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💰★★★★☆Salary potential
🎓Law degree + long experienceEducation
🕐Court hoursWorking hours
🏠CourtWork style
📈Stable, very limited entryMarket demand

Welcome to the world of the judiciary

Whether you're drawn to the law's highest responsibility, or simply curious how one becomes a judge, this guide covers what a judge actually does, what it takes, the day-to-day, and the honest upsides and downsides.

Why read on? Becoming a judge is the pinnacle of a legal career — a position of immense responsibility, respect, and impartiality. Judges interpret the law, weigh evidence, and decide outcomes that change lives. The path is long and appointments are rare, but few roles carry such gravity or public trust.

General description

A judge presides over court proceedings, interprets and applies the law, weighs evidence, and delivers rulings and sentences. In simple terms: they make the final, impartial decision on matters of law and justice. Think of them as the impartial referee and guardian of the law, above the parties before them.

  • Preside over court cases fairly
  • Interpret and apply the law
  • Weigh evidence and arguments
  • Deliver rulings, judgments, and sentences

Key skills & qualifications

Hard skills

Deep legal knowledge Case law Evidence evaluation Legal reasoning Procedure Judgment writing Impartiality Courtroom management

Soft skills

  • Impartiality — you serve the law, not either side
  • Sound judgment — decisions must be fair and reasoned
  • Integrity — public trust rests on it
  • Analytical rigour — weighing complex evidence and law
  • Composure — authority and calm in the courtroom
  • Communication — clear, reasoned rulings

Education & qualifications

A judge is an experienced lawyer first — a law degree, then many years of legal practice, before appointment. The full path typically spans 15–25 years, and appointments are competitive and limited.

Law degree Years of legal practice Judicial appointment Judicial training

Typical responsibilities

  • Presiding — running court proceedings fairly
  • Weighing evidence — assessing facts and law
  • Legal reasoning — applying the law to the case
  • Rulings — deciding outcomes and sentences
  • Judgment writing — clear, reasoned decisions
  • Upholding fairness — protecting due process

Responsibilities by seniority

Experienced Lawyer

10–20 years

  • Deep legal expertise
  • Courtroom experience
  • Strong reputation
  • Building toward the bench
  • Respected in the field

Judge

Appointed

  • Presides over cases
  • Delivers rulings
  • Owns the courtroom
  • Interprets the law
  • Carries full responsibility

Senior / Appellate Judge

Established

  • Hears appeals
  • Sets precedent
  • Most complex cases
  • Shapes the law
  • Leads the judiciary

Areas judges work in

⚖️ Criminal

Trying criminal cases and sentencing.

🏛️ Civil

Disputes between parties.

👪 Family

Divorce, custody, and family matters.

🏢 Commercial

Business and contract disputes.

📜 Appellate

Hearing appeals and setting precedent.

🌍 Specialist courts

Tax, employment, and more.

A day in the life

9:00 AM

Reviewing the day's case files and the legal arguments before stepping into court.

10:00 AM

Court is in session — you listen carefully to both sides, manage proceedings, and weigh the evidence.

1:00 PM

In chambers, researching a point of law that will shape your ruling.

2:30 PM

Back in court, you deliver a reasoned judgment, explaining the law and the decision clearly.

4:30 PM

Writing up a careful judgment that may guide future cases. Justice, weighed and delivered. That's the job.

What this job gives you

  • Immense respect and responsibility
  • Upholding justice and fairness
  • Intellectual depth
  • Stability and prestige
  • A lasting impact on the law

Pros & cons

✅ Advantages

  • Pinnacle of the legal profession
  • Immense respect and prestige
  • Strong, stable salary
  • Intellectually deep
  • Job security
  • Lasting impact on the law
  • Less adversarial than advocacy

❌ Disadvantages

  • Very long path to appointment
  • Limited, competitive entry
  • Heavy responsibility
  • Emotionally difficult cases
  • High public scrutiny
  • Decisions affect lives profoundly

Salary potential — global rating

Rated against all professions globally, where ★★★★★★★★★★ = top 1% earners:

Lawyer (pre-bench)★★★★★★☆☆☆☆Already a senior lawyer
Judge★★★★★★★☆☆☆Strong — a respected public salary
Senior Judge★★★★★★★★☆☆High — appellate and senior roles
Top judiciary★★★★★★★★☆☆Among the most respected roles

Career growth paths

  1. Senior / Appellate Judge — hear appeals and set precedent
  2. Specialise — criminal, family, commercial, or tax
  3. Court leadership — presiding or administrative roles
  4. Supreme / constitutional courts — the highest level
  5. Legal academia — teaching and scholarship
  6. Public inquiries — chairing major inquiries
Key insight: The judiciary is a destination, not a ladder — but it offers unmatched respect, stability, and the chance to shape the law itself.

