The introduction of the Cyber Security and Resilience Bill (CSRB) marks a shift in the UK’s approach to national digital security. While the legal sector has long been governed by the 🔗SRA’s Code of Conduct and the 🔗UK GDPR, the CSRB introduces a new layer of complexity that transforms cyber resilience from a best practice position into a rigorous statutory mandate for many firms.
For law firms, the Bill closes the gap between being a private professional service and being a critical link in the UK’s economic infrastructure.
The Critical Supplier Designation
Under the new framework, the government has the power to designate specific organisations as critical suppliers. Most high-street practices might not fall into this category, the larger commercial firms, like those handling sensitive data for energy, water, or transport sectors, could find themselves under the direct oversight of regulators.
If your firm is deemed critical to the operation of an essential service, you’ll be held to the same high security standards as the utility companies themselves. This includes mandatory adherence to the 🔗NCSC’s Cyber Assessment Framework (CAF), which moves beyond basic Cyber Essentials into a comprehensive, outcome-based security model.
Supply Chain Issues for Law Firms
Even firms that avoid direct designation will feel the ripple effect of the CSRB through their client base. The Bill mandates that operators of essential services (OES) must secure their supply chains. In practice, this means:
Contractual Hardening |
Clients in regulated sectors will demand stricter security clauses and right-to-audit provisions. |
Due Diligence |
Firms will need to prove their resilience with transparency, demonstrating not just that they have software, but that they have the expert staff and governance to manage it. |
Managed Service Providers (MSPs) |
The Bill brings MSPs which many law firms use for their IT, under direct regulation. This is a positive step for firm security, but it requires legal leaders to re-evaluate their vendor risk management. |
Integrity and Ransomware for Legal Firms
Perhaps the most significant change is the expansion of incident reporting. Historically, many firms only reported breaches that resulted in a clear loss of personal data under GDPR. The CSRB widens this scope to include incidents affecting the integrity or confidentiality of systems.
If a firm’s document management system is compromised by ransomware,even if no data is stolen, the incident may now be reportable to the 🔗Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO) within a strict 24-hour initial window, followed by a detailed report within 72 hours.
Moving Beyond Compliance
The legal sector remains a crown jewel target for threat actors due to the high-value escrow accounts and privileged litigation data held on servers. The CSRB is a clear signal from the UK government that security by obscurity is no longer a viable strategy. To remain competitive and compliant, firms must shift toward a proactive posture:
Map your dependencies |
Understand which of your clients fall under “Essential Services.” |
Audit your MSPs |
Ensure your IT partners are prepared for their own new regulatory burdens. |
Elevate Governance |
Move cyber risk from the IT basement to the Boardroom. |
Mondas specialise in navigating these complex regulatory shifts. If your firm is assessing its posture in light of the new Bill, reach out to our team today to ensure your resilience matches your reputation.
Article First Published 19/03/2026


