What is the Solicitor Apprenticeship?
A job and training over 6 or so years, resulting in a Law degree and the SQE (assuming you pass them!) which is a Level 7 (Masters equivalent) qualification, so you will be a qualified solicitor. It entails paid employment with 1 day a week training, using an external provider, e.g. BPP.
Note – not to be confused with the Paralegal Apprenticeship (L3/4 qualification) or the Graduate Solicitor Apprenticeship (need a degree to apply for the latter).
Not all firms offer them. And there may be change in the future https://feweek.co.uk/shorter-apprenticeships-and-level-7-restrictions-confirmed-by-starmer/ if the L7 apprenticeship moves outside the levy.
What do you get paid in the first year?
Anything from <£18,000, to £32,000 in London.
What about in future years?
A lot of firms pay the same in year 5 (post degree on the apprenticeship) as a trainee solicitor starting at that point. So, there is no disadvantage, financially.
In addition, several top firms have a pledge to ‘Treat all routes to qualification fairly with equal value.’ https://www.legalcheek.com/2022/10/to-firms-pledge-to-treat-training-contracts-and-apprenticeships-as-equals/
In some other industries, apprentices are not seen on the same level as graduates.
How do I find one?
Job ‘adverts’ on the Gov site (note this is not a full list of all firms who offer them, just available when you can apply) https://www.findapprenticeship.service.gov.uk/apprenticeshipsearch.
LegalCheek https://www.legalcheek.com/the-solicitor-apprenticeship-most-list/. This isn’t exhaustive, as firms offering them for the first time might not be in the list.
https://solicitors.lawsociety.org.uk/ search for your local town/area, then look for firms with a larger number of solicitors as they are more likely to offer apprenticeships.
Apprenticeship providers - https://findapprenticeshiptraining.apprenticeships.education.gov.uk/courses/43 then ‘View providers for this course. Emailing Teesside Uni, for example, provided a list of firms that have used their services in the past.
Are they hard to get?
Yes! From LegalCheek there are a lot more training contracts than apprenticeships, and the former are hard to come by. Could be 200-1 applicants-positions or significantly higher.
What are the timescales?
Applications can open in September of Y13, but some wait until the New Year. Employment starts in the following September.
What are the entry criteria?
Using the scenario of still studying A-levels (or equiv), the Solicitors Regulation Authority (SRA) say it is CCC, at A-level (or equiv). Some training providers have higher entry criteria, e.g. BPP’s is 128 UCAS points (equiv of ABB). Then, an employer may have their own, even higher, entry criteria, e.g. the top law firms want AAB. Short story, the employer website should say what is required.
This will be based on predicted A-level grades, if they haven’t been obtained yet.
What is the application process?
With the top firms - Application form/CV, online test (e.g. Watson Glaser test https://www.thelawyerportal.com/solicitor/training-contract-overview/watson-glaser-test/), interview and written exercise, assessment day (any or all - group exercise, partner interview, and written exercise).