Judge vs related roles

Here's how some neighbouring roles compare.

RoleCore focusNotePayEntry
Judge
You are here
Decides matters of law impartiallyLaw degree + experienceBaselineHard
LawyerAdvises and represents one sideLaw degreeLower-similarHard
NotaryAuthenticates documents impartiallyLaw + trainingLowerHard
ParalegalSupports legal workTrainingLowerMedium
Compliance SpecialistEnsures legal complianceTrainingLowerMedium

Scroll the table sideways on mobile. Pay comparisons are directional and vary by market and seniority.

Future outlook

The need for impartial justice is permanent, and the role of judge remains one of society's most essential and respected.

  • Justice is a permanent societal need
  • Technology aids case management, not judgment
  • Specialist courts continue to grow
  • Public trust keeps the role vital
  • The impartial human decision can't be automated

Fun facts 🤓

⚖️

The judiciary is deliberately independent — judges answer to the law, not to government or popularity.

📜

A single appellate ruling can set precedent that shapes the law for generations.

🕰️

Becoming a judge often takes two decades of legal experience first.

🤐

Impartiality is everything — a judge must set aside all personal opinion.

🏛️

In many systems, judges are appointed for their experience and reputation, not elected.

Myths about this role

"Judges just bang a gavel."

They run complex proceedings, weigh evidence, interpret law, and write reasoned judgments.

"Anyone with a law degree can be one."

It requires many years of legal practice and a competitive, limited appointment.

"Judges make up their own rules."

They are bound by law and precedent — impartiality is the core of the role.

"It's an easy job."

It carries immense responsibility and emotionally difficult decisions.

"AI will replace judges."

Technology aids administration, but impartial human judgment can't be automated.

Is this job right for you?

✅ Good fit if you...

  • Have deep legal expertise and experience
  • Value impartiality and integrity
  • Can carry heavy responsibility
  • Reason rigorously and fairly
  • Stay composed under scrutiny
  • Want the pinnacle of legal work

❌ Maybe not for you if...

  • You're early in your career
  • You want a fast path
  • You prefer advocacy and taking sides
  • Heavy responsibility unsettles you
  • You dislike public scrutiny
  • You want a less formal role

Independence & the role

The judiciary isn't freelance — it's an appointed, independent public office, valued for its security and gravity rather than flexibility.

✅ Advantages

  • Unmatched respect and authority
  • Strong, stable salary and pension
  • Independence and security
  • Intellectual depth
  • A lasting impact on the law

❌ Challenges

  • Very long path to appointment
  • Limited, competitive entry
  • Heavy responsibility
  • Public scrutiny
  • Emotionally hard cases

How to get started

  1. Excel as a lawyer build deep expertise and a strong reputation over many years.
  2. Gain courtroom experience advocacy and case experience are essential.
  3. Build a reputation for integrity impartiality and judgment are what appointers seek.
  4. Apply or be appointed through a competitive, often limited process.
  5. Complete judicial training before taking the bench.

What to know before you start

  • It's a destination after a long legal career
  • Impartiality is the absolute core
  • Appointments are rare and competitive
  • The responsibility is profound
  • It carries unmatched respect
  • Decisions affect real lives — never forget it

From the field

The same lessons come up again and again from people actually doing the job:

After twenty years as a barrister, taking the bench felt like crossing a line — suddenly you decide rather than argue. The weight of that never fully leaves you.

Judge · 9 years on the bench

Impartiality is harder than it sounds. You learn to set aside every instinct and follow only the law and the evidence. That discipline is the whole job.

Senior judge · 15 years on the bench

Writing a clear judgment is an art. People deserve to understand why they won or lost — and one day your reasoning may guide a future court.

Appellate judge · 20 years on the bench

FAQ

How long does it take to become a judge?
Often 15–25 years — a law degree, many years of legal practice, then a competitive appointment.
Do I need to be a lawyer first?
Almost always, yes — judges are experienced lawyers appointed for their expertise and reputation.
Is entry limited?
Yes — appointments are rare and competitive in most systems.
Is the pay good?
Strong and stable, with an excellent pension — though less than top private lawyers earn.
Is it stressful?
It carries heavy responsibility and emotionally difficult cases, balanced by respect and security.
Will AI replace judges?
No — technology aids administration, but impartial human judgment is irreplaceable.