How two universities still define City law's route to partnership
Data on this year's City partner promotions underscores the enduring power of Oxbridge in shaping who reaches the top of the UK’s legal profession.

Contents
Oxford and Cambridge produced more than one third of this year’s London elite partner cohort, with Durham emerging as the strongest non-Oxbridge contributor.
The talent pipeline is gradually widening at the early-careers stage, with firms rolling out contextual recruitment systems, solicitor apprenticeships and socio-economic targets.
If you want to make partner at one of the UK’s top law firms, the data is clear: it still pays to study at Oxbridge.
Across this year’s partner promotions at the Magic Circle and selected other top City firms, Oxford and Cambridge produced more new partners than any other universities combined, and by a wide margin. Of the 88 lawyers promoted in London for 2025, 34 studied at Oxbridge as undergraduates, giving the two universities more than a third of the partner class - 39% to be precise.
Non-Billable mapped the academic pathways behind this year’s promotions by reviewing all publicly available 2025 announcements from A&O Shearman, Clifford Chance, Freshfields, Linklaters, Slaughter and May, HSF Kramer, Ashurst, Hogan Lovells, Macfarlanes and Norton Rose Fulbright, recording each partner’s undergraduate university.
A pipeline that remains tight at the top
Durham continues to be the standout feeder outside Oxbridge, producing seven new partners this year and cementing its long-standing position as the next rung in the hierarchy. Below that, a small cluster of universities - the University of York, LSE, King’s College London, Bristol, Manchester and Nottingham - each supplied three to four partners.
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The pattern is consistent with what firms are still seeing at the trainee level. According to Chambers Student's latest trainee satisfaction survey, nearly a quarter of trainees at US and Magic Circle firms in London studied at Oxford or Cambridge.
This year's partner promotion data shows the concentration only increases further up the ladder, with Oxbridge alumni making up more than a third of new partners at the City’s top firms this year, and 42% if you look exclusively at the Magic Circle.
While the numbers are shifting, the trend is long-standing. In 2010, Harvard University found that close to 40% of Magic Circle trainee hires were Oxbridge graduates - a dominance clearly reflected in this year’s data.
A note of change, at least in the rankings
There was a twist this year. Both Oxford and Cambridge fell out of the top spots in The Times’ 2026 university rankings for the first time. LSE took first place, the University of St Andrews ranked second and Durham climbed to third. Oxford and Cambridge were tied in fourth place, marking a rare shift.
It hasn’t yet translated into the upper levels of Big Law of course, but it suggests the academic pecking order feeding the City may not be as fixed as it once appeared.
A narrow gateway in socio-economic terms
The Oxbridge dominance becomes more striking when seen through the lens of socio-economic mobility. Both universities remain highly selective, admitting only around one in six or seven applicants. And despite long-running efforts to widen access, they still draw disproportionately from the private-school sector.
In 2024, 34% of students at Oxford and 24% at Cambridge came from private schools. When set against the fact that independent schools educate only about 6% of England’s school-age population, the extent of the academic and socio-economic filtering is already strong by the time candidates reach the training contract selection stage.
Law Firm | Trainee First Year | Trainee Second Year | Newly Qualified (NQ) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Addleshaw Goddard | £52,000 | £56,000 | £100,000 |
| Akin | £60,000 | £65,000 | £174,418 |
| A&O Shearman | £56,000 | £61,000 | £150,000 |
| Ashurst | £57,000 | £62,000 | £140,000 |
| Baker McKenzie | £56,000 | £61,000 | £145,000 |
| Bird & Bird | £47,000 | £52,000 | £102,000 |
| Bristows | £46,000 | £50,000 | £88,000 |
| Bryan Cave Leighton Paisner | £50,000 | £55,000 | £115,000 |
| Burges Salmon | £47,000 | £49,000 | £72,000 |
| Charles Russell Speechlys | £50,000 | £53,000 | £88,000 |
| Cleary Gottlieb | £62,500 | £67,500 | £164,500 |
| Clifford Chance | £56,000 | £61,000 | £150,000 |
| Clyde & Co | £47,000 | £49,500 | £85,000 |
| CMS | £50,000 | £55,000 | £120,000 |
| 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 | £52,000 | £57,000 | £130,000 |
| Eversheds Sutherland | £46,000 | £50,000 | £110,000 |
| 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 | £105,000 |
