HomeMoney HacksHow to Apply for Panel Advocates in Banks And Earn Stable Income?

How to Apply for Panel Advocates in Banks And Earn Stable Income?

Banks often maintain a roster of external lawyers — called “panel advocates” or “empanelled advocates / firms” — whom they engage to handle court cases, recovery proceedings, legal vetting, documentation, title-search, loan-recovery suits, and other banking-related litigation / legal work.
Being appointed on such a panel does not mean you’re a full-time employee of the bank; it is a professional-contract relationship. 

Typical Eligibility Criteria for Empanelment

Although criteria vary somewhat from bank to bank, here are common/recurring requirements:

  • Must hold a recognized degree in law from a university recognised by the Bar Council of India (BCI) and be formally enrolled with the relevant State Bar Council for practice. 
  • Must have a certain number of years of litigation / court practice experience — often minimum 5 years (or more, depending on the bank and nature of cases). 
  • Must have a good reputation: “undoubted legal acumen” and “unblemished integrity.” If representing a firm, all partners must satisfy the criteria. 
  • Should have proper office infrastructure (office premises, staff/assistants, ability to handle documents, communication, internet/phone, etc.) — especially if law-firm / firm-of-advocates. 
  • Must agree to the bank’s terms & conditions: fees/charges schedule, confidentiality, not representing adverse parties, not using bank’s name/brand unlawfully, etc. 

Banks may also prefer advocates/firms who are already on the panel of other banks or financial institutions — as a demonstration of prior experience and credibility. 

When & How Banks Invite Applications?

  • Many banks open their advocate-empanelment portal only twice a year (commonly 1–15 May and 1–15 November) for fresh/renewal empanelments. 
  • Application is typically to be submitted only online (hard copies, email, post or courier may not be accepted). 
  • The bank publishes a public notice / advertisement on its website (Media / Announcements / Legal Section) — mentioning which cities/centres they need advocates for, application format, last date, and contact details. 

What the Application/Selection Process Looks Like

  1. Download the public notice / application form (or use the bank’s advocate-portal). 
  2. Fill in the application with requisite details — personal details, Bar enrolment number, years of practice, area of practice (civil, banking, recovery, property, etc.), office address/infrastructure, prior empanelments (if any), willingness to abide by bank’s terms, etc. 
  3. Upload or attach supporting documents — law degree certificate, Bar Council certificate/enrolment, proof of experience (if required), firm details (if applicable), infrastructure proof (office address), possibly references / client lists / previous empanelments. 
  4. Submit application within stipulated window, strictly via the bank’s portal; applications via other modes (post, email, courier) are usually not accepted. 
  5. Screening by bank’s legal / circle / zonal office — bank officials check eligibility, credentials, infrastructure, past record, sometimes do discreet local checks regarding the reputation, integrity and capability of advocate/firms. 
  6. Decision is at the bank’s sole discretion — even after applying, there’s no guarantee of empanelment. Mere submission does not confer any right or claim to be empanelled.
  7. Empanelment Duration & Review — often empanelment is for a fixed period (e.g. 2 or 3 years), subject to yearly or periodic performance reviews; banks may renew or drop names accordingly.

What Being a Panel Advocate Entails — Responsibilities & Conditions

  • Once empanelled, you may be entrusted with varied legal work: loan-recovery suits (including before tribunals like DRTs), title searches, documentation, drafting/vetting loan papers, civil or criminal suits relevant to banking matters, property-related cases, etc. 
  • You must not represent clients whose interests conflict with the bank (i.e. you cannot act against any branch/office of the bank).
  • You must accept briefs/assignments as per bank’s fee-structure, and maintain confidentiality and professional ethics. 
  • Empanelment does not guarantee that you will get all (or any) cases — allocation depends on the bank’s need, complexity of cases, availability of advocates, and performance history.

Why Banks Empanel External Advocates (Rather than Hiring Lawyers In-house)

  • Banks operate through many branches across diverse jurisdictions — panel advocates allow them to outsource litigation/recovery/court work to locally competent lawyers, rather than maintaining a full in-house legal staff everywhere.
  • This provides flexibility: banks can engage advocates experienced in local property law, recovery laws, regional nuances, tribunals/courts etc., on as-needed basis.
  • Empanelment also helps banks keep a vetted roster: advocates/firms already known for integrity, banking-law expertise, court experience, infrastructure — which ensures quality while limiting risk.

Alerts, Risks & What Applicants Should Know

  • Being on a panel does not equate to being an employee — panel advocates are external professionals. Thus, there’s no guarantee of continuous work or retainer fees. 
  • Banks reserve the right to empanel or de-panel advocates at their sole discretion, without assigning reasons.
  • Mere submission of application does not assure empanelment — many applications could be rejected based on the bank’s assessment of competence, integrity, infrastructure, or lack of need.
  • For law-firms, all partners must meet the eligibility criteria (or else the application may be rejected) — so ensure documentation for all. 

Example: Recent Invitation Notice by Bank

For instance, Bank of Baroda recently published an “Invitation of Applications for Empanelment of Advocates/Firms on Bank’s Panel”. The bank stated that its dedicated portal would open for 15 days (from 01/11/2025 to 15/11/2025) for fresh empanelment.
They asked interested practising advocates/firms to apply via the online portal, highlighting that only online submission would be accepted. 


Advice for Prospective Applicants (Especially from Smaller Towns / Cities)

Since you are based in Udaipur (Rajasthan), this can matter:

  • Monitor the websites of major banks (PSBs and private banks) regularly, especially around May and November, to catch their “empanelment window.”
  • Ensure your documentation is complete: Bar Council enrollment, law degree certificate, proof of practice, office address & infrastructure, prior work/experience (if any), references.
  • If you have prior experience with property-law, banking-recovery, litigation, tribunals or local courts — highlight these, especially familiarity with local laws (Rajasthan property laws, revenue laws, tribunals, civil courts).
  • Be ready to submit a declaration that you will not take cases adverse to the bank, and that you will abide by the bank’s fees & confidentiality norms.
  • Understand that empanelment does not guarantee assignments — work may depend on bank need, case load, and how many panel advocates are active in your region.

Conclusion

Empanelment as a “panel advocate” for a bank offers a structured pathway for legal practitioners to get regular banking-related work and build a relationship with a financial institution. But the process is selective: banks require a combination of legal qualification, relevant experience, integrity, infrastructure, and willingness to abide by their rules.

For lawyers — especially those located outside major metros — it is worthwhile to watch for empanelment notices on bank websites, prepare a complete application, and ensure they meet the criteria. If successful, being on a bank’s panel can open a steady stream of work, particularly in property, recovery, and banking litigation.

Read More: ICAI Announces Applicability of New Income Tax Act, 2025 for May 2027 Exams

Mariya Paliwala
Mariya Paliwalahttps://www.jurishour.in/
Mariya is the Senior Editor at Juris Hour. She has 5+ years of experience on covering tax litigation stories from the Supreme Court, High Courts and various tribunals including CESTAT, ITAT, NCLAT, NCLT, etc. Mariya graduated from MLSU Law College, Udaipur (Raj.) with B.A.LL.B. and also holds an LL.M. She started as a freelance tax reporter in the leading online legal news companies like LiveLaw & Taxscan.

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