Irwin Mitchell London office

The Legal Cheek View

One of the first big law firms to become an Alternative Business Structure (which allows non-lawyers to be partners), Irwin Mitchell has a reputation for innovation and business savvy. Over the past few years, the national giant had been concentrating on building up that business at pace, gobbling up smaller firms and opening new offices — most recently in Brighton— as it aimed for scale (it now has 18 locations across the UK). The net result is multiple years of consecutive growth, with the latest figures showing revenues of £304 million — a 10% increase on last year and the firm’s best results on record to date. These stellar financials follow IM’s recent investment in Scottish law firm Wright, Johnston & Mackenzie, as well as its acquisition of Silk Family Law, both of which are part of new CEO Craig Marshall’s attempts to reassess Irwin Mitchell’s strategy.

IM boasts three key practice areas: corporate, personal and private client. Its work for individuals is dominated by personal injury and medical negligence, while corporate clients are divided across eight main sectors: manufacturing, technology, financial services, real estate, education, media, sports and consumer services. Some of the corporate teams include banking & finance, employment, litigation and pensions, whilst personal teams include wills trusts, international high net worth, lifetime & estate planning and asbestos and occupational disease! Private client work is done across the Birmingham, Bristol, Chichester, Gatwick, Leeds, London, Manchester, Newcastle, Reading and Southampton offices.

When it comes to training, the consensus is that trainees generally feel “very well supported” by partners, management and early careers. “Fantastic variety of work provided. Consistent feedback given for improvement. Consistent reviews to identify gaps in training”, reports one insider. Another says that the “training is first rate and you get to be involved in all aspects of the case”, including “decision making”. As with most firms, this can vary between teams — one rookie speaks of “really direct supervision” in one seat and “average” training in another – but overall, rookies rate the training here as “very good”.

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The work at Irwin Mitchell is described as “fascinating” and “there is a lot of responsibility given” to trainees (though this is equally department-dependent). “Work is very varied both in terms of urgency and type,” one source explains. “I’ve been exposed to a broad scope of tasks at various stages of a matter”. Another insider tells us: “Contentious departments tend to give more stimulating work but generally I feel you are given a wide range of tasks and trusted to get on with the task and feedback given. You are always thought of when there is a meeting with clients, Counsel or experts and given this exposure which is a key part of learning during your TC.” Trainees do sometimes end up with the “usual grunt work” that is to be expected early on, but “if you prove you are up for it and competent”, the quality of the work can be “really great”.

IM’s London office in the Holborn/City borders handles much of the firm’s corporate work, and is very much what you would expect from a City law firm, though the office is also renowned for offering a variety of legal services to individuals as well. The Sheffield office — which is the firm’s headquarters having been founded there in 1912 — is the nerve centre for the wide-ranging personal injury practice that IM is probably best known for. It’s also home to insolvency, litigation, employment, construction, regulatory investigations and real estate teams. Private client is split across a range of locations in West London, the South, Manchester and Leeds.

What unifies this all is a very supportive culture, both among trainees and emanating from supervisors and partners. “Everyone is always extremely happy to offer help and advice”, a survey respondent tells us. “There is a genuine willingness for trainees to succeed and get involved as much as they can, and people are always willing to help if tasks are difficult. I’ve also found that people are very supportive in a personal capacity too, and have been quick to offer support (whether that be picking up workload or pointing me in the direction of further help) when it comes to wellbeing matters as well”. Another describes the approximately 100-strong trainee cohort (split across two years) as a “very supportive, tight-knit group”, with “supportive” and “friendly” being popular adjectives to describe fellow juniors.

Fortunately, ‘competitive’ is not a word that describes the trainee cohort here: “there never felt like a combative ‘Hunger Games’ atmosphere with people competing for seats”, quips one trainee. “All the juniors are very friendly and down to earth”.

Tensions arise less from interaction between fellow humans than with the firm’s problematic IT, with one Fringe headliner noting: “2004 called it wants one of the 100 case management systems back.” IT issues, according to one insider, are “frequent and a frustration”. Others recall “many hours spent on the phone to IT”. Our spies don’t hold back with their IT gripes ― “the technology is really lacking and way behind the curve”; “the matter management system is prone to crashes and is generally un-intuitive” and “internet access is frequently either severely degraded or completely gone”. Some improvements have been made by way of “new laptops” and the introduction of the Office 365 suite, although the latter is “still quite slow”. Though there are reportedly “plans to invest and upgrade in the tech”, trainees say that “the firm is far behind competitors” in this regard.

