ABA Standard 509 · 2025 cycle · Last synced May 31, 2026
Texas A&M University School of Law
Texas · Public · School ID: texas-a&m-university
Texas A&M University School of Law is a public law school in Texas. In the most recent ABA Standard 509 cycle it reported a 96.0% first-time bar passage rate (state average 81.4%). 99.2% of graduates landed full-time, long-term JD-required or JD-advantage jobs, and 19.3% joined large firms of 251+ attorneys. Resident tuition is $32,634 per year; a median grant of $26,048 brings median net tuition to about $6,586. The median LSAT is 169 with a 12.1% acceptance rate.
Different cohorts: first-time bar passage reflects graduates who entered law school about three years before the current admissions class shown above. Read the two as separate snapshots, not a single pipeline.
What is the first-time bar passage rate at Texas A&M University School of Law?
Texas A&M University School of Law reported a 96.0% first-time bar passage rate in the most recent ABA Standard 509 disclosure, versus a 81.4% state average.
How much does Texas A&M University School of Law cost?
Resident tuition at Texas A&M University School of Law is $32,634 per year (about $97,902 over three years). The median grant is $26,048, bringing median net tuition to roughly $6,586 per year.
What LSAT and GPA do you need for Texas A&M University School of Law?
The median (50th-percentile) LSAT at Texas A&M University School of Law is 169 and the median GPA is 4.00; the acceptance rate is 12.1%.
What are the job outcomes at Texas A&M University School of Law?
99.2% of Texas A&M University School of Law graduates held full-time, long-term JD-required or JD-advantage jobs about ten months after graduation. 19.3% joined large firms of 251+ attorneys. 0.0% were still seeking employment.
Source: ABA Standard 509 Required Disclosure for Texas A&M University, published by the American Bar Association at abarequireddisclosures.org. State attorney salary data from U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics OEWS 2024 (occupation code 23-1011). Cost-of-living from U.S. BEA Regional Price Parities. Methodology: /methodology.html.