Our Expert in United Kingdom
No results available
Understanding how to prepare for commercial mediation is the single most important factor in determining whether a dispute settles on favourable terms or stalls into costly litigation. UK courts continue to encourage parties to engage with alternative dispute resolution, and the Civil Procedure Rules reinforce mediation as a serious procedural expectation rather than an optional courtesy. This playbook provides in-house counsel, dispute resolution managers and external legal teams with the operational checklists, position-paper templates, authority-to-settle workflows and settlement modelling frameworks needed to walk into a commercial mediation UK session fully prepared.
What follows is a practitioner-grade pack, covering the six-to-eight weeks before mediation day through to the drafting of enforceable settlement agreements, designed to close the gap between generic guidance and real-world execution.
What this playbook contains:
Effective mediation preparation begins six to eight weeks before the session. The parties who settle most consistently are those who treat this window as a structured project, not a last-minute scramble. Below is the action checklist that counsel, both in-house and external, should work through systematically.
A well-prepared mediation team assigns clear roles before the day. The client representative speaks to commercial objectives and exercises settlement authority. Lead counsel manages the legal narrative, responds to the other side’s arguments and drafts or approves settlement wording. A junior lawyer or paralegal manages the document bundle, takes notes during caucus sessions and tracks concession movements. If quantum is complex, a financial analyst or expert witness should attend, even if only on standby by telephone.
For in-person mediations, confirm that the venue provides a minimum of three private rooms (one per party, one for the mediator), reliable Wi-Fi, printing facilities and catering for a full day. For remote or hybrid mediations, test the video platform in advance, ensure breakout-room functionality is available, and agree a protocol for document sharing during caucus. Distribute dial-in details and a technology troubleshooting contact at least 48 hours beforehand.
The position paper, sometimes called the mediation statement, is the single most important preparation document. It frames the narrative the mediator absorbs before the day and shapes the structure of the opening session. A well-crafted position paper is concise, commercially grounded and focused on resolution rather than litigation posturing.
The following skeleton reflects best practice drawn from guidance published by leading dispute resolution institutions, including CEDR and top-tier commercial law firms. Most mediators recommend a position paper of no more than eight to ten pages, excluding exhibits.
| Exhibit | Document | Purpose |
|---|---|---|
| A | Key contract or agreement | Establishes the contractual framework and relevant clauses |
| B | Chronology of key events | Provides a neutral timeline for the mediator |
| C | Core correspondence (redacted where necessary) | Evidences communications and positions taken |
| D | Financial loss schedule or damages calculation | Supports the quantum claim with workings |
| E | Expert report summary (if available) | Provides independent technical or financial opinion |
| F | Relevant court orders or procedural directions | Shows litigation stage and cost exposure |
Position papers prepared for mediation attract “without prejudice” protection, meaning they cannot ordinarily be disclosed in subsequent litigation. Mark every page clearly. Where you include correspondence that was originally “open,” consider whether sharing it in a without-prejudice document might inadvertently waive privilege. As a safeguard, redact any material that reveals litigation strategy you would not want disclosed if the mediation fails. If in doubt, prepare two versions of the position paper: one for the mediator (containing confidential mediator-only material) and one to be shared with the other party.
A mediation that fails because “I need to take instructions” is a mediation that should not have started. The authority-to-settle workflow is an internal governance process that ensures the right people are available, the right financial boundaries are approved, and the negotiation team has genuine room to move.
The table below illustrates a typical authority structure for a mid-sized UK commercial organisation. Adapt the thresholds to your client’s governance framework.
| Decision-maker | Typical signing authority | Notes and approval triggers |
|---|---|---|
| In-house legal counsel | Up to £50,000 | CFO must be notified; settlement modelling summary attached to approval request |
| CFO / Finance Director | £50,000 – £500,000 | Requires legal counsel recommendation and CEO sign-off for amounts exceeding £250,000 |
| CEO / Board | Above £500,000 | Board resolution or formal delegated authority; consider publicity, warranty and reporting ramifications |
Before the mediation, circulate the authority matrix internally, confirm that each decision-maker is contactable on the day (including by mobile outside business hours) and obtain pre-approved financial parameters, ideally a settlement range with a clearly defined walk-away point.
