Legal interviews — whether for a training contract, a paralegal position, or an in-house counsel role — are highly competitive and structured. The questions test legal knowledge less than most candidates expect. What they actually assess is: motivation (genuine interest in the firm or area of law), commercial awareness, academic and analytical ability, and the interpersonal skills to work with demanding clients and colleagues. Knowing this changes how you prepare.
What legal interviewers assess
- Genuine, researched motivation for this firm or organisation specifically
- Commercial awareness — understanding of the firm's clients, market, and commercial pressures
- Communication: written and verbal, including the ability to be concise under pressure
- Analytical reasoning and attention to detail
- Work ethic and resilience
- Professional judgment and ethics
Motivation and firm-specific questions
"Why do you want to work at this firm?" The most common question and the one that filters most clearly. You must show you know the firm: its practice areas, clients, recent transactions or cases, culture, and how it's positioned in the market. Saying you want to work at a "City firm with a strong reputation" when interviewing at a niche firm with a specific specialism shows you haven't done the work.
"Why do you want to be a solicitor / work in law?" Should be genuine and specific — avoid "I've always been interested in law." Reference specific experiences: a module that sparked interest, work experience that confirmed it, a case or area of law that drew you in. For career changers: what about your previous career led you here, and what have you done to test the decision?
"Why this practice area?" Show specific knowledge of the area: what types of clients does it serve, what are the current trends or challenges, and why are you drawn to that particular work? Generic interest is not enough in a competitive process.
Commercial awareness questions
"Tell me about a recent legal or commercial development that interests you." Have at least two prepared — one legal/regulatory development and one commercial development relevant to the firm's client sectors. Follow The Lawyer, Legal Business, or Financial Times. Your preparation here is entirely visible to the interviewer, and strong commercial awareness is a genuine differentiator.
"How would a rise in interest rates affect your clients?" Or any macroeconomic question applied to the firm's client base. If the firm works in real estate, rising rates compress transaction volumes. If they work in restructuring, rising rates may increase their pipeline. Know what the firm does and think through the implications for their business and clients.
"What makes this firm commercially competitive?" Research: What's their market position? What sectors or clients do they lead in? Recent awards, team hires, notable transactions? This demonstrates you've thought about the firm as a business, not just as an employer.
Competency questions
"Tell me about a time you had to meet a tight deadline." Legal work frequently operates under time pressure. Show specific prioritisation: what you did first, what you cut, how you communicated, and what the quality of the output was. Not panicking and not missing the deadline are the outcomes to demonstrate.
"Describe a time you identified a problem others hadn't noticed." Law values attention to detail and analytical initiative. A genuine example — preferably work or academically related — where you caught something, investigated it, and took appropriate action.
"Tell me about a time you worked as part of a team on a difficult project." Legal teams are collaborative. Show that you understood your role, communicated clearly, supported others, and contributed to the outcome even when the work was unglamorous.
Scenario and ethics questions
"A client asks you to advise them to do something you believe is unethical but isn't illegal. What do you do?" The solicitor's duty is to the client within the law. You can advise the client of any risks or reputational concerns, and you can decline to act if your professional obligations are engaged. But you cannot override a client's legitimate decision. Show you understand the distinction between advice and instruction.
"You discover your supervising partner has given incorrect advice to a client. What do you do?" This is an ethical judgment question. The answer involves raising it with the partner first (respectfully), understanding the full picture before assuming error, and escalating if necessary through appropriate professional channels. Staying quiet is not the right answer — as a solicitor, your duty to the client is independent of the hierarchy.
Questions to ask at the end
- "How does the firm approach the development of junior lawyers / trainees?"
- "What does the first six months look like in this seat / role?"
- "What are the key qualities you see in lawyers who do well here?"
- "What are the main challenges facing the team or practice area right now?"