If you are on the SQE pathway to becoming a solicitor in England and Wales, getting your Qualifying Work Experience (QWE) confirmed is one of the final steps before you can apply for admission to the roll. But for many candidates, especially those without a traditional training contract, it can be one of the most confusing.

This guide explains exactly what QWE sign-off involves, who can confirm your experience, and what options you have if things do not go to plan.

What Is QWE Sign-Off?

Under the SRA’s current rules, every candidate qualifying through SQE must complete at least two years’ full-time (or equivalent) qualifying work experience. That experience needs to involve providing real legal services — not simulated work — and must be formally confirmed before you can apply to join the solicitors’ register.

Confirmation means that a solicitor (or Compliance Officer for Legal Practice) reviews your experience and certifies that it meets the SRA’s requirements, including exposure to at least two of the competences in the Statement of Solicitor Competence.

Who Can Sign Off Your QWE?

There are two main routes to getting your QWE confirmed:

1. Your Employer

The most straightforward option is for a solicitor at your current or former employer to confirm your experience. This is typical if you work (or worked) in a law firm, in-house legal team, or other regulated legal environment where a qualified solicitor can speak to your competence first-hand.

2. An External Solicitor

If there is no solicitor at your workplace who can confirm your QWE — for example, if you gained experience overseas, in a non-regulated organisation, or your employer simply will not cooperate — you can use an independent external solicitor. The external solicitor will review your evidence, speak with your supervisor, and then provide the formal confirmation.

This is the service that QWE Confirmed provides: an SRA-regulated solicitor reviews your documentation and confirms your qualifying work experience on a fixed-fee basis.

What Evidence Do You Need?

There is no single prescribed format for QWE evidence, but you will generally need to demonstrate:

Useful evidence includes a training diary or log of work, a portfolio of tasks you completed, performance reviews, and references from supervisors.

What If Your Employer Will Not Sign Off Your QWE?

This is more common than you might expect, particularly for paralegals at firms that prefer to retain staff in non-qualified roles. However, the SRA has been clear that refusing to confirm QWE that genuinely meets its criteria — simply to retain an employee — could put a firm in breach of its regulatory obligations.

If your employer will not cooperate, you have options:

The QWE Confirmed Process

At QWE Confirmed, the process works as follows:

  1. Free initial review: Send your documentation to contact@qweconfirmed.co.uk for an informal assessment of whether your experience is likely to qualify — no obligation and no sign-up required.
  2. Sign up and submit evidence: If your experience looks suitable, you create an account, upload your evidence, and complete a structured review form mapping your work against the SRA competences.
  3. Supervisor contact: The solicitor speaks with your supervisor to obtain the feedback the SRA requires.
  4. Formal confirmation: Once satisfied, the solicitor provides a signed QWE confirmation that you can submit with your application to the SRA.

Key Things to Remember

Getting your QWE signed off does not have to be complicated. If you are unsure whether your experience qualifies, get in touch for a free initial review.