When should newly qualified lawyers move roles?
For newly qualified lawyers, securing a newly qualified (NQ) position with your current firm after a demanding training contract is a major milestone. It is the moment where years of study, exams, and paralegal experience finally translate into a place within the legal profession.
But once the relief of qualification fades, many junior lawyers ask the same question: how soon is too soon to think about moving on? In a competitive legal market, it is natural to wonder whether staying in your first role will accelerate your career development or whether looking at roles in another law firm could provide faster career progression.
The reality is that timing matters. Employers in private practice and in-house look closely at early career moves, interpreting them as signals of stability, ambition, or indecision. Getting the timing right can mean the difference between a move that strengthens your legal career and one that raises doubts.
How long do newly qualified solicitors usually stay in their first role? And should they stay that long?
Any answer here is, first and foremost, dictated by the legal market itself. In the UK, most firms would reasonably expect newly qualified lawyers to remain in their first qualified role for at least 12 months. This period provides time to consolidate technical skills, gain professional development, and demonstrate reliability as part of a legal team. Staying beyond a year also reassures future employers that you gave your current firm a fair opportunity before moving on.
That said, the “standard” varies depending on practice area and the jobs market. In high-demand areas of law such as corporate law, commercial litigation, or data protection, opportunities often arise earlier and firms may be more open to hiring NQ solicitors with less than a year of post-qualification experience. Conversely, in more stable or saturated specialisms, employers may prefer candidates with 18 months to two years PQE.
Moving sooner than 12 months, when the market does not necessarily dictate it, is less common and requires a strong explanation – you will need to navigate firms potentially questioning your decision to look so early. Moving later than 18 months can also work well, as you may be ready for more complex solicitor roles or a step towards an in-house lawyer position. You will also be closer to that mid-level ‘sweet spot’ of 2-4/3-5 PQE that firms often look to hire in. A risk of waiting longer, however, is missing out on NQ roles specifically designed for junior lawyers in their first two years.
For broader context on the qualification process and recruitment patterns, see our private practice newly qualified guide.
What are the risks of moving too soon after qualification?
While it can be tempting to explore new solicitor roles shortly after qualifying, moving too quickly carries risks.
The most common concern is perception. Employers in private practice may worry that a junior lawyer who changes firms after only a few months is unsettled or indecisive. A CV showing several career moves in the first few years can raise questions about long-term judgement, professional development, or even work/life balance priorities.
There are also practical drawbacks. In the first six months post-qualification, many junior associates have limited client exposure or independent matters to point to. Without this, it is harder to show the skillset that another law firm expects. You may also miss out on the mentoring and career development programmes that firms invest in heavily for their NQ solicitors.
Finally, leaving your current firm too soon may mean missing internal opportunities. Many legal teams support newly qualified solicitors with early responsibility, secondments, or a clear pathway to specialism. Walking away too quickly can close those doors.
Are there good reasons to move roles early as an NQ solicitor?
Despite the risks, there are circumstances where moving within the first year is defensible.
The most common are misaligned practice areas and obvious career progression (whether that is work or salary based). For instance, a trainee solicitor may have wanted to qualify into corporate law or commercial litigation but, due to seat availability, was offered a role in a different area of law. Moving early to align with your chosen specialism can be a rational, strategic career move.
Junior lawyers may also move to make a significant step up in firm profile, and therefore also work quality. This may coincide with securing a much higher salary.
Firm culture can also be a factor. If your current firm lacks support for junior lawyers, offers little career progression, or provides no realistic work/life balance, seeking an alternative may be the right choice. Likewise, if the legal market is particularly buoyant, for example, US firms hiring aggressively in London, or private equity practices expanding their legal teams, acting sooner may position you ahead of the competition.
The key is communication. Any move must be framed not as a reactive step but as part of a thoughtful long-term legal career plan.
How can a junior solicitor decide if it is the right time to change jobs?
Deciding whether to move involves more than monitoring the jobs market. It requires an honest assessment of your long-term legal career goals.
Ask yourself:
- Am I leaving for reasons tied to career and personal development, or reacting to short-term frustrations?
- Will this new role give me access to the practice area, client base, or professional development opportunities I cannot find in my current firm?
- Does the career move align with where I want to be in three to five years?
Think also about how the move will appear on your CV or LinkedIn profile. Future employers, particularly in private practice and in-house legal recruitment, want to see junior lawyers with clarity of direction, not a pattern of uncertainty.
How Taylor Root supports newly qualified solicitors
Your first career move as a solicitor is one of the most significant decisions you will make. At Taylor Root, our private practice team works with newly qualified solicitors and junior associates to assess not only where to move, but also when.
We provide:
- Market insight into the legal market across private practice and in-house roles.
- Salary benchmarking using our law firm salary guide, so your expectations are aligned with market conditions.
- Career advice and career planning support, from structuring your CV to preparing for interviews. See our guide on how to structure your Associate Lawyer CV.
- Professional development opportunities through webinars and resources that help junior Solicitors navigate their career progression.
- Tailored introductions to leading law firms, US firms, and in-house legal teams, ensuring your next career move is well-timed and strategically beneficial.
For a wider overview of the qualification process, see our private practice newly qualified guide.
Is there a “right” time for newly qualified solicitors to move firms?
There is no universal answer. Firms may be surprised if you were to move before 12 months, and many view 12–18 months as the ideal window for a first move. However, if your practice area is misaligned, your current firm cannot support your career progression, or the jobs market offers a unique opening, moving earlier can still make sense.
What matters is that your decision is intentional, well-reasoned, and presented as part of a coherent legal career story. With the right guidance and recruitment support, newly qualified lawyers can move roles with confidence and position themselves for long-term success in the legal profession.
Frequently asked questions
This section provides clear, concise answers to the most common queries about when NQ lawyers should move roles, helping you make informed decisions with confidence.
Most law firms expect NQ solicitors to stay for around 12 months, giving enough time to build technical skills and demonstrate reliability. Staying 12–18 months is common across private practice and in-house teams, though high‑demand practice areas may offer earlier opportunities.
Yes, but it is less common and requires a strong, well‑reasoned explanation. Moving early makes most sense where the practice area is misaligned, there is a genuine step up in work quality or firm profile, or the market is uniquely buoyant.
Areas with high market demand, such as corporate, funds, commercial litigation, data protection, or private equity, often provide earlier openings. More saturated practice areas typically expect 12–18 months PQE before moving.
Most in-house teams hire at 2+ PQE, as they expect junior lawyers to have developed more independent technical capability. It is usually more competitive for NQs, though exceptions exist in fast‑growth sectors or specialist areas.
This is one of the strongest reasons to move early. If your qualification seat didn’t match your preferred specialism, moving firms to align with your long‑term career path is often a good strategic choice.
A specialist legal recruiter can benchmark salaries, explain current hiring patterns, assess whether your CV is ready for a move, and advise on whether you are better positioned to stay or look externally at this stage.
