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Tasmania's legal profession faces retention crisis as criminal lawyers battle burnout and low pay

Tasmanian criminal defence lawyers report being run off their feet as burnout and inadequate compensation drive experienced professionals from the profession.

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By The Daily Tasmania · Published 4 July 2026, 5:08 am

2 min read

Updated 1 d ago· 13 July 2026, 1:34 pm

AI-assisted · human-reviewed where required

AI may assist with research, summarising and drafting. Where public source links underpin the article, they are shown below. Sensitive material is held for human review, and people oversee the standards and corrections process. The Daily Tasmania covers Tasmania news. It is provided for general information only and is not professional, legal, financial, or medical advice. Read our editorial standards →

Links to sources include (but not limited to): examiner.com.au, theadvocate.com.au

Tasmania's legal profession faces retention crisis as criminal lawyers battle burnout and low pay
Photo: Stuart Smith. / CC BY-SA 2.0

Tasmania's criminal legal profession is in the grip of a crisis that threatens the availability of experienced defence counsel, with local practitioners describing unsustainable workloads and compensation that fails to reflect the demands of the role. According to reporting on the issue, one Tasmanian legal eagle described the situation plainly: 'everyone is run off their feet', capturing the sense of exhaustion now widespread across the criminal bar.

The combination of burnout and low pay is driving experienced lawyers to quit the profession entirely, a trend that carries particular weight in a smaller jurisdiction like Tasmania where the pool of qualified criminal defence practitioners is already limited. When experienced legal minds leave the profession, the knowledge they take with them and the reduced capacity they represent ripple through the entire system, affecting not just individual practitioners but the broader community's access to justice.

For Tasmanian businesses and residents, the implications are significant. A diminished pool of defence lawyers puts pressure on court scheduling, lengthens case timelines, and potentially limits the quality of legal representation available to those accused of crimes. The profession's ability to attract and retain talent directly affects how quickly and fairly the state's courts can operate, making this a civic issue with real economic consequences.

Sources: examiner.com.au, theadvocate.com.au.

This article was compiled by AI and screened before publishing. See our editorial standards.

Links to sources include (but not limited to)

Source material used in preparing this article is listed below so readers can check the original record.

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Published by The Daily Tasmania

Covering community in Tasmania. This article was generated by AI from the linked sources, under human oversight and our editorial standards. Sensitive material is held for human review before publication. See our editorial standards.

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