(No doubt you�ve already looked up various �salary survey� finding but these don�t often give you true findings. There is quite a big gap in earnings between high street firms and the big city firms. Your average high street solicitor is probably not as highly paid as many people think. Partners and high flyers in big City firms can earn hundreds of thousands of pounds, but then these are people at the top of the legal profession, who are widely recognised in their field and are the exception. Based on my own experience as a fee earner in a high street practice (I was a trainee at the time) and that of the many people I know in practice, I would sum up as follows: Non-qualified fee earners (i.e. those who are not qualified solicitors, though you may have a law degree etc) in a high street firm, will earn anything between �15k to �22k. The legal industry is becoming increasing �de-skilled�, in that firms often prefer to hire non-qualified personnel (who are cheaper)to do work that traditionally would have been done by solicitors.Once qualified you might expect to earn between �18k and �23k. The area of law you choose to specialise in after qualification can have a significant bearing on your earnings. Generally speaking, �bread and butter� areas like conveyancing, family law, criminal law and probate pay less (a 4yr PQE sol might earn between �28k to �32k). Areas of commercial law pay more. For instance, a 4yr PQE solicitor in commercial property might earn around �45k. Partners obviously earn more, around �50k to �60k for an equity partner in a high street firm (this can be more or less of course, depending on the profitability of the firm). Cont...