| Herbert Smith Freehills Kramer | £56,000 | £61,000 | £145,000 |
| HFW | £50,000 | £54,000 | £103,500 |
| Hill Dickinson | £43,000 | £45,000 | £80,000 |
| Hogan Lovells | £56,000 | £61,000 | £140,000 |
| 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 | £150,000 |
| McDermott Will & Schulte | £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 | £105,000 |
| Quinn Emanuel | n/a | n/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 | £105,000 |
| Sidley Austin | £60,000 | £65,000 | £175,000 |
| Simmons & Simmons | £52,000 | £57,000 | £120,000 |
| Simpson Thacher | n/a | n/a | £178,000 |
| 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 | £55,000 | £60,000 | £130,000 |
| 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) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | DLA Piper* | £3,010,000,000 | £2,400,000 |
| 2 | Clifford Chance | £2,300,000,000 | £2,040,000 |
| 3 | A&O Shearman | £2,200,000,000 | £2,200,000 |
| 4 | Hogan Lovells | £2,150,000,000 | £2,200,000 |
| 5 | Freshfields | £2,120,000,000 | Not disclosed |
| 6 | Linklaters | £2,100,000,000 | £1,900,000 |
| 7 | Norton Rose Fulbright* | £1,800,000,000 | £1,100,000 |
| 8 | CMS** | £1,620,000,000 | Not disclosed |
| 9 | Herbert Smith Freehills | £1,300,000,000 | £1,300,000 |
| 10 | Ashurst | £961,000,000 | £1,300,000 |
| 11 | Clyde & Co | £844,000,000 | £739,000 |
| 12 | Eversheds Sutherland | £749,000,000 | £1,300,000 |
| 13 | BCLP* | £661,000,000 | £748,000 |
| 14 | Pinsent Masons | £649,000,000 | £793,000 |
| 15 | Slaughter and May*** | £625,000,000 | Not disclosed |
| 16 | Simmons & Simmons | £574,000,000 | £1,076,000 |
| 17 | Bird & Bird** | £545,000,000 | £696,000 |
| 18 | Addleshaw Goddard | £495,000,000 | Not disclosed |
| 19 | Taylor Wessing | £480,000,000 | £915,000*** |
| 20 | Osborne Clarke** | £456,000,000 | £771,000 |
| 21 | Womble Bond Dickinson | £448,000,000 | £556,000 |
| 22 | DWF | £435,000,000 | Not disclosed |
| 23 | Fieldfisher | £407,000,000 | £966,000 |
| 24 | Kennedys | £384,000,000 | Not disclosed |
| 25 | DAC Beachcroft | £325,000,000 | £700,000 |
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What the firm-by-firm data reveals
While Oxbridge dominates as a whole, the picture varies across firms.
Clifford Chance, Slaughter and May, Ashurst, Norton Rose Fulbright, A&O Shearman and HSF Kramer all leaned towards Oxford this year - some heavily, some more modestly. Norton Rose Fulbright stood out for the most varied intake, with the majority of partners promoted from universities outside the Oxbridge pipeline.
Linklaters, Macfarlanes, Freshfields and Hogan Lovells leaned in the opposite direction, bringing through more Cambridge graduates. Macfarlanes promoted three Cambridge alumni and no Oxford graduates, while Linklaters’ class was nearly split but edged Cambridge.
Overall, this year’s partner cohort spanned 34 universities across eight countries - wider than many might expect at the top end of the market.
Early signs of a broader entry point
Law firms have made some of the biggest strides in widening access of any in the professional services sector, investing heavily in programmes designed to broaden who can enter and progress through the profession.
Firms including Clifford Chance and Macfarlanes use contextual recruitment systems that evaluate academic results in the context of an applicant’s schooling and background. These tools flag candidates who have exceeded expectations in less-advantaged circumstances and broaden the field of who is considered for training contracts.
At the same time, solicitor apprenticeships have grown sharply since their launch in 2016, with many City firms embracing them. The likes of A&O Shearman, CMS, DLA Piper, Freshfields, HSF Kramer, Hogan Lovells, Linklaters, Norton Rose Fulbright and Slaughters now run apprenticeship schemes that allow candidates to qualify while earning. Apprentices tend to outperform other candidates on the SQE2 exam, according to SRA data.
Socio-economic targets
A growing number of firms are now setting formal socio-economic targets aimed at widening access to the profession.
In 2024, Freshfields announced that it aims to recruit at least 20% of its trainee intake from lower socio-economic backgrounds, measured by parental occupation at the age of 14, which the firm says is a government-backed and widely used indicator.
Slaughters, which says it was the first major law firm to set a social mobility target, announced in 2023 its goal to have 15% of its lawyer workforce coming from lower socio-economic backgrounds by 2033. 11% of its lawyers met the criterion in its latest responsible business report.
Simmons & Simmons has gone further on timing, aiming for 20% of its fee-earners to meet the same criterion by 2029.
