BSB AI Guidance 2026: What Barristers Must Now Understand About AI, Ethics and Professional Competence
Almost a year after the decision in Ayinde v London Borough of Haringey [2025] EWHC 1383 (Admin) should have woken the sleeping bears in the legal profession, the Bar Standards Board has now published its long-awaited guidance on the use of Artificial Intelligence and emerging technologies by barristers. The message is unmistakable: competence in modern legal practice now includes understanding AI, its risks, its limitations and its ethical implications. This is no longer simply a technology discussion. It is now a professional standards issue.

Newsflash for Barristers: AI Competence Is Now a Professional Standards Issue
Almost a year after Ayinde v London Borough of Haringey [2025] EWHC 1383 (Admin), the legal profession has received another clear warning: artificial intelligence is no longer something barristers can treat as optional background noise. The Bar Standards Board’s new guidance on the use of Artificial Intelligence and other technologies, published on 18 May 2026, makes the position plain. AI is now firmly within the territory of professional competence, ethical judgment, client protection and duties to the court.
For barristers, this is not simply about whether they personally use ChatGPT, Copilot, Claude, Gemini or any other AI system. It is about whether they understand how these tools may affect their work, their clients, their opponents, the evidence before the court and the administration of justice itself.
The Core Message
AI is a tool. It is not a substitute for professional judgment.
Barristers remain responsible for every submission, every authority, every factual assertion and every document placed before the court. If AI has assisted in producing that work, the professional responsibility still sits with the human advocate.
Why This Guidance Matters
The Bar Standards Board has made clear that existing professional duties already apply to the use of AI and other technologies. This is important. The BSB has not created a separate “AI rulebook” sitting outside professional conduct. Instead, it has confirmed that the familiar duties of competence, honesty, confidentiality, independence and client protection all apply when technology is used in legal practice.
The guidance follows a period of growing concern about legal professionals relying on AI-generated material without proper verification. The most obvious warning sign came from Ayinde v London Borough of Haringey, where the court considered the use of false legal citations in court material. The case became a watershed moment because it exposed the risk of AI-generated legal content being treated as reliable when it had not been properly checked.
This should have woken the sleeping bears in the legal profession. In truth, some were already awake. Others are only just realising that AI is not simply a productivity tool. It is a professional standards issue.
Key Authority
BSB Guidance: New guidance supports barristers to safely adopt Artificial Intelligence and emerging technologies
Judgment: Ayinde v London Borough of Haringey and Al-Haroun v Qatar National Bank
Core Duties: The BSB Core Duties
Core Duty 7: Competence Now Includes AI Literacy
Core Duty 7 requires barristers to provide a competent standard of work and service to each client. The BSB’s new guidance makes clear that competence now includes maintaining a sufficient level of awareness of technology and AI to understand how they may affect practice.
That does not mean every barrister must become a software engineer. It does mean that a barrister cannot responsibly ignore AI altogether.
A competent barrister now needs to understand, at least at a practical level:
- how AI tools may generate inaccurate or fabricated material;
- how AI-generated citations, summaries or submissions can mislead the court if not checked;
- how client confidentiality and legal professional privilege may be compromised;
- how AI may be used by clients, opponents, solicitors, experts or litigants in person;
- how AI-generated evidence or prompt histories may arise in proceedings;
- how bias may appear in AI outputs; and
- what safeguards are needed before any AI-assisted work is relied upon.
Professional Standard
The “I do not use AI” answer is no longer enough.
Even barristers who do not personally use AI still need to understand how it may affect their cases, their clients, opposing parties, evidence and court submissions.
The Lesson from Ayinde
Ayinde was not just a case about fake citations. It was a case about professional responsibility.
The court was concerned with legal material being placed before it without proper checking. That concern goes directly to the administration of justice. Courts rely on lawyers to assist them accurately. When non-existent authorities, inaccurate quotations or unreliable legal propositions are put before the court, the problem is not merely technical. It undermines trust.
AI systems can produce text that looks confident, polished and legally plausible. That is precisely why they are dangerous when used without verification. A hallucinated authority may look entirely credible to a busy reader. It may contain a realistic case name, a neutral citation, judicial language and a convincing summary. But if it does not exist, it is not a minor drafting error. It is a serious professional problem.
Client Confidentiality and Privilege
One of the most important issues raised by AI in legal practice is confidentiality.
Barristers handle highly sensitive material. In family law, that may include allegations of domestic abuse, safeguarding concerns, medical information, children’s wishes and feelings, school records, police material, local authority records and private communications.
Putting that information into a free or general AI tool without proper safeguards may create serious risks. The questions are obvious:
- Where is the data going?
- Is it being stored?
- Can it be reviewed by humans?
- Can it be used to train future systems?
- Has the client consented?
- Has privilege been protected?
Confidentiality Warning
Free or general AI tools should not be treated as safe spaces for client information.
Where sensitive or privileged information is involved, barristers must consider confidentiality, data security, contractual protections, client consent and professional obligations before using AI.
Why Family Law Needs Particular Care
Family law is one of the areas where AI competence matters most.
Litigants in person are already using AI. They are using it to draft statements, prepare position statements, summarise messages, organise evidence, understand procedure and prepare questions for hearings. Some are using it carefully. Some are not.
This creates a new challenge for the family justice system. AI-generated material may appear in proceedings without being clearly identified. A parent may rely on an AI-generated summary of WhatsApp messages. A witness statement may contain legal phrases the party does not understand. A chronology may omit context because an AI tool compressed the material too aggressively. A safeguarding concern may be overstated, understated or framed in language that does not reflect the underlying evidence.
