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Legal For UK solicitors · £999 + £99/mo

A website for UK law firms.

For SRA-regulated firms that want a credible front door, SRA Transparency Rules built in, and fee-earner bios that prove the credentials — not a templated brochure with a stock gavel photo. £999 to build, £99 a month to look after.

Built by the operators behind
Build
£999

One-off, all-in. Brief, design, build, copy assist, deploy. No discovery fee, no design-phase upcharge, no surprise add-on.

Run
£99 / mo

Hosting, monitoring, security, backups and every small content / copy / image change. No hourly billing on changes.

Compliance, included
SRA-rules ready

SRA Transparency Rules pricing pages, SRA digital badge, Legal Ombudsman complaints procedure, AML-aware lead routing — built in, not billed as a separate engagement.

Brief us
Why this shape

A law-firm site is a regulated document that books work.

Most UK law-firm sites we audit are doing two jobs badly at once: they’re trying to look credible (stock gavel, mahogany desk, "established in 1987") and they’re trying to comply with the SRA Transparency Rules (vague price tables that miss the disbursements, no fee-earner experience listed, complaints procedure two clicks away). Clients judge competence by how the site handles those rules. If the conveyancing price page is hand-waving, they assume the matter will be hand-waving too.

We build law-firm sites the other way round: the SRA badge, the transparency pricing, the fee-earner bios and the complaints route are the load-bearing structure, and the marketing wraps around them. Same operator team that runs Homemove, home.co.uk and homedata.co.uk — we’ve dealt with regulated data, audit-grade record-keeping and integration plumbing since 2023. The £99 / month is what keeps the SRA-mandated information accurate as fees, fee-earners and panel memberships change.

What a law-firm site needs

Six things we build into every law-firm site.

SRA badge + verifiable ID

Firm SRA registration number in the footer credibility strip, plus the SRA digital badge that links straight to the SRA register entry for the firm. A curious prospect can verify the firm’s regulated status in one click — and search engines understand the entity is regulated.

Practice areas in plain English

"Buying a house" rather than "Residential conveyancing." "Sorting out a will" rather than "Private client services." Each page maps to the underlying SRA service area, but the public copy reads like a sensible solicitor talking to a non-lawyer — because that’s who is reading it.

Fee-earner pages with credentials

Each solicitor / chartered legal executive / paralegal page carries SRA / CILEX roll number where applicable, qualifications, year of admission, specialisms (e.g. Court of Protection, EMI options, Schedule 11 trusts, Children Act), and a clean head-and-shoulders photograph. None of the "trusted advisor since 1987" stock paragraph.

Transparency Rules pricing

Dedicated pricing pages for each of the eight SRA-regulated service areas your firm practises in, with fees, fee-earner experience, key stages, likely disbursements and timescales. The format the SRA actually wants — not a vague "from £X plus VAT" disclaimer.

AML-aware enquiry routing

Public site captures matter type, parties and a short factual summary; the qualified enquiry routes into Verify365 / Thirdfort / Credas / SmartSearch / Armalytix so the fee-earner reviewing has context before any ID check is triggered. No documents collected on the public site.

Complaints procedure surfaced

A clear footer link to a complaints page covering the firm’s internal complaints procedure, the Legal Ombudsman details and time limits, and the SRA reporting route where relevant. Reasonably accessible by default — not buried behind three sub-menus.

SRA Transparency Rules

Eight service areas. Eight pricing pages, done properly.

Since December 2018 the SRA has required regulated firms to publish price information for these areas. Here is what the rules ask for, and what the site delivers by default.

Residential conveyancing
Total fee, fee-earner experience, key stages, disbursements (incl. SDLT, search fees, Land Registry), timescales.
Sliding scale by purchase price, fixed disbursement schedule, leasehold supplement, named fee-earner and their experience, "typical 8–12 weeks" timescale framing.
Probate (uncontested, UK estates)
Fee basis (fixed or hourly), fee-earner experience, key stages, likely disbursements (Probate Court, swearing fees, statutory advertisements), timescales.
Banded fixed-fee table by estate value, hourly-rate fallback for complex cases, full disbursement schedule, "typical 9–12 months" framing with the IHT400 caveat.
Immigration (excluding asylum)
Total fee for the service, fee-earner experience, key stages, disbursements (Home Office application fees, IHS), timescales.
Per-route pricing (visa extensions, ILR, naturalisation, dependant applications), Home Office fee linked from the relevant gov.uk page, fee-earner panel.
Motoring offences (summary)
Total fee, fee-earner experience, key stages of the case, likely disbursements (court fees), timescales.
Fixed fees by offence type (speeding, drink-drive, totting up), brief stages-of-case explainer, court fee schedule, "first hearing to outcome" timing.
Employment tribunal claims
Total fee or hourly rate, fee-earner experience, key stages, disbursements (counsel’s fees), timescales.
Banded fees by claim complexity (unfair dismissal, discrimination, whistleblowing), fee-earner specialism, "typical 6–12 months" framing, counsel’s-fees note.
Debt recovery up to £100k
Total fee or hourly rate, fee-earner experience, key stages (pre-action, claim, enforcement), disbursements, timescales.
Banded fees by debt size and contested-status, court issue fee schedule by claim band, enforcement-route options, fee-earner specialism.
Licensing applications (business premises)
Total fee, fee-earner experience, key stages, disbursements (council fees), timescales.
Fixed fees by application type (new premises licence, variation, TEN), council application fee linked, fee-earner specialism, "typical 4–8 weeks" framing.
Immigration appeals (FTT)
Total fee, fee-earner experience, key stages, disbursements (FTT fees, counsel), timescales.
Banded fees by appeal complexity, FTT fee schedule, counsel’s-fees note, "typical 6–12 months to hearing" framing.

