Two-year ultimate bar passage: every U.S. law school, ranked
Across the 194 ABA-accredited U.S. law schools that report two-year ultimate bar passage, the median is 92.8%. Values span from 100% at University of Wisconsin School of Law to 0% at Marquette University School of Law, drawn from the most recent ABA Standard 509 disclosure cycle (trend data 2018–2026).
- Schools reporting 194
- Median 92.8%
- 25th–75th 88.025% – 96.2%
- Range 0% – 100%
Definition
- What it is
- Share of graduates who passed the bar within two years of graduating (the ABA 'ultimate' measure, which counts retakes).
- Reported by
- The American Bar Association, in each school’s annual Standard 509 Required Disclosure.
- Unit
- Percent
How to read it
The two-year rate counts retakes and is almost always higher than first-time; a wide gap between the two flags first-attempt struggles.
Every school, ranked
At the extremes
Top: Yale Law School (100%) · Stanford Law School (100%) · University of Virginia School of Law (100%) · Brigham Young University School of Law (100%) · University of Wisconsin School of Law (100%)
Bottom: Barry University School of Law (73.5%) · Florida A&M University School of Law (72.5%) · Cooley Law School (68.5%) · Southern University School of Law (59.5%) · Marquette University School of Law (0%)
Related metrics
First-time bar passage · Bar passage vs. state average
FAQ
What is two-year ultimate bar passage?
Share of graduates who passed the bar within two years of graduating (the ABA 'ultimate' measure, which counts retakes).
What is the median two-year ultimate bar passage across U.S. law schools?
92.8%, across the 194 ABA-accredited schools that report it in the most recent ABA Standard 509 cycle.
Which law school has the highest two-year ultimate bar passage?
University of Wisconsin School of Law, at 100%.
What counts as a strong two-year ultimate bar passage?
Schools above the median of 92.8% are above average; the top tenth begins around 98.47%.
How should I read two-year ultimate bar passage?
The two-year rate counts retakes and is almost always higher than first-time; a wide gap between the two flags first-attempt struggles.
Source: ABA Standard 509 Required Disclosures, most recent reported cycle (trend 2018–2026). Last updated June 8, 2026.