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Take-home pay by level — Irish solicitors 2026

Figures below are for employed solicitors, taxed under PAYE with standard PRSI Class A (4.1%, employer-matched) and USC.

Level Gross Salary Monthly Net Effective Rate
Trainee Solicitor €32,000 €2,350/mo 11.9%
NQ Solicitor (regional) €48,000 €3,242/mo 18.9%
Solicitor (Dublin, 3–5 yrs) €65,000 €3,978/mo 26.6%
Senior Associate (Big Five firm) €95,000 €5,192/mo 34.4%
Equity Partner (illustrative) €250,000 €11,379/mo 45.4%

"Big Five" refers to A&L Goodbody, Arthur Cox, McCann FitzGerald, Matheson, and William Fry. Bonuses not included. Equity partner income is illustrative — real partner pay is profit-share based. Source: Irish Legal News, PwC Ireland legal salary surveys 2026.

Barristers: self-employed from the first devilling year

Unlike solicitors, barristers are self-employed sole traders operating from the Law Library, taxed under the self-assessment system rather than PAYE — and this changes the numbers in ways an employed-lawyer calculator can't capture directly.

  • Class S PRSI: self-employed barristers pay a flat 4% Class S PRSI rather than Class A — with no employer top-up, but also no access to jobseeker's benefit if work dries up
  • "Devilling" (pupillage): the mandatory first year of practice is traditionally unpaid or paid a nominal stipend by the devilling master — a real financial barrier that means most new barristers need savings or family support to get through year one
  • King's Inns fees: qualifying as a barrister requires the Barrister-at-Law degree (roughly €14,000–€16,000 in fees), paid upfront before any devilling income begins
  • Income volatility: barristers bill per brief with no guaranteed salary — junior barristers commonly report first full-year earnings of €20,000–€35,000, rising sharply only after 5–8 years of building a practice

By the time a barrister reaches Senior Counsel (SC) level — typically 15+ years' call — earnings for those with strong commercial or established criminal practices can exceed €300,000, but the profession's income distribution is far more skewed than solicitors', with a long, thin tail of junior barristers earning modestly for years before any inflection point.

Salary distribution — where Irish solicitors sit

PercentileGrossMonthly Net
P25 — trainee/NQ regional~€32,000–€48,000~€2,350–€3,242/mo
P50 — Dublin mid-level~€65,000~€3,978/mo
P75 — senior associate, Big Five~€95,000~€5,192/mo
P90 — partner track / equity partner~€180,000+~€8,900+/mo

Frequently asked questions

An NQ solicitor on €48,000 takes home about €3,242/month. A Dublin solicitor with 3–5 years' PQE on €65,000 takes home roughly €3,978/month. A senior associate at a Big Five firm on €95,000 takes home approximately €5,192/month.

Barristers are self-employed and pay Class S PRSI (a flat 4%, with no employer contribution) rather than the Class A PRSI solicitors pay as PAYE employees. Barristers file under self-assessment, can claim broader business expense deductions, but lose access to certain PAYE-linked benefits like jobseeker's benefit. Their income is also far less predictable — junior barristers often earn €20,000–€35,000 in the first years of practice.

It depends heavily on practice area and persistence. The Barrister-at-Law degree costs €14,000–€16,000, the devilling (pupillage) year is typically unpaid or nominal, and junior earnings are volatile for years. But established barristers — particularly in commercial, personal injury, or criminal practice — can significantly out-earn equivalent-seniority solicitors, and Senior Counsel with strong practices can clear €300,000+.

A Dublin senior associate on €95,000 (~€5,192/month net) is broadly comparable to a UK regional senior solicitor, but well below London Magic Circle NQ pay (£125,000, ~£5,994/month). Ireland's smaller legal market has fewer ultra-high-paying City-equivalent firms, though the Big Five compete increasingly with UK and US firms for corporate and funds work, particularly around Dublin's IFSC.