Thursday, August 7, 2025
21.5 C
London

Kaplan fines fund £360k to help disadvantaged SQE candidates

11 organisations to receive SQE exam funding from SRA-backed initiative using Kaplan penalty cash

A £360,000 fund amassed from financial penalties imposed on Solicitors Qualifying Examination (SQE) provider Kaplan is being distributed to support disadvantaged individuals hoping to qualify as solicitors, the Solicitors Regulation Authority (SRA) announced today.

The funding will be divided among 11 organisations that specialise in legal education, professional development, and social mobility. The funds are earmarked to cover entry fees for the SQE1 and SQE2 exams, which stand at £1,934 and £2,974 respectively. Candidates could begin sitting their exams as early as January 2026.

The 11 organisations selected to receive the funds are: Aberystwyth Veteran’s Legal Link Clinic, Accutrainee, Black and Proud CIC, Bristol Law Society, The College of Legal Practice, The Law Society’s Diversity Access Scheme, The Law Training Centre, The Legal Social Mobility Fund, The Social Welfare Solicitors Qualification Fund, The University of Lancashire, and The University of Law.

Each of these organisations will administer their own selection process to determine which aspiring solicitors will receive the financial support.

Embed from Getty Images

The money has been collected since the SQE’s introduction in 2021, under an agreement whereby Kaplan pays into a designated fund whenever it fails to meet performance targets set by the SRA. This £360,000 is the first distribution from that fund.

The SRA indicated that future uses of the fund will depend on the scale of further penalty payments and the regulator’s wider business priorities.

Paul Philip, chief executive of the SRA, said he was keen to follow the progress of the successful applicants.

“One of the objectives of the SQE is to promote a diverse profession by removing artificial and unjustifiable barriers. Our decision to distribute the fund in this way reflects our commitment to meeting the SQE objectives,” he said.

“The fund recognises that talent, not financial circumstances, should determine who can become a solicitor. Up to 190 candidates could be supported through the scheme.”

The announcement comes at a time of heightened scrutiny of the SQE regime. Earlier this week, a petition calling for reform of the SQE, including criticism over exam difficulty, costs and a lack of transparency, attracted hundreds of signatures.

The initiative was welcomed by the Law Society, which also received funding for its Diversity Access Scheme (DAS).

Law Society president Richard Atkinson commented: “Our work to support aspiring solicitors who face significant personal barriers to qualify will be greatly helped by the funding provided by the SRA. This funding will promote social mobility and work towards increasing diversity within the legal profession by supporting individuals who face social, educational, financial or personal challenges to qualifying as a solicitor.”

The DAS supports aspiring solicitors from disadvantaged backgrounds in completing their legal education, securing work experience, and gaining access to mentoring opportunities.

With entry fees for the SQE among the most expensive components of qualification, the fund provides an opportunity for many to progress without being priced out of the profession.

The scheme represents one of the most tangible applications of regulatory penalties being redirected to support access to the profession, rather than simply being absorbed as administrative sanctions.

The SRA has signalled that it may continue to explore other initiatives tied to its goals of equality, diversity and inclusion — provided that penalty income from Kaplan or other regulated bodies permits it

Hot this week

Administrators recover just 2% of Pure Legal’s £30m claims book

Creditors face heavy losses as administrators recover just £491k from the failed Pure Legal claims book

Mass litigation ‘could cost UK economy £18bn’, warns new report

Collective litigation boom may deter investment and harm growth sectors, warns ECIPE study

Pérez-llorca and Gómez-Pinzón agree historic merger to enter Colombian market

Pérez-llorca merges with Gómez-Pinzón, forming a powerhouse in Colombia and Latin America

Ex-Dechert lawyer loses seven-figure injury claim over office door handle strike

Judge rules office fire door and handle not “equipment” under Employer’s Liability Act

Make e-wills legal, abolish obsolete rules, law commission tells government

Commission urges overhaul of Victorian wills law to reflect modern tech and protect vulnerable people

Topics

AI set to invade UK courts as government pushes full justice system overhaul

Government unveils sweeping AI plan to transform courts, staff, and case administration

AI is killing Biglaw jobs but it’s great news for malpractice lawyers, says Andrew Yang

Andrew Yang says AI is replacing biglaw juniors—sparking fears of malpractice, not progress.

Barrister busted for quoting fake court cases in shocking legal scandal

Sarah Forey and Haringey Law Centre face a damning high court rebuke after inventing legal precedents.

Is your legal assistant about to be replaced by a robot?

Legal AI tools threaten to disrupt paralegal roles, but experts say humans are far from obsolete.

Fax out, email in: Civil rule reform targets modernised service

Civil Procedure Rule Committee proposes barring solicitors from rejecting email service without a reason

Solicitors and insurers near deal on ‘unbundled services’ definition

Finalised definition of unbundled legal services expected this summer to boost clarity

UK government moves to rein in SEP litigation costs with new IPEC track

UK to consult on new IPEC track to fairly price standard-essential patents amid legal concerns

Judge adds own colourful diagram in high-stakes competition case

Sir Marcus Smith J defends originality with colourful sketch amid KC-stacked court battle
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

spot_imgspot_img