Understanding the Difference – and the Advantages of Each
Navigating the UK licensing regime can be complex, technical and, at times, intimidating. Whether applying for a Premises Licence, responding to a Licence Review, or managing ongoing Compliance, many operators rightly seek professional support. Two roles are most often encountered in this space: the Licensing Solicitor and the Licensing Consultant.
While their work frequently overlaps, these are distinct professions with different strengths. Understanding the difference — and when each is most appropriate — can help licensees choose the right support for their business, their risk profile and their objectives.
The shared purpose: protecting the licence and the business
Both Licensing Solicitors and Licensing Consultants exist for the same fundamental reason: to help operators comply with the licensing framework while protecting their ability to trade.
They each work within the context of:
- The Licensing Act 2003
- The statutory licensing objectives
- Section 182 Guidance
- Local Statements of Licensing Policy
- Engagement with responsible authorities
Where they diverge is in qualification, approach, and the type of issues they are best placed to handle.
What is a Licensing Solicitor?
A Licensing Solicitor is a qualified lawyer regulated by the Solicitors Regulation Authority. Their primary role is to provide formal legal advice, represent clients in legal proceedings, and interpret the law authoritatively.
Core strengths of a Licensing Solicitor
- Legal authority and privilege: Advice is legally privileged.
- Complex or high-risk matters: Particularly suitable for:
- Licensing appeals
- Judicial review
- Defending review applications
- Cases involving serious crime, safeguarding failures or closure
- Court representation: Essential where matters escalate beyond the licensing authority.
- Interpretation of legislation and case law: Especially where legal arguments are finely balanced.
A solicitor’s role is often reactive but critical — stepping in when the stakes are high and the consequences potentially severe.
What is a Licensing Consultant?
A Licensing Consultant is a specialist advisor whose expertise is rooted in practical licensing, policy interpretation and real-world operational experience. Consultants are not lawyers, but many have backgrounds in local authority licensing, enforcement, environmental health, policing or regulatory consultancy.
Core strengths of a Licensing Consultant
- Strategic, preventative support: Helping avoid problems before they arise.
- Operational understanding: Translating law and policy into workable, day-to-day systems.
- Early engagement: Often involved before matters escalate.
- Cost-effective advice: Particularly for ongoing compliance and routine applications.
- Negotiation and liaison: Regular engagement with licensing officers and responsible authorities on practical terms.
Consultants are often best placed to ask:
“How do we operate compliantly without over-restricting the business?”
Key differences in approach
| Area | Licensing Solicitor | Licensing Consultant |
| Primary focus | Legal compliance & risk | Practical compliance & operation |
| Regulation | Solicitors Regulation Authority | Unregulated (experience-driven) |
| Legal privilege | Yes | No |
| Best for | Appeals, reviews, court matters | Applications, variations, policies |
| Typical involvement | High-risk or escalated cases | Ongoing & preventative work |
| Cost profile | Higher | Generally lower |
Neither role is superior — they are complementary.
The Consultant advantage: preventing problems rather than reacting to them
One of the most significant advantages of a Licensing Consultant lies in prevention. Many licensing difficulties arise not from deliberate non-compliance, but from:
- Misunderstood conditions
- Inappropriate operating schedules
- Over-conditioning at grant stage
- Poor engagement with responsible authorities
- Lack of staff training or policies
A Consultant’s strength is in shaping applications and operations so that enforcement, review and legal action are less likely to arise in the first place.
This can include:
- Drafting proportionate operating schedules
- Negotiating conditions before grant
- Advising on safeguarding, intoxication and capacity management
- Aligning licensing with planning and real-world operation
- Preparing staff guidance and management controls
In many cases, this quiet work never becomes visible — precisely because it succeeds.
When a Solicitor is essential
There are circumstances where only a Solicitor is appropriate, such as:
- Appeals to the Magistrates’ Court
- Judicial reviews
- Criminal prosecutions
- Complex review hearings with cross-examination
- Cases involving licensing and parallel criminal liability
In these situations, legal privilege, procedural expertise and advocacy skills are indispensable.
When a Licensing consultant may be the better first call
Equally, many situations benefit from early Consultant input, including:
- New Premises Licence applications
- Variations and extensions of hours
- Changes of style or capacity
- Policy interpretation
- Compliance audits
- Preparing for inspections or hearings
A Consultant can often resolve issues before they become legal disputes, saving time, cost and stress.
The most effective model: collaboration
Increasingly, the most resilient operators adopt a blended approach:
- Licensing Consultants handling day-to-day compliance, strategy and negotiation
- Licensing Solicitors engaged where formal legal proceedings or complex risk arise
This collaboration allows businesses to remain commercially agile while legally protected, rather than defaulting to a purely defensive posture.
Conclusion: choosing the right tool for the task
Understanding the difference between a Licensing Solicitor and a Licensing Consultant is not about choosing one over the other — it is about choosing the right expertise at the right time.
- Consultants excel at prevention, pragmatism and proportion
- Solicitors excel at legal authority, defence and escalation
Used wisely and together where appropriate, both play a vital role in protecting Licences, livelihoods and responsible operation within the licensing framework.
Questions? Call The Licensing Guys on 01432 700024 or email us on licensing@thelicensingguys.com.









