Young lawyers face burnout as legal sector’s long hours culture bites, report finds

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By Legal Cheek on

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LawCare calls for urgent change


Young lawyers are facing the highest risk of burnout and the lowest levels of wellbeing across the profession, according to new research.

The Life in the Law 2025 report by charity LawCare, based on survey responses from more than 1,500 people working in the legal sector, found that those aged 26–35 scored lowest for mental wellbeing and highest for burnout. Overall, nearly 60% of lawyers reported poor mental wellbeing, while half said they experienced anxiety often, very often or all of the time in the past year.

The findings highlight the profession’s entrenched culture of overwork. Almost eight in ten respondents (78.7%) said they regularly put in hours beyond their contracts, with nearly one in ten working more than 21 extra hours each week.

This follows Legal Cheek’s exclusive research on the average start and finish times of lawyers at over 100 leading firms. The data revealed that while some lawyers’ schedules broadly align with a standard 9–5 day, others — particularly at the highest-paying firm — often see their working days stretch to 12+ hours.

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LawCare researchers also heard from many lawyers who are struggling. One law firm partner admitted, “Work has nearly broken me physically and mentally.” A junior barrister echoed this sentiment, saying, “It is unsustainable. My work is slowly killing me.”

The survey also found widespread concerns over workplace culture. Nearly a fifth of respondents (19.5%) said they had experienced bullying, harassment or discrimination in the past 12 months, most often from line managers or supervisors. Levels of psychological safety, or how safe people feel to raise concerns and ideas, also fell in the lower half of the scale.

Retention is a growing concern, with more than half of respondents (56.2%) saying they could see themselves leaving their current workplace within the next five years, and almost a third (32.1%) considering leaving the profession altogether.

LawCare wants urgent change. Its recommendations include tackling heavy workloads, giving managers proper training, embedding flexible working and reforming legal education so newcomers are ready for the realities of the job.

“The legal sector is at a turning point,” the report states. “Our research highlights that people in the sector are facing significant strain, raising urgent questions about its long-term sustainability. Unless decisive action is taken now, the profession risks losing people, further erosion of mental health and wellbeing and reduced public trust and confidence.”

Struggling with the stress of work? Contact LawCare via its helpline or live chat.

6 Comments

Scounsel

Barristers work the longest, especially in publicly funded work.

In court every day.

Prep every evening and most weekends.

Longest of all is in-house barristers for defence firms.

In court all day, prep all evening and the prospect of being called out to a Police station at 3am before going to court the next morning.

Deadlock Daniels

We need regulation and enforcement. Nobody should be legally allowed to bill over 1,600 hours in a year. Make it a sanctionable offence to emply a fee earner that exceeds this. It would result in better quality of work, client care, and wellbeing in the industry. Pay would of course take a hit across the board, but that would be a necessary evil.

Bubbles Wardrobeson

Pull up your big pants and get a grip. Wimpy millennials.

Amy

Boomers have ruined it all for us. Young people nowdays have additional challenges with the inflated costs of everything.

LPC tutor

This was an issue when I was in practice in the 1990s – lots of lawyers of my generation left because of it, it’s nothing to do with wimpy millennials.
When I was 5 and a half years qualified, I still liked law but didn’t want to devote such a huge proportion of my waking hours to commercial lit and all its grinding demands, so I took a sideways move into legal training at what was then the College of Law now ULaw. Fantastically brainy colleagues, fun, not bad pay outside London, for the hours (9-6). It’s interesting to see what my LSF cohort are doing – I’d say fewer than half stayed in private practice. Because of the hours.

Observant Partner

This is true

Handling people problems is tiring and will affect your mind and mental health, coz you’re absorbing their problems

And don’t expect any sleep if you’re having a trial tomorrow, you’ll wake up all night till the trial is over

One of my friend is already crazy, but on the outside, she seems fine. But she’s always on medication, on her rant and media posts, you can hint imbalance and madness, but her friends keep quiet

With technology, handphone and laptop, the jobs are increasing and clients are incessantly asking questions around the clock

As if the lawyers aren’t human, they’ll only stop after the lawyers are dead or cease practicing…

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