This does not mean AI should be dismissed. Used carefully, AI can help litigants in person organise complex information and reduce procedural overwhelm. But used carelessly, it can distort evidence, create false confidence and introduce material that may not withstand scrutiny.
Family Justice Reality
The family court is already in the AI era.
The issue is no longer whether litigants in person will use AI. They already are. The real question is whether lawyers, barristers, judges, regulators and support professionals can respond safely, ethically and intelligently.
Bias, Safeguarding and Vulnerable Court Users
AI systems are not neutral simply because they are technological. They are trained on data. That data may contain bias, assumptions and patterns that do not translate safely into legal decision-making.
In family proceedings, this matters. Cases may involve trauma, domestic abuse, coercive control, disability, neurodivergence, poverty, language barriers, cultural issues and safeguarding concerns. An AI system may not understand the lived reality behind the material it processes. It may miss context. It may flatten nuance. It may reproduce stereotypes. It may present speculation as analysis.
Barristers must therefore remain alert to bias in AI outputs and must not allow AI-generated material to replace human judgment, evidential analysis or professional responsibility.
The Duty to the Court Comes First
Core Duty 1 requires barristers to observe their duty to the court in the administration of justice. That duty remains central when AI is used.
If AI assists with drafting, research, summarising or analysis, the barrister must still ensure that anything placed before the court is accurate, properly sourced and not misleading. The court is entitled to expect that legal professionals have checked their work.
That includes checking:
- case citations;
- statutory references;
- quotations;
- procedural rules;
- practice directions;
- factual summaries;
- chronologies;
- and any legal propositions generated or assisted by AI.
The Non-Negotiable Rule
If you put it before the court, you own it.
AI cannot be blamed for inaccurate submissions. Professional responsibility remains with the barrister.
Transparency: When Should AI Use Be Disclosed?
The question of transparency is likely to become increasingly important. Not every use of AI will need to be announced. There is a difference between using AI to improve internal workflow and relying on AI-generated legal or evidential analysis in a way that affects the service provided.
However, barristers should consider whether AI use has a material impact on the work being done, the advice being given or the material being placed before the court. They should also consider whether the client needs to know that AI is being used and whether consent is required in the circumstances.
The safest approach is not performative disclosure. It is thoughtful, risk-based transparency.
The New Competence Standard for Modern Advocates
The future barrister will not be replaced by AI. But the barrister who understands AI may have a significant advantage over the barrister who ignores it.
The modern advocate will increasingly need:
- legal expertise;
- ethical judgment;
- digital literacy;
- evidence-handling skills;
- data awareness;
- an understanding of AI limitations;
- and the ability to explain technology-related risks clearly to clients and courts.
This is particularly true in family law, where the volume of digital evidence is increasing and where litigants in person are often trying to navigate complex proceedings with limited resources.
The Bigger Point
AI competence is not about chasing trends. It is about protecting clients, protecting the court process and protecting the integrity of legal work.
Technology does not remove professional duties. It sharpens them.
What Barristers Should Be Doing Now
Barristers should now be taking practical steps to ensure that their use, understanding and supervision of AI is consistent with professional obligations.
At a minimum, that should include:
- reading the BSB guidance in full;
- reviewing chambers policies on AI and technology;
- checking whether any AI tools used are secure and appropriate;
- avoiding the input of confidential or privileged material into unsafe systems;
- verifying all AI-assisted legal research against authoritative sources;
- keeping records of how AI-assisted work has been checked where appropriate;
- being alert to AI-generated material produced by clients or opponents;
- considering whether AI use should be disclosed to clients;
- and undertaking training sufficient to maintain technological competence.
For Those Training Toward Advocacy, the Message Is Clear
This guidance is not only relevant to practising barristers. It is also important for anyone training toward qualification, advocacy or a future role in modern legal practice.
The standards expected of the profession are moving. Those entering the profession now need to understand not only black-letter law and procedure, but also how technology interacts with evidence, ethics, confidentiality, client care and court duties.
That does not diminish the role of lawyers. It raises the standard.
Final Thought
The legal profession does not need to panic about AI. But it does need to stop pretending that AI is optional.
The BSB’s guidance is a significant marker in the development of professional standards. It confirms that AI is now part of the competence conversation. For barristers, the message is simple: understand the tools, understand the risks, protect your clients, protect the court, and never allow technology to replace professional judgment.
Almost a year after Ayinde, the warning has become impossible to ignore. The sleeping bears have been woken.
About the Author
Jessica Susan Hill is the founder of JSH Law, providing practical family court support, litigation strategy and evidence-led case analysis for litigants in person.
Jessica works at the intersection of family justice, access to justice and emerging legal technology, with a particular interest in how AI can be used safely and ethically to support litigants in person, improve procedural clarity and reduce overwhelm in complex family proceedings.
JSH Law is not an SRA-regulated firm and does not conduct reserved legal activities. Support is provided to litigants in person through litigation support, McKenzie Friend services, document preparation, hearing preparation and strategic case organisation.
Regulatory & Editorial Notice: This article is published for general information and commentary only. It is not legal advice and should not be relied upon as a substitute for advice from a suitably qualified legal professional. References to the Bar Standards Board, reported cases, professional duties and external guidance are provided for public-interest discussion and educational purposes. JSH Law is not affiliated with the Bar Standards Board, the Bar Council or any chambers mentioned in related commentary.



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