The Legal 500 UK 2026 edition dropped on 1 October 2025 and Scotland’s legal market has been given a proper going-over. After months of submissions, interviews and referee checks, the new rankings paint a picture of a market under real pressure, yet still producing world-class work in pockets of strength.
Political upheaval, economic wobbles and a brutal commercial property slowdown have hit deal flow hard. Legal 500 researchers say it has not been “business as usual” this year. Many corporate, banking and real estate teams report their quietest 18 months in a decade.
Yet one sector refuses to lie down.
Energy Keeps the Lights On
The energy transition continues to throw off huge volumes of work. Renewables projects, offshore wind farm developments, hydrogen schemes and oil & gas decommissioning have kept Aberdeen, Edinburgh and Glasgow teams flat out.
International investors are piling in. Legal 500 notes “increased interest from overseas clients” chasing Scottish expertise in wind, carbon capture and pumped storage hydro. That foreign money has been a lifeline for many firms.
The Top Five Pull Further Ahead
Brodies once again sits top of the pile with an astonishing 41 practice area rankings across the firm. The Edinburgh and Glasgow giant also secured 112 individual lawyer recognitions, more than any other Scottish firm by some distance.
Burness Paull takes second place with 39 firm rankings and 78 ranked lawyers. The newly merged Morton Fraser MacRoberts and Harper Macleod both hit 36 rankings, while Anderson Strathern rounds out the top five with 30.
Here are the numbers that matter:
| Firm | Firm Rankings | Ranked Individuals |
|---|---|---|
| Brodies | 41 | 112 |
| Burness Paull | 39 | 78 |
| Morton Fraser MacRoberts | 36 | Not stated |
| Harper Macleod | 36 | Not stated |
| Anderson Strathern | 30 | Not stated |
| Pinsent Masons | Not top 5 | 59 |
| CMS | Not top 5 | 59 |
| Shepherd and Wedderburn | Not top 5 | 51 |
Nearly 60 firms picked up at least one ranking across 45 practice areas. That breadth shows depth still exists outside the big players, but the gap between the top tier and everyone else is growing.
More Than 700 Lawyers Make the Cut
This year saw over 700 Scottish solicitors named across the four individual tables:
- Hall of Fame
- Leading Partners
- Next Generation Partners
- Leading Associates
Brodies dominated again with 112 entries. Burness Paull claimed 78 places, while Pinsent Masons and CMS both hit 59. Shepherd and Wedderburn secured 51 ranked lawyers.
For younger solicitors, getting onto the Next Generation or Leading Associate lists is now a genuine career milestone. Clients read these tables. Partners notice them. They matter.
Consolidation Rolls On
The Scottish independent sector continues to shrink through mergers. The 2023 tie-up between Morton Fraser and MacRoberts created a new top-five player virtually overnight. Legal 500 expects more deals to follow.
International firms are also expanding. DLA Piper, Addleshaw Goddard and Pinsent Masons have all grown their Scottish headcount in the last two years, hungry for energy and infrastructure work.
That leaves mid-tier independent firms in a tough spot. They face larger, better-resourced competitors on every pitch. Some will merge. Others will carve out genuine niche expertise or accept slower growth.
What It All Means
Scotland’s legal market is splitting into clear tiers. A handful of firms have scale, breadth and brand that the rest simply cannot match. For clients, that means more choice at the top end and genuinely excellent service. For smaller firms and younger lawyers, the pressure is only going one way.
The energy transition will keep the best teams busy for years. Everything else feels uncertain.
The Legal 500 rankings remain the most respected independent measure of quality in this market. Making the list still means something. Topping it means even more.
