Our fees structure is designed to be transparent and accessible, with fixed-fee options for suitable matters and tailored estimates for more complex work.
Clients benefit from knowing what to expect before they commit. Where the scope of a matter is clear, fixed-fee work may be suitable. Where a matter is contested, urgent or document-heavy, a tailored estimate is usually more appropriate.
An initial appointment is the best way to understand the likely costs for your particular circumstances and how the matter is likely to proceed.
Book an initial appointment to discuss your circumstances, likely next steps, and whether your matter is better suited to a fixed fee, staged fee, or tailored estimate.
Book OnlineThe following examples give an indication of fees for commonly requested work. All fees are subject to the specific circumstances of your matter.
Suitable where parties have already reached agreement and want that agreement documented and made binding.
Can include correspondence, exchange of financial material and proposal-based negotiation as a lower-cost path before formal court action.
Where the scope is uncertain, a tailored estimate is more realistic than a generic fixed price.
Best suited to work with a predictable scope, such as document preparation, consent orders, some divorce applications and other defined tasks.
Some matters can be broken into stages so the client understands the likely cost of each step before moving to the next.
Contested or urgent matters usually require tailored costs advice after the first appointment because the eventual scope cannot be predicted accurately at the outset.
Court filing fees, process server fees, barrister fees, expert reports and other third-party charges are generally separate unless clearly stated otherwise.
We aim to give clear costs information before you commit to any work. Additional charges such as court filing fees, barrister fees and expert reports are generally separate to professional fees and will be outlined at your first appointment.
Information on this page is general in nature and is not a substitute for specific costs advice on your matter.
The best starting point is an initial appointment to discuss your circumstances, understand the likely scope of your matter, and get clear costs advice before committing.