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First4Lawyers are an award-winning claims management company. Their No Win No Fee lawyers will take a success fee from compensation awarded in winning cases – this is typically 25% but could be more depending on your circumstances.

The Basics

If you are comparing Tredegar no win no fee solicitors, the key point is that the phrase describes a funding arrangement, not a promise that every claim will be accepted or cost-free in every situation. A solicitor will still need to look at the type of claim, the evidence, time limits, and the likely risks before offering terms. It is also worth checking what percentage or success fee may be deducted if the claim succeeds, whether insurance or disbursements could matter, and what the agreement says about unsuccessful claims. You can get a free consultation with First4Lawyers, who can help identify whether a suitable no-win-no-fee option may be available for your circumstances.

For many people in Tredegar, “no win no fee” sounds reassuring but can still feel unclear at the point where real paperwork is involved. It usually means legal fees are linked to the outcome, rather than paid upfront in the same way as traditional hourly billing, but the practical details sit in the agreement itself. That may include a success fee, insurance, disbursements such as report or court costs, and the circumstances where costs may still arise. The useful starting point is not simply whether a firm advertises no win no fee, but whether the funding terms, claim type, and risk assessment are a sensible fit.

Conditional Fee Agreements

No Win No Fee is a UK term often used for Conditional Fee Agreements (CFAs) between a solicitor and a client. In broad terms, the solicitor agrees that some or all of their fee is only payable if the claim succeeds, often through a success fee taken from compensation or handled according to the terms of the agreement. If the claim does not succeed, the client may not have to pay the solicitor’s basic charges, but other costs can still need careful checking, including disbursements such as medical reports or court fees, and any risk of the other side’s costs. “After the Event” (ATE) insurance is sometimes used to help manage that risk. Not every claim type can be handled under a no win no fee arrangement, and different firms may assess Tredegar enquiries in different ways, so the paperwork and the type of claim both matter.

Types of Cost Components 

When looking at the benefits and possible pitfalls of a No Win No Fee Agreement, these are the main cost terms worth understanding before signing. They can affect what is paid if the claim succeeds, what may happen if it does not, and what questions are worth asking before a Tredegar enquiry is taken forward. In plain terms, the agreement should make clear what the solicitor charges, what expenses may be separate, what insurance is being used if any, and how any deduction from compensation would be calculated.

  • Basic Charges or Standard Fee – Fees associated with legal work done on behalf of a client.  Typically based on the number of hours spent and hourly rates associated with the staff involved with case. Different lawyers in Tredegar will have different fees for their day-to-day work, and these can vary between practices, and between qualified solicitors within a practice.
  • Disbursements – Payment for expenses made on behalf of the client including but not limited to court fees, experts’ fees, accident report fees and travelling expenses.
  • Success Fee or “Uplift” To compensate for the cost of lost cases, lawyers typically are allowed to add a success fee or ”Uplift” in the CFA.   This is usually a percentage (not more than 100%) of a lawyer’s basic charges that is added to a client’s bill for which they will seek to recover from the other party if they win the claim.
  • After the Event (“ATE”) Insurance Premium – Cost of Insurance as part of a no win no fee agreement to indemnify the costs and disbursements of the lawsuit.  Usually purchased at or after the start of the litigation process.

Advantages and Disadvantages

Advantages

  • Because the cost to the client is linked to the outcome of the case.  For an unsuccessful case, there is the possibility that the client pays little or no cost.
  • Required disclosure of a CFA to the other party may encourage earlier settlement as the other party’s cost will increase in line with the level of the success fee.
  • Any damages awarded to the client will not be eaten up by the success fee, as the success fee will in most cases be payable by the opponent.

Disadvantages

  • There is no privilege, nor privacy attached to the funding arrangement in place. The existence of the CFA must be disclosed to the other party at the outset of the litigation and the risk assessment has to be disclosed to the court and if necessary to the other party when costs are assessed.
  • A CFA gives the lawyer a financial interest in the litigation and because of this they are inclined to take control of the strategy and resolution of the litigation.
  • Unless the client buys ATE to cover the winning party’s costs, the client is still at risk to pay those costs.

If you want to check whether a particular solicitor or firm is regulated, you can use the Solicitors Regulation Authority website, which lists regulated law firms and individuals. If you mainly want to understand whether a no win no fee solicitor may be available for a Tredegar claim, you can also visit our partner First4Lawyers for a free no-obligation chat. The chat can help narrow the enquiry without assuming that every claim, agreement, or fee structure will work in the same way. It can also help turn broad questions about risk, deductions, and suitability into points a regulated firm can consider properly.