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Oxbridge 15x More Likely Top Pupillage Awards Bar Reveals

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Summary

Bar Council published its fifth annual pupil survey, revealing that graduates from Oxbridge universities are 15 times more likely to receive financial awards of £60,000 or more compared to pupils from other universities. The survey found stark disparities between publicly funded areas (8% receiving top awards) and privately funded chambers such as chancery and commercial (46% receiving top awards), with the median award falling in the £40,000-£49,000 bracket.

Published by Law Gazette on lawgazette.co.uk . Detected, standardized, and enriched by GovPing. Review our methodology and editorial standards .

What changed

The Bar Council's fifth annual pupil survey is the first to include questions about university education, revealing significant disparities in pupillage award levels based on institutional background. Oxbridge graduates comprised 30% of respondents but were 15 times more likely to obtain awards of £60,000 or more, while pupils in publicly funded areas such as crime and family were far less likely to receive high awards compared to those in commercial chambers.

Affected parties include pupillage applicants, chambers, and the Bar Standards Board. The findings highlight systemic advantages for graduates from elite universities and signal areas requiring intervention, particularly regarding the experiences of disabled and neurodivergent pupils, where 30% reported negative experiences compared to 13% of non-disabled respondents. Chambers should review award-setting practices and inclusion policies in light of these disparities.

What to do next

  1. Monitor for Bar Standards Board updates on minimum pupillage award rates
  2. Review chambers diversity and inclusion practices in light of disability discrimination findings
  3. Track progress on bullying and harassment reduction initiatives

Archived snapshot

Apr 10, 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.

- 19 Comments

Bar pupils who attended Oxbridge are 15 times more likely than others to obtain financial awards of £60,000 or more, according to the Bar Council’s latest pupil survey which asked about university education for the first time.

The fifth survey, published today, also reveals that 8% of pupils working in publicly funded areas, such as crime and family, received awards above £60,000 compared with 46% of pupils working in other areas.

Chambers and employers set their own awards when they advertise pupillages, just as law firms do with training contracts. Privately funded chambers, such as chancery and commercial, typically set higher awards.

The minimum award is set by the Bar Standards Board and guided by the Living Wage Foundation. The minimum pupillage award for 2026 is £25,863 for 12-month pupillages in London and £23,504 for pupillages outside London.

The median pupil award for this year’s respondents fell in the £40,000-£49,000 bracket. Last year, it fell in the £30,000-£39,000 bracket.

The survey was sent to 472 pupils and attracted 143 responses. Three in 10 respondents attended Oxbridge, 35% attended a Russell Group university, 11% went to other ‘research-intensive’ universities and 23% went to another institution. Four respondents attended university overseas.

Read more

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Eight in 10 respondents said their overall experience of pupillage had been positive. However, three in 10 pupils with disabilities were negative about their pupillage compared with 13% of pupils without a disability. While 77% of pupils were satisfied with their induction, pupils identifying as neurodivergent were twice as likely to say they were unsatisfied or neutral about theirs.

Bar chair Kirsty Brimelow KC said: ‘One focus of mine is improving access to practice for barristers with disabilities, seen and unseen, and those who are neurodivergent. We recently published a new neurodiversity guide with advice for chambers and pupils, and we will continue to work closely with chambers using the findings of this and previous surveys, to ensure that our pupils have a strong and positive a start at the bar.’

Brimelow: Focus on barristers with disabilities

Fewer pupils reported experiencing or witnessing bullying, harassment or discrimination - 18% this year compared with 28% last year. However, Brimelow said there was no place for bullying and harassment at the bar and she was determined to work with the bar’s commissioner for conduct, Dame Maria Miller, to stamp it out.

- 19 Comments

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Last updated

Classification

Agency
Law Gazette
Instrument
Notice
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Minor

Who this affects

Applies to
Legal professionals Employers
Industry sector
5411 Legal Services
Activity scope
Pupillage awards Diversity monitoring Workplace discrimination
Geographic scope
United Kingdom GB

Taxonomy

Primary area
Employment & Labor
Operational domain
Compliance
Topics
Civil Rights

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