonfriday.co.ukIf you want to earn a decent rate either as a trainee or when qualified, you'll need to avoid high street firms (the ones that do conveyancing and wills and work for small local businesses) and go for a bigger top 500 firm. These will generally be based in London, Birmingham, Bristol, Leeds, Manchester and a few other big cities. As a trainee the high street places will pay the bare minimum (the law society sets a minimum trainee salary, which is currently £15,332 outside London and £17,110 in London), and not much more afterwards.
The bigger firms will do you some decent money - almost anyone in the
UK Legal 500 will pay you at least 30k in your first year as a qualified solicitor (and considerably more in London - 40 to 55 as an NQ was common in London when I was one almost 4 years ago), and it can go up between 5 to 10k per year after that, if you're good.
So - in summary. If you start this September on a full time CPE, you could be earning decent money by September 2010 as a trainee in London, and outside London fairly decent. Whether in or out of London big money kicks in two years later when you qualify, so you're looking at September 2012.
If you're doing it all part time, it will be at least four years before you're on a training contract, and then two years before you're qualified, and by then it's 2014 and the oil and food will have run out and we'll all be dead.