How to read a law school’s bar passage rate

Reading the data · Updated 2026-06-14

A law school’s bar passage rate is one of the most-cited numbers in admissions, and one of the most misread. Here is what the figure does and doesn’t tell you.

First-time vs. ultimate pass rate

Two different rates both get called “bar passage.” The first-time rate is the share of a school’s graduates who pass on their first attempt in a given year. The ultimate rate (the ABA’s two-year measure) is the share who eventually pass within two years of graduating. The ultimate rate is almost always higher because it counts retakes. When you compare schools, make sure you are comparing the same one.

Read it against the jurisdiction, not in a vacuum

Bar exams are not equally hard, and passing scores differ by state. A 78% first-time rate in a demanding jurisdiction can reflect stronger work than an 85% rate in an easier one. The ABA reports each school’s rate alongside the state where most of its graduates sat, which is the context that makes the number meaningful.

Watch the cohort size

At a small school, a handful of results swings the rate by several points from year to year. One off year is noise, not a trend. Look across multiple years before reading anything into a single figure, the trend matters more than the latest point.

What the rate doesn’t capture

See it in the data

Every school’s first-time and ultimate bar passage, with the multi-year trend, comes straight from the ABA Standard 509 disclosures. Compare schools side by side, and weigh the rate against cost and employment before you decide.

Source: ABA Standard 509 Required Disclosures (most recent cycle), via abarequireddisclosures.org. State attorney-salary context from U.S. BLS OEWS 2024. Methodology: /methodology.html.