A credible settlement range is grounded in financial modelling, not instinct. Follow these steps to prepare for commercial mediation with a defensible numeric framework:
The caucus, the private meeting between the mediator and one party, is where the real work of commercial mediation happens. How counsel and the client communicate during caucus sessions directly affects the mediator’s ability to broker a deal.
The joint opening session sets the tone. Prepare a short opening statement (five to seven minutes) that acknowledges the other party’s perspective, frames the dispute as a problem to be solved and signals genuine willingness to engage. Avoid reading from a legal skeleton argument, the mediator has already read the position paper. Instead, have the client deliver a brief, human account of the commercial impact and the outcome they seek.
During caucus, the mediator will explore your real interests, test your position and carry messages between the rooms. The following principles, sometimes described as the 4 C’s of mediation, should guide your approach:
Certain phrases can derail a mediation or damage your negotiating position. Avoid the following:
Assembling a well-organised document pack is essential preparation for a commercial mediation. The table below lists the key documents, their purpose and the recommended stage at which to disclose them.
| Document | Purpose | When to disclose |
|---|---|---|
| Principal contract or agreement | Establishes the legal relationship and key obligations | Pre-shared with position paper |
| Key correspondence and emails | Evidences the factual narrative and contemporaneous positions | Pre-shared (redact privileged content) |
| Financial loss schedule | Quantifies the claim or counterclaim with workings | Pre-shared with position paper |
| Expert report summary | Provides independent technical or financial opinion | Pre-shared or on-day (depending on strategy) |
| Costs schedule (own costs to date and estimated to trial) | Demonstrates litigation cost exposure for both parties | On-day, share during caucus to drive settlement |
| Draft heads of terms | Provides a skeleton settlement agreement to accelerate drafting | On-day, produced once terms are crystallising |
Prepare two bundles: a pre-shared bundle sent to the mediator and the other side with the position paper (typically seven to fourteen days before the mediation), and an on-day bundle containing tactical documents, such as costs schedules, updated financial models or concession packages, that you deploy during caucus at a time of your choosing. Ensure privileged or litigation-strategy documents remain out of both bundles.
Understanding how to prepare for and conduct a mediation means planning the day itself as carefully as the weeks before it. Below is a typical timeline for a one-day commercial mediation in England and Wales.
When the parties reach terms, convert them immediately into a written settlement agreement. At a minimum, the document should address:
A settlement agreement signed at mediation is a legally binding contract, enforceable through the courts if a party defaults. The golden rule of mediation is to never leave the room without a signed document, even if it is a short-form heads of terms that captures the essential deal points and records the parties’ intention to be bound.
If the mediation does not settle, the process remains confidential. Neither party may refer to proposals made or positions taken during the mediation in any subsequent court proceedings. The mediator cannot be called as a witness. In-house teams should hold a structured debrief within 48 hours: assess what movement occurred, identify any remaining common ground and decide whether a further mediation session, a Part 36 offer or continued litigation is the appropriate next step.
Where settlement is reached, implement it promptly. Circulate the signed agreement to all stakeholders, arrange payment within the agreed timeline and diarise any non-monetary milestones. If the settlement requires a consent order (for example, to stay or discontinue proceedings), instruct counsel to file it without delay.
The difference between a mediation that settles and one that fails almost always lies in preparation. Knowing how to prepare for commercial mediation, from the position paper to the authority matrix, from the caucus scripts to the settlement draft, transforms a voluntary process into a disciplined commercial negotiation. Treat the six-to-eight-week preparation window as seriously as you would treat trial preparation, arrive with genuine authority and a credible settlement range, and ensure every document, every team member and every script is aligned to one objective: a binding settlement signed before you leave the room. For in-house teams navigating commercial mediation UK disputes in 2026, this playbook provides the operational framework to achieve exactly that.
Explore the United Kingdom lawyer directory to connect with experienced mediation practitioners who can guide your next steps.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Michel Kallipetis at Independent Mediators Limited, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
posted 23 minutes ago
posted 47 minutes ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 4 hours ago
posted 4 hours ago
posted 4 hours ago
posted 5 hours ago
posted 5 hours ago
No results available
Find the right Legal Expert for your business
Sign up for the latest legal briefings and news within Global Law Experts’ community, as well as a whole host of features, editorial and conference updates direct to your email inbox.
Naturally you can unsubscribe at any time.
Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Send welcome message