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03 July 2026 / Stephen Gold
Issue: 8168 / Categories: Features , Procedure & practice , Civil way
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Civil way: 3 July 2026

Court and Tribunal fees up; Shtum after tax avoidance; Rental latest; Remote or attended?

LAWBITES

Sue Soon to Save A raft of court and tribunal fees are set for inflationary rises on 13 July 2026 under the Court and Tribunal Fees (Miscellaneous Amendments) Order 2026 (SI 2026/642 as amended by SI 2026/665). 170 fees will be up by 2.6% and 27 by an average of 34%. Commencement fees for money claims and trial fees are untouched, but any landlord who has the distinction of being able to seek possession will be shelling out more to kick off: £415 instead of £404 in the county court. A general application on notice in civil (fee 2.4(a)) will cost £321 and an application for divorce etc (fee 1.2) £628. A family search of the index of decrees absolute (fee 7.1) jumps by £24 to £89. The Property Chamber’s new fee structure, already threatened (see ‘Civil way’, NLJ, 24 April 2026, p13), will be among the tribunal changes brought in. A probate

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MOVERS & SHAKERS

Ogier—Martin Livingston

Ogier—Martin Livingston

Martin Livingston joins Ogier in Cayman to strengthen regulatory support

Blake Morgan—47 promotions

Blake Morgan—47 promotions

Blake Morgan announces 47 summer promotions across UK offices

NEWS
Consultant-led law firms should prepare for closer regulatory attention as oversight evolves
Artificial intelligence may draft workplace grievances, but employers cannot treat them any differently from conventional complaints
From dishonest claimants to judicial promotions and procedural skirmishes, the latest legal developments offer plenty for litigators to digest
Fresh guidance is set to influence how courts decide whether hearings take place online or in person
County Court judges remain divided over whether landlords can lawfully force entry to carry out essential safety inspections after tenants ignore access injunctions
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