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Clients Expect Weekly Updates and Same-Day Responses from Lawyers

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Summary

A Law Firm Marketing Club survey of 642 UK consumers found that 88% of clients expect their lawyers to provide updates at least weekly, while 83% expect same-day responses to queries. Two-thirds expect 24/7 access to their firm, and 59% want online chat functionality. Researchers noted that younger clients rated digital communication options more highly than older respondents. Price was identified as the main source of friction in client relationships, with researchers recommending clearer pricing and better communication to bridge expectations gaps.

Published by Legal Futures on legalfutures.co.uk . Detected, standardized, and enriched by GovPing. Review our methodology and editorial standards .

What changed

The Law Firm Marketing Club published research findings on client expectations from law firms. The survey found that 88% of 642 UK consumers cited weekly updates as an important expectation, 83% expected same-day responses, and 67% expected 24/7 access to their firm. Younger respondents rated digital communication tools more favourably than older respondents. Nine out of ten clients expressed willingness to use their law firm again.

For law firms, the research highlights a gap between client expectations and actual service delivery, particularly around pricing transparency and digital communication. Firms seeking client loyalty may need to review their communication protocols, pricing clarity, and digital service offerings. The research identified that firms treating each new matter as the start of a long-term relationship were more likely to see repeat business.

Archived snapshot

Apr 21, 2026

GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.

Clients expect lawyers to give them “at least weekly updates”

20 April 2026 Posted by Nick Hilborne

Suit: Clients expect their lawyers to be smartly dressed

The vast majority of clients expect their lawyers to update them “at least” weekly and also provide same-day responses to queries, research have found.

Law firms met clients’ expectations on service – although younger clients were less easily impressed – but much less so when it came to price.

When asked about their ‘vital’ and ‘preferable’ expectations from their lawyer or law firm, 88% of clients cited “at least weekly updates about my matter”, with 83% expecting “same-day responses” to their queries.

Two-thirds expected to be able “to speak to someone 24/7”, while 59% wanted online chat on the firm’s website.

Just over half (52%) expected their lawyer to be dressed formally, such as by wearing a suit.

Researchers said younger respondents “rated the options of online chat and 24/7 access to the firm as more important than older respondents”.

The Law Firm Marketing Club report, What do clients want, need and expect 2026?, was based on responses from 642 consumers across the UK, three-quarters of whom had sought advice only on personal matters and the rest of business affairs.

When it came to delivering on expectations, they were most likely to rate lawyers as ‘superb’ or ‘very good’ when it came to service, especially those aged over 45.

The age gap was most obvious when it came to communication, with 70% of 18-29 year-olds rating it as ‘superb’ or ‘very good’, compared to 91% of those aged over 60.

Researchers commented: “Price is the main source of friction in client relationships, but clearer pricing and better communication can help close the gap.”

Nine out of 10 clients were willing to use their law firm again, but only 56% had actually gone back.

“The firms that approach new matters as being the start of a long-term client relationship will see more loyalty from their clients and repeat business,” the study said.

Whether clients regarded their law firm’s approach to diversity and sustainability as important depended on the client – those seeking business advice saw both, particularly sustainability, as significantly more important than those with personal matters.

Laura Lack, community manager of the Law Firm Marketing Club, said: “What stands out in this research is that client expectations haven’t dramatically changed, but they have become clearer.

“Clients want to be kept informed, to receive timely responses, and to feel confident they understand what’s happening with their matter at every stage.

“The difference lies in how those expectations are delivered. Younger clients increasingly see digital access, online communication and round-the-clock availability as part of the standard experience, while older clients continue to prioritise direct contact and human reassurance.

“For law firms, the challenge is striking the right balance. It’s about being proactive in communication, using digital tools where they add value, and setting clear expectations around availability so clients feel supported without creating unsustainable demands on teams.”

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Last updated

Classification

Agency
Legal Futures
Published
April 20th, 2026
Instrument
Notice
Branch
Executive
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Minor

Who this affects

Applies to
Legal professionals
Industry sector
5411 Legal Services
Activity scope
Client communications Legal services marketing Professional standards
Geographic scope
United Kingdom GB

Taxonomy

Primary area
Financial Services
Operational domain
Legal
Topics
Consumer Protection Employment & Labor

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