If your firm doesn’t practise in one of the eight areas, we omit it cleanly. If you do, the SRA rules are followed by default — and amended in the £99 / month whenever your fees or panel change.

How it works

Brief on Monday. Live by the end of the week.

01

Brief

Half-hour call with the managing / senior partner. Practice areas, fee-earner roster, AML provider, case-management system (LEAP, Clio, Actionstep, Quill, Osprey), any open SRA matters. One-page spec back the same day for the partners.

02

Build

Design, copy, build, SRA Transparency pricing pages, fee-earner bios with structured data, AML-aware lead routing, complaints page — across one working week. Staging URL by mid-week for a 15-minute partner-meeting review.

03

Run

£99 / month from launch. New fee-earner, panel membership, fee uplift, regulatory update, transparency-page refresh — email or WhatsApp it, we ship it. No hourly billing on edits.

Hundreds of unique website designs floating against a moonlit night sky — every one designed to its own brand, none templated.
Designed to spec

A million ways this could look. None of them templates.

Every site we build is designed to spec, branded for one client. No shared theme between brands. No component kit we recycle. Your site won’t look like anyone else’s because nobody else got your brief.

  • Designed to spec. Every page laid out fresh against your brief — not a pre-made template with your logo dropped in.
  • Branded to you. Typography, palette, motion language and component shape all chosen for this brand, not a previous client’s.
  • Yours forever. Code lives in a git repo that is yours from day one. No platform lock-in, no proprietary CMS, no exit fee.
FAQ

The partners’ questions.

Will the site display our SRA ID and the SRA digital badge correctly?

Yes. Firm-level SRA registration number and SRA digital badge (linking back to the SRA register so any visitor can verify the firm in one click) sit in the footer credibility strip on every page. Individual fee-earner pages carry each solicitor’s SRA roll number, year of admission, qualifications (LLB, LPC, SQE, LLM, or international equivalents), and practice areas. Rendered as plain text so a client can verify them, marked up as Person + LegalService structured data for search.

How do you handle the SRA Transparency Rules on pricing?

We build a dedicated pricing page for each of the eight regulated service areas that require it (residential conveyancing, probate, immigration excluding asylum, motoring offences, debt recovery up to £100k, employment tribunal claims, licensing applications and, for solicitors who do them, immigration appeals to the FTT). Each page carries fees, fee-earner experience, key stages, likely disbursements and timescales — in the format the SRA actually wants. If you don’t practise in one of the eight areas, we omit it cleanly; if you do, the rules are followed by default.

What about the Legal Ombudsman complaints procedure — does it have to be on every page?

The complaints procedure has to be reasonably accessible — in practice that means a clear footer link to a complaints page that covers your firm’s internal procedure, the Legal Ombudsman details and time limits, and (where relevant) the SRA reporting route. We include this by default; you don’t have to remember to ask for it.

Can the enquiry form integrate with Verify365 / Thirdfort / Credas / SmartSearch for AML?

Yes. The public site captures matter type, parties, and a short factual summary; the qualified enquiry routes into your AML provider (Verify365, Thirdfort, Credas, SmartSearch, Armalytix or similar) so the fee-earner reviewing has context before any ID check is triggered. We don’t collect ID documents on the public site — that stays inside the AML provider where it belongs.

Can practice areas be split by partner or by office?

Yes. Each fee-earner page lists their own practice areas and specialisms (e.g. private client doing wills + probate + Court of Protection; commercial property with retail and licensed-premises subspecialisms). Multi-office firms can show a per-office team and per-office contact details under one nav, one design system, one £99 / month — not three duplicated sites.

What if I want to take the site somewhere else later?

You can, any time. The code lives in a git repository that is yours from day one. Cancel the £99 / month with one month’s notice and we hand over the codebase, any AML / case-management integration credentials, and deployment instructions; another developer can take over from there. No exit fee, no stranded fee-earner pages, no platform you cannot leave.

A site that books the next matter.

Tell us about the firm, the practice areas and the AML provider you run on. If we’re a fit, we’ll come back inside 24 hours with a one-page spec.