In-House Training Contracts: What To Expect And How To Get One

What makes an in-house training contract different (by a current in-house trainee).

In-House Training Contracts: What To Expect And How To Get One
Get the newsletter that keeps lawyers ahead
Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.

In-house training contracts allow for a varied and unique training experience compared to the traditional private practice route.

While in-house TCs are still quite rare, they are increasing in number and popularity.

So, how do you even apply for a an in-house TC?

Where to apply

In-house TCs tend to be recruited on a needs basis, meaning they can be advertised at any point in the year. That said, some organisations like SSE and Sky run more regular cycles - usually once a year or every two years.

TCs can be advertised across several platforms - LinkedIn tends to be the most popular, along with company job boards. Other sources include your usual suspects (such as LawCareers.Net, and TargetJobs), specialist recruitment agencies and social media accounts like @InHouseLegal on Instagram.

The application process varies, too.

Most organisations go for the classic cover letter and CV combo, or use basic application questions (e.g. "Why train at X?" or "What are your strengths?"). While you’ll dodge the infamous Watson Glaser, some employers may use psychometric tests or reading/comprehension exercises to narrow down the pool.

Interviews are also varied - I’ve had some organisations use one final interview following a CV and cover letter review, or I’ve been on the other end of the spectrum where I went through a four-stage process (one of which was a practical/skills-based assessment).

How do you decide which TC is right for you?

No two in-house training contracts are alike. Two major factors are going to determine your TC: the size of your legal department and the industry the organisation operates in.

Larger departments often offer formal or semi-formal seat rotations, giving you more structured exposure to different areas. Smaller teams usually take on work as it comes in and are unlikely to have such a formal structure - but fret not, your supervisor will help make sure your training stays broad and balanced.

You’ll also need to consider contentious experience. If your in-house team doesn’t handle litigation, you’ll need to be seconded to a private practice firm to meet the SRA requirements.

The industry/sector your organisation is in will also determine a lot about your training. For example, training at a utilities company will look very different from a financial institution.

Most importantly, you need to consider your post-qualification options.

Are you keen to stay in the same sector? Or are you looking to nail down a specialist area like IP or litigation? Ideally, you want to undertake a TC that will give you a wide breadth of work across various areas of law, allowing you to decide what area of commercial law might be best suited for you in the long run.

What are in-house teams looking for in their trainees?

Each in-house team will have a different vision of their ideal trainee, but there are a few common themes.

In-house teams look for the usual soft skills like communication, collaboration and time management. While legal experience is a massive asset, don’t underestimate the value of non-legal work experience.

As with firms, what matters is your attitude and ability to learn. The whole point of your training contract is learning how to be a solicitor (a good one at that). You won’t be an expert in the sector the team is in, however, part of the journey is learning about the business AND about the industry.

Typical day-today

Your day-to-day activities will depend on your company’s needs and operations, from commercial needs, such as contract reviews to contentious matters, such as reviewing witness statements for civil litigation.

On my training contract, I’ve been handling a mix of non-contentious and contentious work for three different companies, including a bank specialising in vehicle financing, and a short-term and long-term vehicle rental business.

On a daily basis, I’m looking at commercial contracts for new and existing suppliers and supporting our operations department with escalated customer complaints or Financial Ombudsman inquiries, and providing ad-hoc legal advice to different departments of the business.

Future planning

A legal career in-house can provide a varied and fulfilling career with plenty of options.

You can follow the traditional route, moving seniority from legal counsel to general counsel or head of legal within the organisation. You can also take on specialist legal paths based on practice areas, such as IP, employment or litigation within the business.

If you're someone who prefers the off-the-beaten path, working in-house can open doors beyond traditional legal roles. It’s a great launchpad for pivoting into legal-adjacent careers like legal operations, compliance, or risk, where you can combine your legal training with business strategy and operational insight.

You may also step into roles such as company secretary, acting as the link between the board of directors and stakeholders.

If the corporate ladder doesn’t appeal, the legal tech boom has created new opportunities in the startup world, where lawyers are increasingly moving into product, policy or innovation roles.

And of course, there is always a triumphant return to private practice…..

Am I suited for in-house?

The beauty of in-house is the variety - every company of any size or industry needs legal advice, meaning there is a plethora of opportunities for where you can work, and the type of work you can take on.

So long as you’re open and commercially minded, your legal career can truly take you anywhere.

