Private equity reshapes UK law firm governance

By Solicitors Journal Editorial
External capital is transforming UK law firm governance, financing structures and regulatory risk management.
Private equity and other external capital sources are reshaping how many UK law firms are governed, financed and managed. The post Legal Services Act market permits corporate ownership models, including Alternative Business Structures, that can accommodate non lawyer capital and control.
The data points to structural change rather than episodic headline deals. The Solicitors Regulation Authority reports that, as at 31 October 2024, 1,257 of the 9,147 firms it regulated held an ABS licence, representing 14 per cent of the regulated population. This is up from 791 firms, or 8 per cent, in 2017 to 2018. Incorporated companies account for most ABS licensed firms, 954 of 1,257, followed by LLPs at 255.
Investor appetite has also been documented by market analysts. The Strategy and PwC UK Legal Services Market Report Summer 2025 describes a significant acceleration in investment and links it to the post liberalisation influx of private capital, technology investment needs including AI, and consolidation opportunities.
For practitioner readership, the centre of gravity is no longer whether private equity can own law firms. It is what private equity does to the capital stack and the control system of a regulated professional business. Private equity tends to introduce a board driven governance model with formal reserved matters, time bound value creation and exit logic, often five to six years for UK buyouts in aggregate, and financial instruments such as leverage, preference instruments, shareholder loans, earn outs and continuation vehicles that are unfamiliar to traditional partnership economics.
Regulation is not a mere background condition. It is a deal term. SRA rules require approval for owners and certain managers, and impose notification and approval obligations around material interests, with explicit warnings about legal obligations and potential criminal offence for non notification. This pushes sophisticated buyers towards deal structures that front load regulatory diligence, use holdco opco layers to manage control, and sometimes acquire adjacent unregulated service providers where possible.
Risk also re prices. The SRA mandatory professional indemnity insurance regime, including the Minimum Terms and Conditions, creates a floor of client protection but also a hard constraint that interacts with corporatisation. Recent appellate decisions on interpretation of the MTC, including dishonesty condonation and aggregation, show why capital providers and their lender and insurer counterparts focus closely on governance, controls and knowledge attribution.
The likely litigation and regulatory flashpoints over the next cycle are less about private equity ownership as such and more about conflicts and own interest risk in corporate groups, supervision and reserved activities, highlighted by the conduct of litigation shock after Mazur, and financial resilience and consumer redress if a leveraged or acquisitive group faces claims spikes, regulatory interventions or refinancing stress.
ABS evolution and why investors care about law firm capital stacks
ABS licensing has grown steadily and is now a meaningful minority of the regulated market. The SRA authorisation annual data shows ABS licensed firms increasing from 791 in 2017 to 2018 to 1,257 in 2023 to 2024, while the overall number of regulated firms declined over the same period from 10,407 to 9,147. This is consistent with a market narrative of gradual corporatisation alongside consolidation, with fewer firms but greater scale.
The SRA regulated community monthly statistics also point to a large base of incorporated entities among regulated firms. In January 2026 there were 5,186 incorporated companies out of 8,940 total head offices in the dataset. This legal form backdrop is compatible with external equity and debt.
The Legal Services Board presents ABS as an innovation enabling structure. In its 2023 to 2024 annual report it notes that ABS firms were over twice as likely to have innovated within the last three years compared with traditional structures, based on its technology and innovation survey. It also records continued growth in licences issued, with the SRA being the largest licensing authority by volume.
Investor theses described in mainstream market reports are therefore not purely financial. They are built on the premise that corporatised entities can retain and reinvest profits, fund technology and marketing at scale, and run buy and build consolidation strategies across fragmented regional and consumer segments. The Strategy and PwC report ties liberalisation to private capital inflows and frames capital as enabling consolidation and longer horizon investment.
The deal record since 2020 shows multiple capital archetypes entering legal services. These include classic private equity buyouts, minority growth equity, legal finance minority stakes and public to private transactions. Examples with public source support include the minority investment by Burford Capital in PCB Litigation in July 2020 and the 2023 take private of DWF Group plc by Inflexion Private Equity Partners via a scheme of arrangement.
For solicitors, external capital is no longer exotic. The practical question is which firms can absorb it without breaking core professional constraints, including independence, conflicts management, client money discipline and supervision, and without creating an undeliverable equity story.
Timeline of notable ABS and private equity milestones
The following milestones synthesise SRA authorisation data, documented public transactions and regulator commentary.
2012
First wave of ABS licensing begins in practice following Legal Services Act liberalisation.
2015
Gateley style public market models demonstrate listed law firm feasibility.
2019
SRA Standards and Regulations replace the SRA Handbook, moving towards a more outcomes focused compliance framework.
2020
Burford Capital takes a minority equity stake in PCB Litigation, illustrating external equity via legal finance.
2021
Phoenix Equity Partners invests in Setfords. Sun Capital acquires Fletchers, marking a platform buyout.
2022
Blixt backed Lawfront accelerates regional buy and build, including the acquisition of Farleys.
2023
Inflexion completes the take private of DWF via a court sanctioned scheme of arrangement, followed by delisting from public markets.
