What's on Practical Law?

After the event insurance (for policies taken out from 1 April 2013)

Practical Law UK Practice Note Overview 9-504-0925 (Approx. 35 pages)

After the event insurance (for policies taken out from 1 April 2013)

by Practical Law Dispute Resolution in association with Ashurst LLP
Solicitors have a duty to discuss with their clients how and when costs are to be met, and whether a client’s liability for their own or other parties’ costs may be insured. This note aims to explain what after the event (ATE) insurance is; the circumstances in which it is available; how to deal with insurance companies; and the procedural requirements. It concludes with a list of the principal advantages and disadvantages of ATE insurance to a client.
On 1 April 2013, the majority of the Jackson/civil litigation reforms came into force. As a result of these changes, where the ATE policy is entered into on or after 1 April 2013, the ATE premium will no longer be recoverable from the other side, save in excepted cases. For a summary of ATE insurance in the excepted cases, see Practice note: After the event insurance (for policies taken out before 1 April 2013 and in the excepted cases).

Get full access to this document with a free trial

Try free and see for yourself how Practical Law resources can improve productivity, efficiency and response times.

About Practical Law

This document is from Thomson Reuters Practical Law, the legal know-how that goes beyond primary law and traditional legal research to give lawyers a better starting point. We provide standard documents, checklists, legal updates, how-to guides, and more.

Learn more
  • Expert Guidance

    650+ full-time experienced lawyer editors globally create and maintain timely, reliable and accurate resources across all major practice areas.

  • Trust

    83% of customers are highly satisfied with Practical Law and would recommend to a colleague.

  • Improve Response Time

    81% of customers agree that Practical Law saves them time.

End of Document
Resource ID 9-504-0925
© 2024 Thomson Reuters. All rights reserved.
Maintained
Resource Type Practice note: overview
Jurisdictions
  • England
  • Wales
Related Content