Law Firm
Trainee First Year
Trainee Second Year
Newly Qualified (NQ)
Addleshaw Goddard£52,000£56,000£100,000
Akin Gump£60,000£65,000£174,418
A&O Shearman£56,000£61,000£150,000
Ashurst£52,000£57,000£125,000
Baker McKenzie£56,000£61,000£140,000
Bird & Bird£47,000£52,000£98,000
Bristows£46,000£50,000£88,000
Bryan Cave Leighton Paisner£50,000£55,000£105,000
Burges Salmon£47,000£49,000£72,000
Charles Russell Speechlys£50,000£53,000£88,000
Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton£57,500£62,500£164,500
Clifford Chance£56,000£61,000£150,000
Clyde & Co£47,000£49,500£85,000
CMS£50,000£55,000£110,000
Cooley£55,000£60,000£157,000
Davis Polk £65,000£70,000£170,000
Debevoise £55,000£60,000£173,000
Dechert£55,000£61,000£165,000
Dentons£50,000£54,000£100,000
DLA Piper£50,000£55,000£110,000
Eversheds Sutherland£46,000£50,000£100,000
Farrer & Co£47,000£49,000£88,000
Fieldfisher£48,500£52,000£95,000
Freshfields£56,000£61,000£150,000
Fried Frank£55,000£60,000£175,000
Gibson Dunn£60,000£65,000£180,000
Goodwin Procter£55,000£60,000£175,000
Gowling WLG£48,500£53,500£98,000
Herbert Smith Freehills£56,000£61,000£135,000
HFW£50,000£54,000£100,000
Hill Dickinson£43,000£45,000£80,000
Hogan Lovells£56,000£61,000£135,000
Irwin Mitchell£43,000£45,000£76,000
Jones Day£56,000£65,000£160,000
K&L Gates£50,000£55,000£115,000
Kennedys£43,000£46,000£85,000
King & Spalding£55,000£60,000£165,000
Kirkland & Ellis£60,000£65,000£174,418
Latham & Watkins£60,000£65,000£174,418
Linklaters£56,000£61,000£150,000
Macfarlanes£56,000£61,000£140,000
Mayer Brown£55,000£60,000£135,000
McDermott Will & Emery£65,000£70,000£174,418
Milbank£65,000£70,000£174,418
Mills & Reeve£45,000£47,000£82,000
Mischon de Reya£47,500£52,500£95,000
Norton Rose Fulbright£50,000£55,000£135,000
Orrick£55,000£60,000£160,000
Osborne Clarke£54,500£56,000£94,000
Paul Hastings£60,000£68,000£173,000
Paul Weiss£55,000£60,000£180,000
Penningtons Manches Cooper£48,000£50,000£83,000
Pinsent Masons£49,500£54,000£97,000
Quinn Emanueln/an/a£180,000
Reed Smith£50,000£55,000£125,000
Ropes & Gray£60,000£65,000£165,000
RPC£46,000£50,000£90,000
Shoosmiths£43,000£45,000£97,000
Sidley Austin£60,000£65,000£175,000
Simmons & Simmons£52,000£57,000£120,000
Skadden£58,000£63,000£173,000
Slaughter and May£56,000£61,000£150,000
Squire Patton Boggs£47,000£50,000£110,000
Stephenson Harwood£50,000£55,000£100,000
Sullivan & Cromwell£65,000£70,000£174,418
Taylor Wessing£50,000£55,000£115,000
TLT£44,000£47,500£85,000
Travers Smith£54,000£59,000£120,000
Trowers & Hamlins£45,000£49,000£80,000
Vinson & Elkins£60,000£65,000£173,077
Watson Farley & Williams£50,000£55,000£102,000
Weightmans£34,000£36,000£70,000
Weil Gotshal & Manges£60,000£65,000£170,000
White & Case£62,000£67,000£175,000
Willkie Farr & Gallagher£60,000£65,000£170,000
Withers£47,000£52,000£95,000
Womble Bond Dickinson£43,000£45,000£80,000
Rank
Law Firm
Revenue
Profit per Equity
Partner (PEP)
1DLA Piper*£3,010,000,000£2,400,000
2Clifford Chance£2,300,000,000£2,040,000
3A&O Shearman£2,200,000,000£2,200,000
4Hogan Lovells£2,150,000,000£2,200,000
5Freshfields£2,120,000,000Not disclosed
6Linklaters£2,100,000,000£1,900,000
7Norton Rose Fulbright*£1,800,000,000£1,100,000
8CMS**£1,620,000,000Not disclosed
9Herbert Smith Freehills£1,300,000,000£1,300,000
10Ashurst£961,000,000£1,300,000
11Clyde & Co£844,000,000£739,000
12Eversheds Sutherland£749,000,000£1,300,000
13BCLP*£661,000,000£748,000
14Pinsent Masons£649,000,000£793,000
15Slaughter and May***£625,000,000Not disclosed
16Simmons & Simmons£574,000,000£1,076,000
17Bird & Bird**£545,000,000£696,000
18Addleshaw Goddard£495,000,000Not disclosed
19Taylor Wessing£480,000,000£915,000***
20Osborne Clarke**£456,000,000£771,000
21Womble Bond Dickinson£448,000,000£556,000
22DWF£435,000,000Not disclosed
23Fieldfisher£407,000,000£966,000
24Kennedys£384,000,000Not disclosed
25DAC Beachcroft£325,000,000£700,000

