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Judiciary

High Court Judge

One of approximately 110 judges who sit in the High Court of Justice, handling the most complex and high-value civil cases and serious criminal matters.

Overview

High Court Judges (officially 'Justices of the High Court' or 'puisne judges') are among the most senior members of the judiciary in England & Wales. There are approximately 110 High Court Judges, sitting across the three divisions: the Queen's/King's Bench Division, the Chancery Division, and the Family Division.

High Court Judges hear the most complex and high-value civil cases, including commercial disputes worth hundreds of millions of pounds, complex fraud cases, judicial review challenges to government decisions, and the most difficult family cases (such as international child abduction and forced marriage). They also sit in the Crown Court for the most serious criminal cases, including murder, terrorism, and cases of exceptional public interest.

Appointment to the High Court is by invitation of the Lord Chancellor on the recommendation of the JAC. Candidates must have held a legal qualification with rights of audience for at least seven years, though in practice all High Court Judges have had distinguished careers of 20–30+ years, typically as leading barristers (many are King's Counsel) or, increasingly, promoted from the Circuit Bench.

High Court Judges are addressed as "My Lord" or "My Lady" in court and are knighted (or made a Dame) upon appointment. They sit in the Royal Courts of Justice in London and travel on circuit to regional court centres. Their judgments create binding precedent and shape the development of English law.

Day-to-Day Work

  • Trying the most complex civil and commercial cases
  • Hearing judicial review challenges to government decisions
  • Sitting in the Crown Court for the most serious criminal trials (murder, terrorism)
  • Writing detailed reserved judgments that set legal precedent
  • Hearing appeals from lower courts and tribunals
  • Granting or refusing injunctions and interim relief
  • Managing multi-week or multi-month trials with substantial evidence
  • Sitting in the Divisional Court and Court of Appeal when required

How to Qualify

Selection by the JAC, typically from among the most distinguished barristers (usually King's Counsel) and senior Circuit Judges. Must have at least seven years' qualification with rights of audience, though in practice all appointees have 20–30+ years of experience at the highest level.

Distinguished legal career

20–30+ years

Build an outstanding reputation as a barrister (usually KC) or senior judge.

JAC selection / invitation

6–12 months

May be invited to apply or apply through open competition.

Appointment

Immediate

Appointed by the Crown on the recommendation of the Lord Chancellor. Knighted upon appointment.

Typical Costs

ApplicationFree

Salary Ranges

High Court Judge£188,901 (as of 2024)
Court of Appeal (if promoted)£215,094
Supreme Court Justice (if promoted)£230,717

Key Skills

Exceptional legal intellect and analytical ability
Outstanding written judgement drafting
Authority and gravitas in the courtroom
Ability to synthesise vast volumes of evidence and argument
Absolute impartiality and independence
Resilience under public and political scrutiny

Pros & Cons

Advantages

  • The pinnacle of a legal career for many
  • Judgments shape the law and create binding precedent
  • Exceptional pension, knighthood/damehood, and security of tenure
  • Intellectually the most challenging legal work available
  • Enormous contribution to the rule of law and justice

Disadvantages

  • Significant pay cut from top-earning KC practice
  • Intense public and media scrutiny
  • Lonely role — sole responsibility for momentous decisions
  • Limited personal freedom (restrictions on public activities)
  • Heavy workload with complex reserved judgments

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Last updated: 2025-03-01