
Bristol-based TLT Solicitors law firm has closed in on the £100m mark in a year when the law firm elected its first new managing partner in almost two decades, according to a report in InsiderMedia.
In the year to 30 April 2020, revenue climbed by 13 per cent rise from £87.6m to £98.8m.
Growth across its focus sectors continues to drive the firm’s revenue increase, with major projects for financial services clients, supporting EV infrastructure and energy storage initiatives, significant work for central and local government, and major new client wins in the retail and digital sectors.
TLT managing partner John Wood (pictured above) said: “We had a strong year last year as we continued with our strategy to build expertise and scale in our specialist sectors and across our UK offices.
“Investment in our FutureLaw practice is a key part of that as we look at how we can deliver legal and other professional services more effectively for our clients, using innovations in technology and process improvements.
“Looking ahead, whilst of course our primary focus in the first part of this financial year is carefully managing the impact of the pandemic so that we come out of this period with the same momentum that we had coming in to it, we are not standing still.”
TLT also made some major management changes, with John Wood elected as the first new managing partner in 19 years.
David Pester takes on a new head of strategic growth role with partner Andrew Webber taking over from John Wood as head of corporate. Other key management changes were also made.
Headquartered in Bristol, TLT has UK offices in Belfast, Edinburgh, Manchester, Glasgow and London.
LawFuel News – Fueling Law Firm Growth
- Federal Employment Litigation Explodes to 7-Year High as Disability Claims Surge 42%
The dockets don’t lie and right now they’re screaming “opportunity” at every employment practice in America,… Read more: Federal Employment Litigation Explodes to 7-Year High as Disability Claims Surge 42% - Is This The Billable Hour’s Last Stand? Anthropic’s Top Lawyer Thinks So
The legal profession has survived recessions, regulatory upheavals and the occasional partner meltdown. But the next threat to BigLaw’s favourite revenue model may come from something far less dramatic. A machine that reads faster than any associate and which could spell the end of the infamous ‘billable hour’, which has been touted as being in its end time for some time. According to Jeff Bleich, general counsel at AI company Anthropic, (pictured) the traditional billable hour could soon be on borrowed time. - Legal Ethics Whiplash 2026: DOJ Moves to Block State Bars from Disciplining Its Lawyers — Plus a Massive Spike in Judicial Complaints
LawFuel StaffBig Law partners and in-house counsel, take note: the rules governing attorney discipline are shifting… Read more: Legal Ethics Whiplash 2026: DOJ Moves to Block State Bars from Disciplining Its Lawyers — Plus a Massive Spike in Judicial Complaints - Legal AI – Herbert Smith Partners with Legora as “Intelligent Legal Colleague”
Leading global law firm Herbert Smith Freehills Kramer is adopting Legora as its firmwide general-purpose AI… Read more: Legal AI – Herbert Smith Partners with Legora as “Intelligent Legal Colleague” - Taylor Rose’s 1,000‑Lawyer Milestone: Has the Consultant Model Finally Gone Mainstream?
Tom Borman, lawFuel Contributing EditorTaylor Rose has become the first UK law firm to push its… Read more: Taylor Rose’s 1,000‑Lawyer Milestone: Has the Consultant Model Finally Gone Mainstream? - Philadelphia Judge Charged With Strangulation In Domestic Violence Case
Lawyers, judges, and the rest of the legal tribe usually prefer their courtroom drama metaphorical. Philadelphia’s… Read more: Philadelphia Judge Charged With Strangulation In Domestic Violence Case - Top 8 Legal Answering Services for Law Firms in 2026
Missing a client call can mean missing a case. Potential clients often contact multiple firms and… Read more: Top 8 Legal Answering Services for Law Firms in 2026






