ABS countdown | Why did the SRA want to bring its fining powers more in line with the SDT?

Stuart Bushell explores a number of possible explanations for the SRA's desire to bring its fining powers more in line with those of the Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal
Whatever your point of view, it is difficult to find any logical sense in the current situation regarding the fines to which solicitors could be subject under the present, slightly disjointed, regulatory system.
Theoretically, depending upon your corporate structure and how the Solicitors Regulation Authority (SRA) views your regulatory transgressions, you could be subject to different processes with maximum fines of £2,000, £250m or an unlimited amount. Please form an orderly queue in front of the one you would prefer.
The SRA has announced, in a new consultation paper, that it is currently in discussions with the Ministry of Justice (MoJ) as to what increases might be made in the SRA’s fining powers for “traditional” (non-ABS) firms of solicitors. This is a little surprising since it was only in October 2012 that the MoJ rejected the SRA’s application to increase the amount it can fine such firms from £2,000 to what is likely to be a purely theoretical maximum of £250m. So why is the SRA so desperate to change the current regime and why does it apply in such an uneven fashion in the first place? The knee-jerk assumption that the SRA would stand to benefit financially would not be justified, since all fines are paid to the Treasury.
Since March 2012 the SRA has regulated two categories of law firm – traditional and ABS. The regulator has made no secret of the fact that it would like to have a level playing field between the two, but fining powers have been an exception. Traditional firms can be fined up to £2,000 by the SRA, but if it considers a weightier penalty more appropriate it can refer the case to the Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal (SDT), which has unlimited fining powers. Where ABSs are concerned, the Legal Services Act permits the SRA to impose fines of up to £250m for firms and £50m for individuals, the thinking being that ABSs may have non-lawyer owners or managers which are part of much bigger entities with the potential for misdemeanours of much greater magnitude.
Three-step process
Both the SDT and the Law Society opposed the SRA attempt to “equalize” the two separate systems and the MoJ agreed last October, but the new SRA consultation paper seeks to justify equalisation on the plausible basis that this would improve the consistency, fairness and transparency of decision making and “assist decision makers to determine specific figures”.
The regulator has proposed a three-step process for the determination of fines, which would take account of the nature and impact of the conduct, mitigating factors, and the profit or gain which might have been made as a result of the misconduct. The regulator also argues that for firms of “greater means”, fines might be calculated by reference to profit or, perhaps more suitably, as a percentage of turnover or the excess of domestic turnover over a defined threshold. So, assuming a five per cent basis of calculation, a firm with a turnover of £2m could in extreme circumstances be facing a fine of £100,000; and the relatively small number of firms with turnover of £100m, could be facing fines of up to £5m.

.jpg&w=3840&q=60)


![Re Beth [2026] EWFC 156 (B): Family Court identifies perpetrator of non-accidental injuries in infant fact-finding proceedings](/_next/image?url=https%3A%2F%2Fimages.iicj.net%2Farticle%2Ffeature%2FSwindon_%2C_The_Law_Courts_.jpg&w=3840&q=60)
![The Local Authority v The Mother [2026] EWFC 166 (B): Resolutions assessment refused and special guardianship order made in non-accidental injury proceedings](/_next/image?url=https%3A%2F%2Fimages.iicj.net%2Farticle%2Ffeature%2FThe_Royal_Courts_of_Justice_-_geograph.org.uk_-_2952836.jpg&w=3840&q=60)








