Winchester, Public Access, BSB regulated

Direct access divorce barristers in Winchester.

Divorce barristers in Winchester, instructed directly on Public Access. Divorce applications and the linked financial remedy — Form A, First Appointment, FDR and final hearing — on written fixed fees, at the Winchester Combined Court Centre and the surrounding family courts.

Clerk and Counsel places specialist divorce barristers in Winchester on a Public Access basis, instructed directly by the client without a solicitor, on a written fixed fee. Every barrister we place is regulated by the Bar Standards Board and carries professional indemnity insurance.

Our Winchester divorce barristers attend the Winchester Combined Court Centre on The Castle, with Southampton, Portsmouth, Basingstoke and the Isle of Wight also on circuit. Winchester is the administrative seat of the South Western circuit so cases are frequently reallocated between these courts.

The work covers Divorce and dissolution proceedings under the Divorce, Dissolution and Separation Act 2020, including conditional and final orders, jurisdiction disputes and contested validity. Direct access counsel for the divorce application itself plus the linked financial remedy proceedings — Form A, Form E, First Appointment, FDR and final hearing.

Need a divorce barrister in Winchester?

Send a short brief, the parties, the proceedings, the next hearing date and the key issues. A clerk will respond with shortlisted counsel and a fixed fee in writing.

Send a brief
Divorce courts covered from Winchester

Winchester family courts and the surrounding circuit.

Winchester Combined Court Centre

Public Access divorce barristers regularly attending Winchester Combined Court Centre for directions, FDR, fact finding and final hearings.

Southampton Combined Court Centre

Public Access divorce barristers regularly attending Southampton Combined Court Centre for directions, FDR, fact finding and final hearings.

Portsmouth Combined Court Centre

Public Access divorce barristers regularly attending Portsmouth Combined Court Centre for directions, FDR, fact finding and final hearings.

Basingstoke County and Family Court

Public Access divorce barristers regularly attending Basingstoke County and Family Court for directions, FDR, fact finding and final hearings.

Isle of Wight Combined Court, Newport

Public Access divorce barristers regularly attending Isle of Wight Combined Court, Newport for directions, FDR, fact finding and final hearings.

Scope of work

Divorce work we cover in Winchester.

Sole and joint divorce applications

Jurisdiction and forum disputes

Conditional and final orders

Linked financial remedy (Form A to final hearing)

Pension sharing and pension attachment

Spousal maintenance and clean break

Pre and post nuptial agreements

Consent orders and Tomlin orders

Direct access vs solicitor instructed

The main differences at a glance.

Direct access (Public Access) lets you instruct a barrister without a solicitor in the middle. The traditional model uses a solicitor to manage the file and instruct counsel. Both are regulated and both have their place. The table below sets out the practical differences for a typical private client matter.

 Direct access barristerSolicitor instructed barrister
Who you instructThe barrister directly, through the clerks.A solicitor, who then instructs a barrister on your behalf.
Professionals you payOne: the barrister.Two: the solicitor and the barrister.
Fee structureFixed fee, agreed in writing before any work begins.Solicitor on hourly rates, barrister on brief fee. Costs build over time.
Typical overall costLower. One specialist, one fee per piece of work.Higher. Two firms, two sets of overheads, hourly billing on the file.
Time to instruct24 to 72 hours from brief to client care letter.One to three weeks for file opening, AML checks and counsel selection.
Who runs the file day to dayYou do, as litigant in person. The barrister advises and represents.The solicitor manages the file, correspondence and court filings.
Court filings and correspondenceYou file documents and deal with the court office. Counsel tells you what to file and when.The solicitor files documents and corresponds with the court and other side.
Advice, drafting and advocacyDone by the barrister you instruct.Drafting often shared between solicitor and barrister. Advocacy by counsel.
Best suited toDefined pieces of work: advice, drafting, hearings, negotiation.Heavy disclosure, safeguarding, complex multi party litigation and ongoing case management.
RegulationBar Standards Board. Counsel carries professional indemnity insurance.Solicitors Regulation Authority and Bar Standards Board.

If the case is unsuitable for direct access, for example public law children work or matters needing heavy ongoing case management, the clerks will say so up front and point you to a solicitor.

FAQs

Direct access divorce barristers in Winchester.

How do I instruct a direct access divorce barrister in Winchester?

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Send the clerks a short brief — the parties, the proceedings, the next hearing date and the key issues — and any orders or statements already on file. We shortlist Public Access qualified divorce barristers covering the Winchester family courts, confirm a written fixed fee and issue the client care letter, usually inside 24 to 72 hours.

What does a divorce barrister in Winchester cost on direct access?

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Fees are agreed up front on a fixed fee basis. A first conference and written advice on a divorce matter typically starts in the low hundreds of pounds for a junior, with FDR, fact finding and final hearing fees scaled to complexity and reading. All fees are confirmed in writing in the client care letter before any work begins.

Which courts cover divorce cases for clients in Winchester?

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Divorce cases for Winchester clients are typically listed at Winchester Combined Court Centre, Southampton Combined Court Centre, Portsmouth Combined Court Centre, Basingstoke County and Family Court, Isle of Wight Combined Court, Newport. Our counsel attend those courts in person and, where the court directs, by CVP or Teams. Remote hearings are common for short directions and FDA listings.

Is direct access suitable for divorce work?

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Yes, for private divorce matters between adults or between parents. Public law children work, care proceedings and cases involving the local authority are not suitable for Public Access; we will recommend a legal aid solicitor instead where appropriate.