2024
Investcorp acquires Stowe Family Law from Livingbridge, continuing the private equity ownership cycle.
2025
High Court decision in Mazur clarifies that conduct of litigation cannot be delegated under supervision to unauthorised staff.
2026
Continuation fund transaction extends private equity ownership of Fletchers beyond its initial fund lifecycle.
These milestones show that private capital in legal services has moved from experimentation to institutionalisation.
Governance consequences of private equity capital in a regulated firm
The governance shift is best understood as a movement from partner centric constitutionalism to board centric corporate control. In the partnership model, authority is diffused across partners, often through management committees and partner votes. In the corporate model, authority concentrates in a board of directors supported by sub committees, formal reporting and investor veto rights.
The Strategy and PwC report describes corporate models becoming more diverse and sophisticated, adding competitive pressure to classic LLP economics. In an investor owned ABS or corporate group containing an authorised entity, the structural tension lies between fiduciary duties owed within the corporate vehicle and professional obligations owed to clients, the court and the regulator.
The SRA Principles apply across authorised firms and, for licensed bodies, to those involved in delivering regulated services under the terms of the licence. This dual discipline makes board composition and information rights legally significant. Investor nominated directors and observers must operate within a framework that cannot override independence, conflicts rules and duties to act in each client’s best interests.
For private equity backed firms, board composition commonly broadens. Management partners remain, but investors typically seek board seats, observer rights and formal reserved matters covering budget approval, leverage limits, acquisition approvals, partner remuneration frameworks and appointment or removal of key officers. This is common in other sectors. The legal sector twist is that control cannot lawfully or ethically trump professional obligations.
The control system also becomes more document driven. Public to private transactions illustrate the mechanics. The acquisition of DWF by Aquila Bidco Limited was implemented by a court sanctioned scheme and included detailed financing mechanics and investor commitments in the scheme documentation. This is a concrete example of how legal businesses become financing grade assets subject to the discipline of corporate finance.
Conflicts governance is one of the most acute professional issues. SRA conflicts guidance defines an own interest conflict as a situation where the duty to act in the best interests of clients conflicts, or significantly risks conflict, with the firm’s own interests. In external capital structures, the firm’s own interests include shareholder value, debt covenants, earn out targets and cross sell plans. Conflicts analysis therefore becomes more complex than a file opening exercise.
Governance implications also flow through to indemnity and liability. The more corporate and multi entity the group becomes, the more likely it is that disputes will turn on knowledge, condonation, aggregation and attribution across directors and members. These issues are now litigated in the professional indemnity space in ways that matter directly to investor diligence.
Regulatory arbitrage, ABS oversight and where gaps persist
The regulatory system permits external ownership but conditions it. SRA guidance emphasises that owners of authorised bodies must be approved and that material interest concepts draw from statutory definitions. The regulator flags notification obligations and the possibility of criminal offence if relevant notifications are not made.
This creates incentives for regulatory arbitrage. Sophisticated buyers look for structures that capture economic value while reducing friction from role holder approvals, suitability assessments and ongoing compliance burdens. The SRA authorisation framework makes clear that non authorised individuals must be brought into the approval process when they occupy certain ownership or management positions.
A second arbitrage vector lies at the boundary between reserved legal activities and broader unreserved or legal adjacent services. The Law Society practice note on solicitors delivering services from unregulated entities recognises that the post 2019 Standards and Regulations permit solicitors to deliver non reserved legal services to the public from businesses not regulated by a legal services regulator, subject to risk management and client communication obligations.
This boundary is commercially significant. In February 2026 reporting noted that Higgs LLP, backed by August Equity, acquired a Scottish business described as not a regulated law firm. This illustrates how legal groups can expand into unregulated delivery units alongside regulated practice, potentially changing the risk profile and regulatory touchpoints.
Oversight gaps are also visible in the conduct of litigation shock following Mazur and Stuart v Charles Russell Speechlys LLP. The decision clarified that litigation conduct is a reserved activity and that unauthorised staff cannot borrow authorisation merely by being employed and supervised. Firms were forced to re examine operating models built around paralegal execution of litigation steps.
For private equity owned platforms this has economic implications. A model reliant on leveraged staffing pyramids faces margin compression if reserved steps must be reallocated to authorised personnel. The market response, including training, workflow redesign, supervision protocols and technology tooling, feeds directly into valuation narratives used in buyouts and refinancing.
At system level, the Legal Services Board reinforces that ABS exists to widen participation and enable new business models, but it also evaluates regulator performance and highlights areas of concern requiring action. This informs debate on whether ABS oversight is sufficiently resourced and harmonised.
Deal mechanics, exits and financing structures beyond private equity
Private equity does not buy a partnership share in the traditional sense. It buys equity and control rights in or around a licensed body, typically through a corporate group where the law firm operates as an operating company or LLP and investor capital sits at holdco level.
The DWF take private illustrates the archetype. The acquisition vehicle used a scheme of arrangement, with shareholder elections into loan notes and preference instruments and explicit equity commitment letters. The documentation revealed the financing plumbing that underpins a legal business as an investable asset.
