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International Lawyers Qualifying via SQE: Complete Guide to England & Wales

CELE SQE Team
May 7, 2026
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6 min read
International lawyers can qualify as solicitors in England & Wales through SQE1 and SQE2 exams, bypassing traditional training contracts.
Maria, a corporate lawyer from São Paulo with five years' experience, stares at her screen wondering: "Can I really become a qualified solicitor in England without starting from scratch?" She's not alone. Thousands of international lawyers are discovering that the Solicitors Qualifying Examination (SQE) has revolutionised how overseas legal professionals can qualify in England & Wales, offering a direct pathway that doesn't require abandoning years of hard-earned expertise.

Why International Lawyers Choose the SQE Route

The SQE represents the most significant change to solicitor qualification in decades. Unlike the previous system that heavily favoured UK law graduates, the SQE assesses competence regardless of your legal background. International lawyers find this particularly attractive because it recognises that legal skills are transferable—your experience analysing contracts in New York or advising clients in Singapore demonstrates the analytical thinking that solicitors need.
The numbers speak volumes. Since the SQE launched in 2021, international candidates have consistently represented a significant portion of test-takers. The examination's structure—SQE1's 360 multiple-choice questions across two papers (FLK1 and FLK2), followed by SQE2's practical skills assessment—allows you to demonstrate competence without needing a UK training contract first.
Remember: you don't need a law degree from any jurisdiction to sit the SQE. Your MBA, engineering degree, or philosophy doctorate combined with legal experience can be just as valuable.

Understanding the SQE1 and SQE2 Structure for International Candidates

SQE1 tests your knowledge across 13 areas of English law, split between FLK1 and FLK2. FLK1 covers foundational subjects including Contract Law, Tort Law, and the English Legal System—areas where your international experience provides a solid foundation. You'll recognise concepts like consideration in contracts or negligence in tort, though you'll need to master the English approach.
FLK2 delves into practice areas: Property Law and Practice, Criminal Law and Practice, and Solicitor Accounts. These subjects tend to be more jurisdiction-specific, but international lawyers often find the practical focus refreshing. Rather than abstract legal theory, you're learning how solicitors actually handle property transactions or manage client money.
SQE2 assesses five practical skills: Client Interviewing, Advocacy, Case and Matter Analysis, Legal Research, and Legal Writing/Drafting. International lawyers frequently excel here because these skills mirror what you've been doing throughout your career. The 60-minute Legal Research task, conducted on the Pearson VUE platform using only Ctrl+F search functionality, tests your ability to find relevant information quickly—a skill you've likely honed regardless of your home jurisdiction.

Qualifying Work Experience: Your International Background Counts

Here's where international lawyers gain a significant advantage. The SRA recognises qualifying work experience (QWE) from any jurisdiction, provided it develops the skills needed for solicitor practice. Your years handling cross-border mergers in Frankfurt, advising tech startups in Tel Aviv, or managing litigation in Toronto can all count towards your required two years of QWE.
The key is demonstrating that your experience involved legal work that develops solicitor competencies. Commercial law, dispute resolution, property transactions, regulatory compliance—these translate directly. Even if you practiced in a different legal system, skills like client counselling, legal analysis, and document drafting are universally relevant.

Strategic Study Approaches for International Lawyers

Your international background shapes how you should approach SQE preparation. Unlike fresh graduates learning law for the first time, you're translating existing knowledge into English legal concepts. This requires a different strategy.
Start by identifying areas of overlap. If you practiced commercial law, Contract Law and Business Law and Practice in FLK1 will feel familiar. Focus your initial efforts on distinctly English concepts—the doctrine of consideration might work differently than in your home jurisdiction, or the approach to contractual interpretation may emphasise different factors.
For completely new areas, approach them systematically. English Legal System, for instance, covers constitutional principles, court structures, and sources of law that may be entirely different from what you know. Don't try to compare everything to your home system—sometimes it's easier to learn English law as a standalone subject.
International lawyers often underestimate subjects like Solicitor Accounts or Legal Services. These practice-focused areas test specific English regulatory requirements that have no equivalent in other jurisdictions—allocate adequate study time accordingly.

Practical Considerations: Timing, Costs, and Career Planning

Most international lawyers can realistically prepare for SQE1 in 8-12 months while working full-time, depending on their legal background and available study time. Those with common law experience often need less time for foundational subjects, while civil law lawyers might require additional preparation for case law methodology and precedent-based reasoning.
Consider the financial investment carefully. SQE1 exam fees, preparation materials, and potential time off work represent a significant cost. However, compare this to the traditional route's opportunity cost—two years of training contract salary versus your current earning potential. For many international lawyers, the SQE route offers faster qualification with less career disruption.
Plan your timeline around exam availability and career goals. If you're aiming for a specific firm's intake or want to coordinate with visa applications, work backwards from your target qualification date. Remember that you need to pass both SQE1 and SQE2, complete your QWE, and meet character and suitability requirements before admission.

Building Your English Legal Network

Qualification is just the beginning. International lawyers entering the English market need to build professional networks and understand local business culture. Consider joining the Law Society, relevant specialist associations, or international lawyer networks. Many firms value the international perspective you bring, especially in an increasingly globalised legal market.
Your international background isn't a disadvantage to overcome—it's a competitive advantage to leverage. Clients dealing with cross-border matters value lawyers who understand multiple legal systems and cultural contexts. Position your qualification journey as adding English law expertise to your existing international capabilities.

Making Your SQE Journey Successful

The SQE represents unprecedented opportunity for international lawyers to qualify in one of the world's leading legal jurisdictions. Success requires understanding that you're not learning law from scratch—you're adapting your existing expertise to English legal principles and practices.
At CELE SQE, we've supported international lawyers from over 40 jurisdictions through their qualification journey since 2021. Our comprehensive SQE1 courses (from £1,750 for short-term preparation to £3,720 for long-term study) and targeted SQE2 course (£1,450) recognise that international candidates need focused preparation that builds on existing knowledge rather than starting from zero. Connect with our team at WeChat SQE100 or visit celebar.com to explore how we can support your qualification journey.

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