Consultant's Corner

Law school closures, mergers, and name changes: a timeline

Reading the data · Updated 2026-06-19

A current-year number is a snapshot, and snapshots hide direction. The most useful warning an applicant can study is a school's trajectory, and no trajectory is louder than a school that went from healthy to shuttered in under a decade. This is the chronological record of the U.S. law schools that opened, merged, were renamed, lost ABA accreditation, or closed.

Why this matters before you apply

Rankings describe prestige today. They say nothing about whether a school will still be granting degrees, or still be accredited, when you graduate into the job market three years from now. A school can report a respectable bar pass rate the same year its enrollment, faculty, and finances are quietly collapsing. By the time the closure announcement lands, the applicants who needed the warning have already enrolled.

That is why Exhibit 509 keeps the full fifteen-year history of every school, including the ones that have since closed, with their records intact. As we argue in is law school worth it, a single year of data can fool you; the direction of travel cannot. The timeline below is the hub. Each entry names the year, the school, and what happened, and links to the school's profile where it still exists in our dataset so you can read the trend lines that preceded the headline.

The timeline

How to read this list

Three of these events are not deaths at all. North Texas at Dallas is a birth; the Mitchell Hamline and UIC stories are consolidations that produced stronger institutions; and the Penn State reunification simply undoes an earlier split. The rest are warnings. Open any school above and you can watch the metrics that preceded the headline: the bar-pass slide, the faculty contraction, the enrollment drop. Run that same trajectory read on any school still operating, and you have the single best early-warning system the public data offers. Verify anything that drives a decision against the methodology and the original ABA disclosure.

This page is a hub. Per-school deep dives, tracing each institution's full fifteen-year arc from its strongest year to its last disclosure, are coming, and will link back here as we publish them.

Source: ABA Standard 509 Required Disclosures (most recent cycle) and Exhibit's closed-status field and corrections log, via abarequireddisclosures.org. State attorney-salary context from U.S. BLS OEWS 2024. Methodology: /methodology.html.
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