Popular culture has given most people a very specific image of a private investigator — a rumpled figure in a parked car nursing cold coffee, or a wisecracking detective with a city skyline behind them. The reality is both more ordinary and more sophisticated than that.
Here is what the job actually involves.
Surveillance
This is probably what most people imagine, and it is a genuine part of the work. Surveillance involves observing and documenting an individual's movements, activities, and interactions over a defined period. It is conducted legally, professionally, and without harassment or trespass. The output is typically timestamped photographic or video evidence supported by a detailed written log.
Surveillance is used in infidelity investigations, insurance fraud cases, employee misconduct, custody disputes, and business intelligence work.
Background Checks and Due Diligence
Before a business takes on a new partner, investor, or senior employee, knowing who they really are matters. A professional background check goes well beyond what an employer can access through standard reference processes — verifying identity, financial history, directorship records, litigation history, and the accuracy of claimed qualifications and experience.
This service is also used by individuals — people who have met a romantic partner online, people who are being approached by investment opportunities, and landlords vetting tenants.
Asset Tracing
Where money has gone missing — through divorce, business disputes, fraud, or unpaid judgements — a PI can follow the financial trail. Asset tracing involves examining property records, business ownership, vehicle registrations, and other indicators of wealth that may have been deliberately obscured.
Process Serving
Legal documents need to be formally served on individuals — and some individuals make themselves very difficult to find. A PI can locate a subject and serve documents in a legally compliant manner, supporting solicitors and legal teams.
Digital Investigations
The digital world leaves trails. A trained investigator can assist with the legal recovery of digital evidence, analysis of online activity, and identification of anonymous accounts in cases of online harassment, fraud, or defamation.
What a PI Cannot Do
Transparency matters here. A private investigator in the UK cannot access medical records, tax records, bank accounts, or phone records without legal authority. We cannot hack devices, intercept communications, or conduct surveillance on private property. We operate entirely within the law — and any investigator who suggests otherwise should be avoided.
How to Choose the Right PI
Look for membership of a professional body such as the Association of British Investigators or the World Association of Professional Investigators. Ask about their background and experience in your specific type of case. Be wary of anyone who guarantees results or quotes unusually low fees — both are red flags.
The First Step
Most reputable private investigators offer a free initial consultation. There is no pressure and no obligation. A good PI will tell you honestly what is achievable, what it is likely to cost, and what the realistic timeline looks like.
Get in touch today to find out how we can help.