It has finally arrived
The most detailed analysis of the legal market’s remuneration in South Africa there has ever been.
Remember, before you read it, that this is total remuneration, not just salary.
And whilst it is not every lawyer, in every firm or team in the country - It is taken from thousands of interviews that the research team at Nabii have conducted, from the offices in Cape Town, over the past 9 months. We cover sole practitioners up to the largest law firms, in house remuneration across 10 industries, and ALSPs and Consulting.
Download here, for free, below
This is the most accurate field research report you will read.
Take your total remuneration and see which band you are in, nationally, by industry and by city.
And, looking ahead to the new year and beyond, it will help you to benchmark your total pay against others across other sections of the legal sector.
* For now, enjoy this unprecedented report, 143 pages of data brought to you by Nabii Intel, part of The GRM Group - THE leading voice of remuneration and careers in the legal space, in South Africa.
* Over 4000 Attorney remuneration packages analysed, 1000s of field research calls conducted, backed up by 12 years of historical remuneration data.
* The report shows the changes the legal sector is facing are dizzying
* The legal market is undergoing a fundamental paradigm shift toward a gig economy model.
* Traditional billable hour structures and lockstep promotions are rapidly becoming obsolete as clients demand strategic, cost-effective legal services.
* The report predicts that remuneration will become largely merit-based, with lockstep compensation dying off.
And those that stand still, will find their work increasingly commoditised. Which will push prices and therefore earnings, downward
Johannesburg and Cape Town maintain 10-20% salary premiums over national averages, particularly in high-demand practice areas. Other cities consistently show remuneration 20-25% below national averages, while Durban and Pretoria fall somewhere between these extremes.
High-demand, high-revenue practice areas commanding premium compensation include Mergers & Acquisitions, Banking and Finance, Corporate Commercial, Litigation and Fintech. Lower-tier practice areas such as Family Law and Estates, Wills and Trusts consistently underperform the market financially.
The in-house sector shows robust growth with General Counsel positions in banking, Fintech, and Mining commanding 10-15% premiums above national benchmarks in major cities.
Our report issues a stark warning: lawyers who cannot deploy AI Agents by mid-2026 will likely be left behind. Legal technology adoption is no longer optional but essential for survival. Solo practitioners must leverage AI to compete with larger firms.
Several transformative trends threaten traditional firm structures:
* Alternative Legal Service Providers are gaining significant market share
* Fractional in-house work is accelerating through platforms like Umbiie.com
* Global gig platforms are enabling South African lawyers to charge in foreign currencies
* Legal process outsourcing may consolidate but will evolve toward MSP-type arrangements
* The report suggests that firms investing in skills, technology, and specialist expertise can command premium compensation, while generalist and fragmented segments face slower growth.
The data indicates you should consider:
* Immediately investing in AI and legal technology capabilities
* Restructure performance compensation away from pure billable hours toward value-based metrics
* Consider hybrid workforce models combining permanent staff with fractional experts
* Evaluate our practice area mix for alignment with high-demand sectors
The report warns of a “pay bubble” deflating for partners and senior lawyers, with most firms lacking the cash reserves to sustain outsized compensation as demand for traditional legal services wanes.
There are many challenges facing the legal sector, wherever you sit in it, but there are also huge opportunities - take it all in and reach out to us. Rob on rob@thegrmgroup.com
The GRM Group: The Business of Legal Talent. is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.