The perks are private healthcare (including private GP video access), shopping discounts through a corporate deals website, and cheap cinema tickets. But who needs barista-poured coffee and lavish socials when you have a life? Perhaps the greatest perk of working at Irwin Mitchell, aside from the friendly team and interesting work, is the work-life balance, which is pretty much “as good as it can get” according to our insiders.

Trainees report that it is “rare to do overtime” at Irwin Mitchell, with one insider reporting 6pm or earlier leave times whilst another adds “if there isn’t work nobody has an issue with you logging off”.Rookies do acknowledge that trainees in some departments regularly work considerably later – particularly those in the “public law and human rights team” which has “unsustainable billing targets” according to one despondent trainee. However, others are more positive, particularly on the topic of the firm’s flexible working policy.

The firm operates a “flexible by choice” policy, which basically means individual teams set their own WFH policy. One trainee reports on what it means for them: “flexible by choice policy is well-implemented and there is support when working from home. It is less than ideal as a trainee to spend the majority of time working from home, but this is not a reflection on the firm, and I suspect the benefits of home working are felt more by those who need less oversight.” Another junior adds that the policy “means I get to drop off my daughter at nursery and pick her up at the end of the day without any issue, even if it means I have to supplement my hours in the evening.” Trainees still generally report attending the office around three days a week, with attendance strongly encouraged to aid development. But, when WFH, you’re provided with a “pretty decent budget” for equipment and the “tech infrastructure (VPN etc.)” is apparently often more efficient from home than in the office.

Another rookie describes their home-working experience: “At first, I missed the engagement in the office however, most colleagues make an effort to go into the office once a week and the flexible nature of the way the company works means I can work when it suits me, which enables me to go to medical appointments/ the gym throughout the day and then work earlier in the mornings or later in the evenings.”

Those in the office send mixed feedback depending on which location they’re operating out of. It’s not quite rooftop swimming pools, but the firm’s newer hubs are all said to be “modern and impressive”. Others, particularly those in the south, are “pretty outdated and tired” with a handful of trainees finding issues with the “air conditioning”. “Little things like decent coffee and office facilities” are also notably missing in some of the older offices. On the bright side, we’re hearing rumours that those in London can expect a move soon and the firm’s Newcastle arm has also recently moved into a newly refurbed pad.

Efforts to make the place more eco-friendly are similarly site-dependent but one insider tells us there’s an “environmental society” on the case.

Insider Scorecard

A
Training
A*
Quality of work
A
Peer support
A
Partner approach-ability
A
Work/life balance
C
Legal tech
C
Perks
B
Office
B
Social life
B
Eco-friendliness

Insider Scorecard Grades range from A* to D and are derived from the Legal Cheek Trainee and Junior Lawyer Survey 2024-25 of over 2,000 trainees and junior associates at the leading law firms in the UK.

Money

First year trainee salary £43,000
Second year trainee salary £45,000
Newly qualified salary £76,000
Profit per equity partner £571,000
PGDL grant £10,000
SQE grant £10,000

The above figures are for London, where NQ salaries range from £58,000 to £76,000 depending on the business area. Outside of London, first year trainees earn £31,000, rising to £33,000 in their second year, and between £44,000 and £55,000 upon qualification.

For the PGDL grant, Irwin Mitchell offers £,1000 per month of full-time study.

Hours

Average start work time 08:35
Average finish time 17:51
Annual target hours 953
Annual leave 25 days

Average arrive and leave times are derived from the Legal Cheek Trainee and Junior Lawyer Survey 2024-25 of over 2,000 trainees and junior associates at the leading law firms in the UK.

Secondments

Chances of secondment abroad 0%
Chances of client secondment 1%

Secondment probabilities are derived from the Legal Cheek Trainee and Junior Lawyer Survey 2024-25 of over 2,000 trainees and junior associates at the leading law firms in the UK.

General Info

Training contracts 50
Latest trainee retention rate 84%
Offices 18
Countries 1
Minimum A-level requirement No minimum
Minimum degree requirement No minimum

Diversity

UK female associates 77%
UK female partners 57%
UK BME associates 8%
UK BME partners 8%

Universities Current Trainees Attended

The Firm In Its Own Words