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Expert analysis

30 January 2026 / Dr Chris Pamplin
Issue: 8147 / Categories: Features , Profession , Expert Witness
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Who are expert witnesses, what do they do & what do they earn? Dr Chris Pamplin reveals the latest stats
  • Data for 2025 sets out the professions, workload and experience of expert witnesses, as well as the nature of their work, and the fees they command.
  • This article examines the notable changes since the UK Register of Expert Witnesses started carrying out surveys in 1995.

As a large, multidisciplinary expert witness community in the UK, the experienced individuals listed in the UK Register of Expert Witnesses represent a valuable source of information on matters of importance to experts and those who instruct them. Since 1995, the register has regularly conducted surveys of its expert witnesses. The following analysis is based on our most recent survey, which was conducted last summer.

The experts

Of the 240 experts who responded, 90 were medical practitioners. Of the remaining experts, 41 were engineers, 15 were in professions ancillary to medicine, 17 were accountants or bankers, 26 had scientific qualifications, 12 were surveyors or valuers,

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NEWS
The Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) has launched a recruitment drive for talented early career and more senior barristers and solicitors
Regulators differed in the clarity and consistency of their post-Mazur advice and guidance, according to an interim report by the Legal Services Board (LSB)
The Solicitors Act 1974 may still underpin legal regulation, but its age is increasingly showing. Writing in NLJ this week, Victoria Morrison-Hughes of the Association of Costs Lawyers argues that the Act is ‘out of step with modern consumer law’ and actively deters fairness
A Competition Appeal Tribunal (CAT) ruling has reopened debate on the availability of ‘user damages’ in competition claims. Writing in NLJ this week, Edward Nyman of Hausfeld explains how the CAT allowed Dr Liza Lovdahl Gormsen’s alternative damages case against Meta to proceed, rejecting arguments that such damages are barred in competition law
The next generation is inheriting more than assets—it is inheriting complexity. Writing in NLJ this week, experts from Penningtons Manches Cooper chart how global mobility, blended families and evolving values are reshaping private wealth advice
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