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Bar courses: a student’s guide to barrister training 2025/26

updated on 12 August 2025

To become a barrister, students must pass a Bar course at an education provider that's been approved by the Bar Standards Board (BSB). All aspiring barristers must complete a Bar course in order to be ‘called to the Bar’, which enables you to apply for a pupillage. Read LawCareers.Net’s guide to Bar courses to understand what you need to do to reach qualification as a barrister.

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Bar courses take one year to complete when studying full time. The courses are provided by different universities and vary in fees (between £12,000 and £20,000), contact time with tutors, materials provided and learning styles catered for. 

Bar courses are also titled differently depending on the course provider (eg, ‘Bar Vocational Course’, ‘Bar Practice Course’, ‘Barrister Training Course’, ‘Bar Vocational Studies’ and more). While all providers use a common set of assessment criteria, they don't all run the same assessments. The BSB outlines the elements aspiring barristers must pass to be 'called to the Bar'.

Students must pass their Bar course to be eligible for a pupillage – the final stage of qualifying before being able to practise as a barrister. 

Check the BSB's Authorised Education and Training Organisations factsheet for information on those delivering the vocational component of Bar training and the courses they deliver. 

What are the requirements to qualify as a barrister?

Qualifying as a barrister is a three-stage process:

  • The academic stage: an undergraduate law degree or any non-law degree plus a graduate law conversion course. The minimum undergraduate requirement is a 2.2, but you’re realistically likely to need at least a 2.1. 
  • The vocational stage: a postgraduate Bar course (see more about the new Bar courses below).
  • The pupillage/work-based stage: one year practising as a pupil barrister at a barristers’ chambers or other organisation, with the first six months spent shadowing a senior barrister and the second six working on cases as a junior.

In addition, prospective barristers must join one of the four Inns of Court and complete 12 ‘qualifying sessions’ run by their Inn – this takes place during the vocational stage. The deadline for applying to an Inn is at least 12 weeks before the start of the Bar course. The Inns also administer the ‘fit and proper person’ test, which prospective barristers must pass when they’re called to the Bar after graduating from the Bar course.

Find out more about joining an Inn with this LawCareers.Net Feature, ‘Becoming a barrister: what are the Inns of Court?

The vocational stage of training can be completed in the following ways:

  • A full-time one-year course or a part-time course completed over a longer period.
     
  • The Bar course divided into two parts. One part of the Bar course may be delivered through self-study (ie, no tutor contact). Students don’t pay fees for part two of the course until they’ve successfully completed part one. Part two is the much more expensive part of the course, so this means that students who fail part one aren’t locked into paying the full fees. Students can also take a break after completing part one and return to part two later.
     
  • A course that combines the academic and vocational stages (where the Bar course is integrated into an undergraduate degree).

The Bar course can be combined with a master’s (LLM) qualification, which makes it eligible for postgraduate student loan funding.

The BSB states that students will have unlimited attempts to pass the Bar course assessments within five years. That said, the academic regulations of the vocational course providers may differ from this for their associated academic awards. 

Barrister apprenticeships

While plans for barrister apprenticeships have been discussed and are considered a “viable option” to qualifying as a barrister, this route is not yet available. However, a collaborative group, which includes some barristers’ chambers and the Ministry of Justice are allegedly working together to design a programme. In December 2024, the BSB and the Institute for Apprenticeships and Technical Education revealed a barrister apprenticeship standard, which provided a framework for how this qualification route will eventually work. Much like a solicitor apprenticeship, the proposed barrister apprenticeship would take six years to complete and would involve a combination of work and study with barrister apprentices completing a law degree and the Bar course while they work.

Bar courses

Here are the institutions and Bar courses that enable students to complete the vocational stage of barrister training. To secure a place on one of the below courses, students must apply directly to a particular university or law school. This information applies to the 2024/25 or 2025/26 academic year dependent on Bar course providers' most up-to-date information.

University/law school Name of Bar course Locations Routes offered Annual start dates Study format Fees
BPP University Law School (2025/26) Bar Training Course (BTC)

Birmingham

Leeds

London Holborn

Manchester

Course in one part

Course in part with LLM

Course in one part with Professional Legal Studies

Course in one part with Professional Legal Studies (LLM)

September (and January for London only)

Course in one part: full time or part time

Course in one part with LLM: full time or part time

Course in one part with Professional Legal Studies: full time

Course in one part with Professional Legal Studies (LLM): full time

BTC: £16,400 outside London or £17,700 in London

BTC (LLM): £17,300 outside London or £19,100 in London

BTC with Professional Legal Studies £16,100 outside London or £17,400 in London

BTC with Professional Legal Studies (LLM): £17,000 outside London or £18,700 in London.

