Solicitor vs Claims Management Company — Personal Injury Claims
Last reviewed: June 2026 · EA Personal Injury Solicitors
A solicitor is SRA-regulated, can give legal advice, and can conduct and represent your claim through to court. A claims management company (CMC) is FCA-regulated, cannot give legal advice or litigate, and typically refers your case to a solicitor while charging an additional fee. For personal injury claims, using a solicitor directly gives you more protection and usually costs less overall.
TL;DR — Quick Summary
Key Points
- Solicitors are SRA-regulated; CMCs are FCA-regulated and cannot give legal advice.
- CMCs cannot conduct litigation — they refer cases to solicitors, often charging a referral fee on top.
- The success fee a solicitor can charge is capped at 25% of your general damages by statute.
- Using a solicitor directly removes the additional CMC cost layer and gives you full SRA client protections.
- Both routes may ultimately use a solicitor — but instructing one directly is almost always cheaper and simpler.
What Is the Difference Between a Solicitor and a Claims Management Company?
The most important distinction is that a solicitor is a qualified legal professional regulated by the Solicitors Regulation Authority (SRA). Solicitors can give legal advice, represent you in negotiations, issue and conduct court proceedings, and appear in court on your behalf. A claims management company (CMC) is a business regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) that can introduce you to a solicitor or provide claims handling services, but cannot give legal advice or litigate your claim.
In practice, most CMCs operating in the personal injury market take your details and refer your case to a panel solicitor, charging a referral fee for doing so. That fee ultimately comes out of your compensation or is included in the solicitor's costs structure.
Side-by-Side Comparison
| Factor | Solicitor | Claims Management Company |
|---|---|---|
| Regulator | Solicitors Regulation Authority (SRA) | Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) |
| Can give legal advice? | Yes | No |
| Can conduct litigation? | Yes | No |
| Can represent you in court? | Yes | No |
| Professional indemnity insurance | Required by SRA rules | Not required in same way |
| Referral fees charged | None (direct instruction) | Often yes — added to your costs |
| Success fee cap | 25% of general damages (statutory cap) | Not subject to same cap |
| Client complaints route | SRA + Legal Ombudsman | FCA + Financial Ombudsman Service |
| Direct access to fee earner | Yes | Usually not — they refer elsewhere |
| Suitable for court proceedings | Yes | No — must instruct solicitors |
Regulation and Legal Advice
The SRA Code of Conduct for Solicitors imposes detailed duties on solicitors, including the duty to act in your best interests, to be honest with you, to keep your money safe, and to maintain confidentiality. Solicitors must carry professional indemnity insurance and comply with strict rules on client money. If a solicitor breaches their duties, you can complain to the SRA and, if relevant, to the Legal Ombudsman.
CMCs are regulated by the FCA under the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 (as amended). The FCA imposes requirements on CMC conduct but the regulatory framework is not as comprehensive as the SRA's for solicitors, and CMCs do not hold practising certificates or have the same client money protections.
The Cost Difference in Practice
Under a no win, no fee agreement with a solicitor, the success fee is capped by statute at 25% of the general damages and past losses element of your compensation. It cannot be applied to future care or future loss of earnings.
When you use a CMC, the CMC may charge its own fee (sometimes called an introduction fee or management fee) in addition to the solicitor's success fee. The combined deduction from your compensation can therefore exceed what you would pay using a solicitor directly. Some CMCs also charge upfront fees, which solicitors regulated under the SRA Code cannot require for no win, no fee cases.
Your Practical Rights With a Solicitor
When you instruct a solicitor directly, you receive a client care letter setting out your rights, costs information, and the solicitor's regulatory status. You have a direct relationship with your fee earner and can contact the SRA if you have a concern. Your file must be transferred to another solicitor if you change firms, and any client money is held in a regulated client account.
With a CMC, you have fewer protections and less direct control. If the CMC refers your case without your consent to a solicitor you have not vetted, you may have limited recourse if the quality of representation is poor.
When Might a CMC Be Used?
Some CMCs have evolved into claims platforms that do provide a useful aggregation function — for example, for high-volume financial mis-selling claims. For personal injury, the value of a CMC introduction is minimal, as most SRA-regulated firms offer a free initial enquiry and will assess your claim directly without any referral middleman.