District of Columbia vs. North Dakota: Cost, Bar Passage & Outcomes Compared

On the most recent ABA Standard 509 data, North Dakota posts the higher first-time bar passage (68.35% vs 65.57%); District of Columbia is cheaper on sticker tuition ($12,438 vs $17,139); North Dakota places more graduates in full-time JD jobs (83.6% vs 71.2%).

Side by side (ABA Standard 509)

MetricDistrict of ColumbiaNorth DakotaBetter
Admissions
Median LSAT151151Tie
Median undergraduate GPA3.283.48North Dakota
Acceptance rate37%63.1%District of Columbia
Cost
Resident tuition$12,438$17,139District of Columbia
Non-resident tuition$28,874$34,249District of Columbia
Median grant$8,292$3,875District of Columbia
Bar passage
First-time bar passage65.57%68.35%North Dakota
Two-year ultimate bar passage75%81.01%North Dakota
Bar passage vs. state average-15.1 pts-5 ptsNorth Dakota
Employment
Full-time, long-term JD employment71.2%83.6%North Dakota
Large-firm (250+) employment2.4%0%District of Columbia
Federal clerkships0%5.5%North Dakota

15-year trajectory

First-time bar passage: 53.1% in 2011 to 65.57% in 202530%40%50%60%70%111315182022242565.57%
First-time bar passage · 2011–2025
District of Columbia — First-time bar passage
First-time bar passage: 77.16% in 2011 to 68.35% in 202550%60%70%80%90%111315182022242568.35%
First-time bar passage · 2011–2025
North Dakota — First-time bar passage
Resident tuition: $9,480 in 2011 to $12,438 in 2025$8,000$10,000$12,000$14,0001113151719212325$12,438
Resident tuition · 2011–2025
District of Columbia — Resident tuition
Resident tuition: $9,895 in 2011 to $17,139 in 2025$7,500$10,000$12,500$15,000$17,500$20,0001113151719212325$17,139
Resident tuition · 2011–2025
North Dakota — Resident tuition

Full profiles & related

FAQ

Which is cheaper, District of Columbia or North Dakota?

District of Columbia is cheaper on sticker: resident tuition of $12,438 versus North Dakota's $17,139.

Which has better bar passage, District of Columbia or North Dakota?

North Dakota has the higher first-time bar passage, 68.35% against District of Columbia's 65.57%.

Which has better job outcomes, District of Columbia or North Dakota?

North Dakota places more graduates in full-time, long-term JD jobs (83.6% vs 71.2%).

District of Columbia vs North Dakota: which is better?

It depends on what you weigh — the table above shows where each wins. Across the four headline measures (selectivity, sticker cost, first-time bar passage, and JD employment), North Dakota leads on more of them, but read the row that matters most to you rather than the count.

Source: ABA Standard 509 Required Disclosures, most recent reported cycle. Last updated June 26, 2026.

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