Law firms are also increasingly visible in the national Social Mobility Employer Index, which ranks employers on the strength of their outreach, recruitment and progression strategies for people from lower socio-economic backgrounds. Law firms made up half of the top 10 organisations in this year's index.
Will any of this shift the partnership ranks?
Chambers Student data shows that the pool of universities producing trainees has expanded over time, suggesting a wider entry base than the typical Oxbridge narrative.
Whether these trends - and the growing efforts by firms to widen access - will meaningfully diversify the partner ranks remains to be seen. The journey from trainee to partner typically takes around a decade, and real shifts in the partnership pipeline will take years to surface.
| Firm | London office since | Known for in London |
|---|---|---|
| Akin | 1997 | Restructuring, funds |
| Baker McKenzie | 1961 | Finance, capital markets, TMT |
| Davis Polk | 1972 | Leveraged finance, corporate/M&A |
| Gibson Dunn | 1979 | Private equity, arbitration, energy, resources and infrastructure |
| Goodwin | 2008 | Private equity, funds, life sciences |
| Kirkland & Ellis | 1994 | Private equity, funds, restructuring |
| Latham & Watkins | 1990 | Finance, private equity, capital markets |
| McDermott Will & Schulte | 1998 | Finance, funds, healthcare |
| Milbank | 1979 | Finance, capital markets, energy, resources and infrastructure |
| Paul Hastings | 1997 | Leveraged finance, structured finance, infrastructure |
| Paul Weiss | 2001 | Private equity, leveraged finance |
| Quinn Emanuel | 2008 | Litigation |
| Sidley Austin | 1974 | Leveraged finance, capital markets, corporate/M&A |
| Simpson Thacher | 1978 | Leveraged finance, private equity, funds |
| Skadden | 1988 | Finance, corporate/M&A, arbitration |
| Sullivan & Cromwell | 1972 | Corporate/M&A, restructuring, capital markets |
| Weil | 1996 | Restructuring, private equity, leverage finance |
| White & Case | 1971 | Capital markets, arbitration, energy, resources and infrastructure |
| Law firm | Type | First-year salary |
|---|---|---|
| White & Case | US firm | £32,000 |
| Stephenson Harwood | International | £30,000 |
| A&O Shearman | Magic Circle | £28,000 |
| Charles Russell Speechlys | International | £28,000 |
| Freshfields | Magic Circle | £28,000 |
| Herbert Smith Freehills | Silver Circle | £28,000 |
| Hogan Lovells | International | £28,000 |
| Linklaters | Magic Circle | £28,000 |
| Mishcon de Reya | International | £28,000 |
| Norton Rose Fulbright | International | £28,000 |
Methodology
Non-Billable reviewed publicly available 2025 London partner promotion announcements from A&O Shearman, Clifford Chance, Freshfields, Linklaters, Slaughter and May, HSF Kramer, Ashurst, Hogan Lovells, Macfarlanes and Norton Rose Fulbright, noting each partner’s undergraduate institution.
Partners with undisclosed, unavailable or non-verifiable university data were excluded.
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 | £57,000 | £62,000 | £140,000 |
| Bryan Cave Leighton Paisner | £50,000 | £55,000 | £115,000 |
| Herbert Smith Freehills | £56,000 | £61,000 | £145,000 |
| Macfarlanes | £56,000 | £61,000 | £140,000 |
| Travers Smith | £55,000 | £60,000 | £130,000 |
| Firm | Merger year | Known for in London |
|---|---|---|
| BCLP | 2018 | Real estate, corporate/M&A, litigation |
| DLA Piper | 2005 | Corporate/M&A, real estate, energy, resources and infrastructure |
| Eversheds Sutherland | 2017 | Corporate/M&A, finance |
| Hogan Lovells | 2011 | Litigation, regulation, finance |
| Mayer Brown | 2002 | Finance, capital markets, real estate |
| Norton Rose Fulbright | 2013 | Energy, resources and infrastructure, insurance, finance |
| Reed Smith | 2007 | Shipping, finance, TMT |
| Squire Patton Boggs | 2011 | Corporate/M&A, pensions, TMT |
Law Firm | Trainee First Year | Trainee Second Year | Newly Qualified (NQ) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ashurst | £57,000 | £62,000 | £140,000 |
| Bryan Cave Leighton Paisner | £50,000 | £55,000 | £115,000 |
| Herbert Smith Freehills Kramer | £56,000 | £61,000 | £145,000 |
| Macfarlanes | £56,000 | £61,000 | £140,000 |
| Travers Smith | £55,000 | £60,000 | £130,000 |
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