Minority investments are also common where founders seek capital but resist full control transfer. Phoenix Equity Partners invested in Setfords Law Ltd alongside founders, with Business Growth Fund exiting as part of the transaction. Such structures combine growth capital with enhanced governance and reporting without a full change of control.
Exit pressure is structural rather than incidental. UK industry reporting by the British Private Equity and Venture Capital Association indicates that average holding periods increased in 2023, with buyout investments averaging about six years. Older materials describe a traditional three to five year expectation.
That timing imperative can collide with professional services realities, including long term client relationships, gradual brand building and claims tail risk. One response is the continuation fund mechanism, where a new vehicle acquires the asset from an older fund nearing end of life. In February 2026 legal sector reporting described a continuation fund transaction extending private equity ownership of Fletchers for another four to five years.
Public materials sometimes reveal performance metrics relevant to the financialisation debate. Investcorp’s announcement of its September 2024 acquisition of Stowe Family Law stated that Stowe operated from around 90 locations, had nearly 400 staff supporting about 5,000 clients a year, and reported annual turnover over 37 million pounds for the year ending March 2024. Reporting on Fletchers in 2026 claimed that EBITDA had grown materially over a four year period, supported by add on acquisitions. Investor announcements regarding Setfords described platform scale and growth statistics.
Financing extends beyond private equity equity. Senior debt and acquisition facilities feature in public take private documentation, including references to facilities used to fund annual professional indemnity premiums. Bank facilities at operating firm level are visible through registered charges and filings. Minority equity from legal finance providers, exemplified by Burford’s investment in PCB Litigation, provides cash injection without operational control. Holdco and special purpose vehicle layering is used to manage regulatory approvals, lender security and investor rights while maintaining SRA compliance.
For practitioners, the capital structure conversation is about risk allocation. Who bears risk when things go wrong. Clients, partners and employees, investors, lenders and insurers all sit in a contractual hierarchy shaped by deal documents and regulatory constraints.
Culture, independence, insurance and competition effects
The cultural shift is visible in remuneration and career progression. External equity introduces equity dilution, deferred consideration, management incentive plans and retention packages. These can feel alien to lockstep partnerships.
The Strategy and PwC report frames partnership economics and operating models as under review, with corporatised models growing faster and drawing investor interest. Independence questions turn on professional principles. The SRA Principles require acting with independence and in each client’s best interests. Conflicts guidance prohibits acting where an own interest conflict exists or there is a significant risk of one. These standards apply regardless of ownership model.
Client perception also matters. Even if governance is compliant, the expectation that private equity will push for volume growth and margin enhancement can interact with trust and reputation, particularly in consumer and claims markets. Legal Services Board research suggests that consumer facing segments are where innovation and new models have had the greatest impact.
Professional indemnity insurance is central to the investable model. The SRA Indemnity Insurance Rules require authorised bodies to maintain insurance meeting the Minimum Terms and Conditions. Recent appellate decisions illustrate why governance and knowledge attribution matter. In Axis Specialty Europe SE v Discovery Land Company LLC the Court of Appeal considered condonation under the dishonesty exclusion and aggregation issues. In Royal and Sun Alliance Insurance Ltd v Tughans coverage litigation addressed whether compulsory professional indemnity responded to claims involving repayment of fees.
Insurers have issued operational guidance in response to Mazur, emphasising that conduct of litigation is reserved and that it is a criminal offence for unauthorised persons to conduct litigation. For high volume litigation platforms this has direct operational and underwriting consequences.
Private equity ownership also increases the salience of directors and officers insurance. Investor nominated directors and independent directors expand potential claimant classes and liability exposures. Coordination between professional indemnity and D and O cover becomes part of governance design.
Competition and market structure
The macro effect of external capital is further consolidation and a shift towards branded platforms, especially in regional full service and volume consumer segments. This aligns with declining firm counts in SRA data alongside rising ABS penetration.
Whether this improves access, quality and resilience or creates systemic risks remains an open policy question. The Legal Services Board frames ABS as enabling different structures to meet legal needs and promote competition. The counter case is that private equity incentives may prioritise profitable segments unless policy corrects for market failures.
What next for practitioners and regulators
Four policy levers appear plausible.
First, enhanced transparency of ownership and control. As ABS penetration rises, stakeholders may seek clearer disclosure of beneficial ownership, investor rights and group structures.
Second, tighter supervision of reserved activities. The Mazur fallout suggests more formal guidance and enforcement attention on who conducts reserved steps and how supervision is evidenced.
Third, financial resilience expectations. The combination of leverage and claims tail risk may prompt debate about prudential style requirements for large consumer platforms.
Fourth, cross regulator coordination. As groups span regulated and unregulated entities and multiple regulators, coherent supervisory approaches will be necessary.
For solicitors, the practical question is not whether private equity is coming. It is how governance, compliance and risk frameworks adapt so that professional principles remain intact within increasingly financialised capital structures. The investable law firm must still be a regulated law firm. The tension between those two descriptions will define the next phase of market evolution.