City, University of London (2025/26) Bar Vocational Studies (BVS) London

Course in one part (LLM)

Course in one part (PgDip)

Course in one part (PgDip with specialism)
September

Full time

Part time

LLM: full-time per year £21,200 or part-time per year £10,600

PgDip: full-time per year £17,900 or part-time per year £8,950

PgDip with specialism: full-time per year £20,100 or part-time per year: £10,050  

The Inns of Court College of Advocacy (2025/26) ICCA Bar Course London Course in two parts

Part one: September and January

Part two: September 

Full time

Online learning available for certain modules 

Including all BSB fees and textbooks: total £16,081 (part one: £4,020; part two: £12,061)

Northumbria University (2025/26)

 

Bar Course

Bar Skills Course

Bar Knowledge Course 

Newcastle

Bar Course in one part

Bar Course in one part (LLM)

Bar Skills Course in one part

Bar Knowledge Course in one part
September 

Bar Course: full time or part time

Bar Course (LLM): full time or part time

Bar Skills Course: part time

Bar Knowledge Course part time

Bar Course in one part: £13,200

Bar Course in one part (LLM): £13,200

Bar Skills Course: £9,900

Bar Knowledge Course: £3,300

Nottingham Law School (2025/26) Barristers Training Course (BTC) Nottingham

Course in one part (PgDip)

Course in one part with LLM
September  Full time

Course in one part (PgDip): £12,900

Course (LLM): £15,200

The University of Law (2025/26) Bar Practice Course (BPC)

Birmingham

Bristol

Leeds

Liverpool

London Moorgate

Manchester

Newcastle

Nottingham

Course in one part 

Course in one part with LLM

September

January  

Full time

Part time

Course in one part: £15,635 outside London (excluding Newcastle), £13,500 in Newcastle, and £17,235 in London

Course in one part (LLM): £18,285 outside London (excluding Newcastle), £13,650 (including £4,500 Newcastle Postgraduate Award) in Newcastle, and £20,085 in London

Cardiff University (2025) Bar Training Course Cardiff

Course in one part (PgDip)

Course in one part (LLM)
September Full time

Course in one part (PgDip): £18,950

Course in one part with LLM: £18,950

Bristol Law School (2025/26) Bar Training Course Bristol

Course in one part (LLM)

Course in one part (PgDip)
September

Full time

Course in one part, full time (LLM): £15,750

Course in one part, full time (LLM): £15,750

Course in one part, full time (LLM): £15,750

Course in one part, full time (PgDip): £13,750
Manchester Metropolitan University (2025/26) Bar Training Course Manchester Course in one part September

Full time

Part time 

Part-time flexible

Full time: £14,500 

Part time:  £1,209 per 10 credits studied
University of Hertfordshire (2025/26) Bar Practice Hertfordshire

Course in one part (LLM)

Course in one part (PgDip)
September  Full time

Course in one part (LLM): £17,250

Course in one part (PgDip): £15,760  

 

Case study: The University of Law

To give students a better sense of the different learning options now on offer, we’ve outlined what The University of Law’s BPC involves in more detail below.

The University of Law’s BPC is taught continuously in one part and involves face-to-face learning with tutors throughout the course. Like all new Bar courses, the BPC comprises the knowledge areas of:

  • criminal litigation;
  • civil litigation;
  • evidence and sentencing; and
  • evidence and resolution of disputes out of court.

It’ll also cover the following core skills:

  • advocacy;
  • conferencing;
  • drafting;
  • opinion writing;
  • professional ethic; and
  • legal research.

As part of the course, students have the unique opportunity to participate in mock trials in real courtrooms with real judges and senior barristers, where they can hone their advocacy skills and put learning into practice. The opportunity also includes visits to the High Court, the magistrates’ court, Crown Court and county courts.

Students also have the option to combine the BPC with an additional master’s qualification, which can be gained in the following three ways:

  • Pro bono pathway: students carry out pro bono work throughout the year, providing free legal advice to members of the public under the supervision of a master’s solicitor. At the end of the year, the students write a critical reflective review of their pro bono experiences.
  • Dissertation pathway: students complete a dissertation in addition to their BPC studies.  
  • Optional modules pathway: complete a range of optional assessed modules to help shape the direction of your career. Students will then sit the exams once they’ve finished the BPC.

More flexibility, more to think about

Bar courses offer one immediate positive for students – generally lower fees than the old BPTC system.

With a much wider range of choice in terms of course structure and fees, prospective barristers must spend time familiarising themselves with all the options to make an informed decision about where to study.