Forbes Solicitors has acquired e3 employment law LLP, a boutique employment practice in the North West, in a move that signals accelerating consolidation among regional UK law firms seeking specialized capability without London overhead. No purchase price was disclosed. The transaction places a 15-lawyer employment practice inside a 300-plus solicitor regional platform.
Forbes Solicitors operates 14 offices across Lancashire and Manchester, generating approximately £30 million in annual revenue. e3 employment law LLP has built a North West client roster over 12 years with a focus on tribunal work and executive exits. The acquisition adds employment law depth to Forbes' commercial offering without the partner compensation drag that often accompanies organic hires in contested practice areas. Integration is expected within 90 days.
This matters because mid-tier legal consolidation is no longer confined to volume conveyancing or personal injury. Employment law—historically fragmented among solo practitioners and small partnerships—now attracts platform buyers as corporates and private equity-backed portfolio companies professionalize HR risk management. The UK employment tribunal backlog sits at 40,000 cases as of Q1 2025, creating sustained demand for representation. Regional firms that control employment practices can cross-sell into existing commercial client bases without the £200,000-plus partner salaries required to recruit from national firms. Forbes gains a ready team with existing referral relationships and a billing model already calibrated to mid-market client expectations.
The acquisition also reflects a broader pattern: legal services M&A activity in the North West has increased 18% year-over-year as firms pursue geographic density before national competitors enter their corridors. Employment law is particularly suited to bolt-on deals because it requires minimal physical infrastructure and integrates cleanly into existing case management systems. For private equity observers, this is the third Forbes transaction in 24 months, suggesting either organic growth constraints or preparation for a sale process within the next 18 to 24 months.
Operators should watch for additional Forbes acquisitions in immigration or regulatory practices, which would indicate a shift toward corporate advisory services and away from consumer-facing revenue. Employment law practices with £2 million to £5 million in revenue in Birmingham, Leeds, and Liverpool are now in play as consolidators map adjacencies. For allocators tracking UK mid-market legal services, partner retention at e3 over the next six months will signal whether Forbes paid for relationships or simply bought a book of business. If three or more partners depart, the acquisition was mispriced.
The deal completes as UK employment law changes around flexible working and tribunal fee structures take effect in Q2 2025, creating a 12-to-18-month window of elevated demand before the market adjusts. Forbes now controls a practice positioned to capture that surge without the ramp time required to build it internally.