What do City lawyers actually do each day?

For a closer look at the day-to-day of some of the most common types of lawyers working in corporate law firms, explore our lawyer job profiles:

Nayiri Houldsworth is a trainee solicitor currently working in-house at a bank specialising in motor finance.

FirmLondon office sinceKnown for in London
Baker McKenzie1961Finance, capital markets, TMT
Davis Polk1972Leveraged finance, corporate/M&A
Gibson Dunn1979Private equity, arbitration, energy, resources and infrastructure
Goodwin2008Private equity, funds, life sciences
Kirkland & Ellis1994Private equity, funds, restructuring
Latham & Watkins1990Finance, private equity, capital markets
Milbank1979Finance, capital markets, energy, resources and infrastructure
Paul Hastings1997Leveraged finance, structured finance, infrastructure
Paul Weiss2001Private equity, leveraged finance
Quinn Emanuel2008Litigation
Sidley Austin1974Leveraged finance, capital markets, corporate/M&A
Simpson Thacher1978Leveraged finance, private equity, funds
Skadden1988Finance, corporate/M&A, arbitration
Weil1996Restructuring, private equity, leverage finance
White & Case1971Capital markets, arbitration, energy, resources and infrastructure
Law firmTypeFirst-year salary
White & CaseUS firm£32,000
Stephenson HarwoodInternational£30,000
A&O ShearmanMagic Circle£28,000
Charles Russell SpeechlysInternational£28,000
FreshfieldsMagic Circle£28,000
Herbert Smith FreehillsSilver Circle£28,000
Hogan LovellsInternational£28,000
LinklatersMagic Circle£28,000
Mishcon de ReyaInternational£28,000
Norton Rose FulbrightInternational£28,000
Law Firm
Trainee First Year
Trainee Second Year
Newly Qualified (NQ)
A&O Shearman£56,000£61,000£150,000
Clifford Chance£56,000£61,000£150,000
Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer£56,000£61,000£150,000
Linklaters£56,000£61,000£150,000
Slaughter and May£56,000£61,000£150,000
Law Firm
Trainee First Year
Trainee Second Year
Newly Qualified (NQ)
A&O Shearman£56,000£61,000£150,000
Clifford Chance£56,000£61,000£150,000
Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer£56,000£61,000£150,000
Linklaters£56,000£61,000£150,000
Slaughter and May£56,000£61,000£150,000
Law Firm
Trainee First Year
Trainee Second Year
Newly Qualified (NQ)
Ashurst£52,000£57,000£125,000
Bryan Cave Leighton Paisner£50,000£55,000£105,000
Herbert Smith Freehills£56,000£61,000£135,000
Macfarlanes£56,000£61,000£140,000
Travers Smith£54,000£59,000£120,000
FirmMerger yearKnown for in London
BCLP2018Real estate, corporate/M&A, litigation
DLA Piper2005Corporate/M&A, real estate, energy, resources and infrastructure
Eversheds Sutherland2017Corporate/M&A, finance
Hogan Lovells2011Litigation, regulation, finance
Mayer Brown2002Finance, capital markets, real estate
Norton Rose Fulbright2013Energy, resources and infrastructure, insurance, finance
Reed Smith2007Shipping, finance, TMT
Squire Patton Boggs2011Corporate/M&A, pensions, TMT
Law Firm
Trainee First Year
Trainee Second Year
Newly Qualified (NQ)
Ashurst£52,000£57,000£125,000
Bryan Cave Leighton Paisner£50,000£55,000£105,000
Herbert Smith Freehills£56,000£61,000£135,000
Macfarlanes£56,000£61,000£140,000
Travers Smith£54,000£59,000£120,000
Author of blog post.
Olivia Rhye
11 Jan 2022
•
5 min read