Can you legally represent yourself in the Magistrates’ Court?
Yes. Every person charged with a criminal offence in Victoria has the right to appear on their own behalf, and the Magistrates’ Court of Victoria publishes guidance specifically for people who choose to represent themselves. Nobody can force you to hire a lawyer. The real question is not whether you are allowed to, but whether you should, and the honest answer depends entirely on what you are facing.
What representing yourself actually means
Representing yourself means you personally run your case from start to finish. You speak for yourself at the bar table, you decide how to plead, you make submissions to the magistrate, and if the matter is contested you question witnesses and respond to the prosecution. As Victoria Legal Aid explains, a self-represented person carries the same responsibilities in the courtroom that a lawyer would carry for a client, without the training that normally comes with them.
It also means the housekeeping is yours to manage. You are the one who has to obtain and read the brief, meet any deadlines, bring the right documents, know when your matter is listed, and address the court properly when your name is called. None of that is difficult in isolation, but it adds up on a stressful day, and mistakes with process can delay your matter or count against you. A lawyer absorbs all of this invisibly, which is part of why people underestimate how much representation actually covers.
The court will explain process, but it will not be your lawyer
This distinction catches people out constantly. A magistrate can explain the steps, tell you what is happening next, and make sure you understand the procedure, but they cannot give you legal advice, take your side, or run your case for you, as the Supreme Court of Victoria sets out for self-represented people across the Victorian court system. The magistrate has to stay neutral. That means the person deciding your case is also the only lawyer-trained person in the room who cannot help you argue it.
What does representing yourself involve on the day?
It depends heavily on your plea, and the gap between a plea and a contest is enormous. A guilty plea is a structured, relatively contained process. A contested hearing is a full adversarial contest against a trained prosecutor.
If you plead guilty
On a guilty plea, the facts are usually agreed, and your job is to make a plea in mitigation, the submissions that shape your sentence. This is where you raise your circumstances, your lack of prior history, references, remorse, and anything that reduces the penalty. Victoria Legal Aid and duty lawyers deal with guilty pleas at the Magistrates’ Court every day, and this is the situation where a self-represented person is most likely to cope, particularly with some help beforehand. Even here, what you say can change the outcome, because sentencing is not automatic.
There are still traps on a plea. Agreeing to a summary of facts that overstates what you did can lock in a worse sentence than the evidence justifies, and once you have pleaded guilty it is hard to undo. Character references, evidence of counselling or treatment, and a clear explanation of why the offending happened all carry real weight, yet self-represented people often arrive with none of it prepared. The difference between a conviction and a non-conviction, or between a fine and a community order, frequently comes down to how well the plea is put, not the bare facts of the charge.
What if you contest the charge?
This is where self-representation becomes genuinely hard. In a contested hearing you have to understand the brief of evidence, object to material that should not be admitted, cross-examine police and witnesses, and make legal argument, all under the rules of evidence, as the Fitzroy Legal Service Law Handbook describes for criminal matters in the Magistrates’ Court. A trained prosecutor runs the case against you and does not lower the bar because you are unrepresented. Most people who lose a winnable contest lose it on procedure and evidence, not on the facts.
The prosecution has to prove the charge beyond reasonable doubt, and in principle that burden never shifts to you. In practice, turning that principle into a result takes skill. You need to know what a no-case submission is, when to make one, how to challenge an identification or a breath reading, and how to decide whether to give evidence yourself, knowing you can then be cross-examined. Getting any of these wrong can quietly sink a defence that was actually strong.
You cannot personally cross-examine some witnesses
There is also a limit that surprises self-represented accused. In family violence and sexual offence matters, a person who represents themselves is generally not permitted to personally cross-examine a protected witness, such as the complainant or a child. The court makes alternative arrangements instead. That protection exists for good reasons, but it means self-representation simply does not work the way people expect in exactly the matters where feelings run highest, and it is another signal that these cases need a lawyer.
When is self-representation a reasonable option?
Self-representation is most defensible when the charge is minor, you intend to plead guilty, the facts are not in dispute, and the likely penalty is a fine or a good behaviour outcome rather than anything that changes your life. Plenty of people handle a first, low-level matter this way. The calculation shifts the moment the outcome carries weight.
When you should get a lawyer instead
Get advice, and seriously consider representation, if a conviction could put a criminal record on your history, cost you your driver licence, expose you to imprisonment, or flow into immigration or family law consequences. The same applies to any contested matter, any indictable charge, and anything involving family violence, where Victoria Legal Aid recommends getting legal help rather than going it alone. The size of the charge is a poor guide. A “minor” driving charge that carries licence loss can hurt more than a fine ten times larger.
Consequences also reach past the courtroom. A conviction can affect a working with children check, some professional registrations, a visa, and future employment, and those effects can outlast the sentence by years. A lawyer weighs all of this before you plead, and can sometimes secure an outcome, such as a diversion or a finding without conviction, that a self-represented person does not even know to ask for. That is the real value of advice: not just arguing the charge, but protecting everything sitting behind it.
What free help can you get if you cannot afford a lawyer?
A lot, and most people do not realise how much. Cost is the reason many people represent themselves, but going completely unassisted is rarely the only alternative to paying privately. Victoria has a layered system of free help built specifically for people in this position.
Duty lawyers and Help Before Court
A duty lawyer is a free Victoria Legal Aid lawyer at the court who can assist eligible people on the day, most often with a guilty plea, and Help Before Court can connect you with advice ahead of your hearing. Duty lawyers are not available for every matter and priority goes to people in custody, at risk of jail, or otherwise vulnerable, so eligibility is assessed, not guaranteed. Beyond that, Victoria Legal Aid’s help at court services and local community legal centres can offer advice, and a grant of legal aid may cover full representation for serious matters if you qualify.
It helps to be realistic about what these services do. A duty lawyer can be a lifeline for a plea, but they usually cannot run a contested hearing for you, and they are meeting you cold on a busy list. Booking advice ahead of time through Help Before Court or a community legal centre almost always produces a better result than turning up hoping to be seen. The point is that “I cannot afford a private lawyer” and “I must represent myself completely alone” are not the same thing, and treating them as if they were is how people end up unprepared.
The hidden costs of going it alone
The cost of self-representing is rarely the court fee. It is the defence you did not know you had, the evidence you did not object to, and the plea you entered without understanding the sentencing consequences. A criminal record does not expire when the hearing ends. It can affect employment, travel, and future matters for years, which is why a decision that feels like saving money in the short term can be the most expensive choice of all.
There is also a subtler cost. Standing up alone against a prosecutor, under stress, in an unfamiliar room, makes it hard to think clearly and easy to say too much or agree to something you should not. People routinely leave court having accepted an outcome they did not fully understand, simply because they wanted the day to be over. Getting advice, even once, before you commit to a plea, is the single most useful thing a self-represented person can do, and it costs far less than undoing a decision made in the moment.
So should you represent yourself in the Magistrates’ Court?
If the charge is minor, you are pleading guilty, and nothing serious turns on the result, representing yourself with some free help beforehand can be a reasonable choice. If the matter is contested, or a conviction could cost you your record, your licence, or your liberty, the smarter move is to get advice first. Either way, speak with a criminal defence lawyer before your first court date, so you understand exactly what is at stake before you decide to stand alone.
