Applying to one or more law schools can be stressful and confusing in knowing where to apply if your stats are acceptable, and if the education is affordable. Obtaining a law degree at the best law schools is usually highly competitive, where school officials reject many more applications than they accept.
Once a law school receives your application, the Law School Admission Council credential assembly service will ensure that they’ve received every transcript from all institutions you’ve attended in higher learning.
National Law School Acceptance Rates
Many of the challenges of the legal profession occur years before when potential student candidates are applying to the law school of their choice. The applicant must have a “good enough” grade point average and an LSAT score, at a minimum, based on the law school’s median range.
The student must submit an impressive personal essay and letters of recommendation that revealed their personality with others and writing/reading skills. Finally, they’ll need to ensure they can gather sufficient funds to attend law school or have what it takes to receive grant money and scholarships. Specific national law school admission facts and statistics include:
- Top-ranked law schools look for specific factors when considering what potential student applicants they will accept, including their GPA and LSAT score
- Most law schools, colleges, and universities consider student candidates with an LSAT score of 150 or higher, and the top 5 law schools require a 170 score or above
- LSAT test scores are the best predictor of which applicants will pass or fail the bar exam
- Many law schools have dramatically lowered their admission standards due to an abrupt decline in their annual revenue in the months following the start of the Covid-19 pandemic
- Statistically, about 33% of all LSAT test-takers score between 156 and 180 on average, placing them at minimal risk of not being accepted at some law school
Only a few law schools in the US accept a person without an undergraduate degree and a good GPA, and nearly all State Bar Associations will not certify or license law school graduates who earn a law degree without first earning an undergraduate degree.
American Bar Association (ABA) Bar Passage Rates
In February 2020, the American Bar Association released data indicating that 90% of all recent law school graduates had passed their state licensing exam within the first two years after graduation. This rate jumped significantly (up 5%) from previous data.
- In 2019, the US Department of Education changed Standard 316, requiring 75% of law school graduates who sit for the bar exam to pass within the first two years after earning their degree
- In 2020, approximately 5% of all American Bar Association-approved law schools fell short of the simplified passage rates threshold of ensuring that their graduates passed the bar within two years
- In 2017, 89.5% of all law school graduates who had sat for the bar examination passed it within two years
- In 2016, 80.64% of all law graduates who sat for the bar exam passed within two years of graduating
Yale, Harvard & University of Southern California – Berkeley Statistics
Each year, families spend thousands of dollars on standardized test preparation, private tutoring, and other classes to ensure their child receives the best education ranking to attend law school. Many law school applicants are willing to relocate thousands of miles away to ensure that they get a degree from Yale, Harvard, Stanford, University of Southern California, and other colleges.
Getting a degree from a higher rank law school might ensure the graduate receives better job prospects, higher salaries, and a better life. Many alumni can attest that the acceptance rates at top law schools are meager and typically based on the student candidate’s ability to pass the bar exam after completing their law programs.
Typical law school acceptance rates for high-ranking law schools include:
- Approximately 49% of Yale Law School students (graduating in 2023) are women
- About 51% of all Yale Law graduates in the Juris Doctor class of 2023 will be students of color
- The average age of all Yale Law Juris Doctor students is 25
- Approximately 11% of all Yale Law School attendees are first-generation college students
- In 2019, Yale University received 3626 applicants for their law school Juris Doctor programs, including 262 new offers
- In 2019, Yale offered 221 student applicants a place in their law programs, and 84% accepted those offers
- In 2019, Yale University Law students earned their undergraduate degrees at 82 educational institutions
- In 2019, the median Grade Point Average (GPA) among new Juris Doctor students at Yale was 3.94 with a high of 3.99 and a low of 3.50, with approximately 25% of new student GPAs averaging 3.85
- In 2019, the median LSAT score at Yale was 173, with a high of 176 and a low of 155, with approximately 25% of new students LSAT scores of 170
- In 2019, Harvard received 7505 applications for their Juris Doctor program and made 968 offers of admission, where 502 new students accepted the offer
- In 2019, the median GPA among new Juris Doctor students at Harvard was 3.88 with a high of 3.95 and a low of 3.78
- In 2019, the median LSAT score at Harvard was 173, with a high of 175 and a low of 170
- Approximately 80% of all new student classes at Harvard Law School were at least four years out of college, 62% were two years or more out of college, and the remaining 23% were four years out
- The new student freshmen at Harvard Law School in 2019 arrived from 17 countries, 49 states, and territories, speaking 58 different languages
- In 2019, Harvard Law School students had earned undergraduate degrees at 164 different educational institutions
- In 2019, 88 new law school students at Harvard were Phi Beta Kappa inductees, and 26 students were company founders and CEOs
- In 2019, the median LSAT score at the University of California at Berkeley was 168, with a high of 170, and the lower 25% scored 163 on average
- In 2019, the median GPA among Juris Doctor students at the University of California Berkeley was 3.81, with a high of 3.92 and the lower 25% averaging 3.65
- In 2019, approximately 9% of all new students attending the University of California Law School were over 30 years of age
- In 2019, the average age of a newly admitted University of California Berkeley law school student was 25 years old, ranging from 21 to 46 years old
- In 2019, 66% of all newly admitted University of California Berkeley law students were female, 32% were male, and 2% were non-binary or trans
- Approximately 56% of the University of California Berkeley law school graduates in 2023 will be students of color
- About 13% of the all University of California Berkeley law students in the class of 2023 will hold an advanced degree, and 23% will receive a degree in a stem field
Many law applicants have received their undergraduate degrees from more than 8000 accredited educational institutions in the US.
Getting into Law Schools
The law school acceptance rates vary among colleges and universities competing to accept the best available student applicants. For example, Yale University ranked number one among all law schools in the United States, had only a 10% acceptance rate, and rejected 90% of all law school applicants, even those with an acceptable GPA and LSAT score.
Fulfilling all of the law school’s requirements can ensure that the law school will look at the applicant’s transcript grades, overall grade point average (GPA), and LSAT (law school admission test) scores. However, the law school acceptance rates are based not only on each candidate’s academic potential but also on the undergraduate’s major and classes attended.
Completing academic working undergraduate studies helps showcase all law school applicants’ research and writing skills and the level of their time management skills.
All applicants must submit letters of recommendation that might show they built a close relationship with the teacher or professor in undergraduate school. This information carries just as much weight as test scores and helps the Law School Admission Council better identify the student applicants that will do well in their law programs.
Top 100 US Law Schools Acceptance Rates Breakdown
US News Ranking /School Name /Acceptance Rate /LSAT Median /GPA Median /Applications 2020
- Yale University 10% 173 3.93 6969
- Stanford University 11% 171 3.89 9621
- Harvard University 18% 173 3.86 14165
- University of Chicago 22% 170 3.9 11992
- Columbia University 22% 171 3.7 16330
- New York University 33% 169 3.78 15760
- University of Pennsylvania 19% 169 3.89 13986
- University of Virginia 20% 168 3.86 15259
- University of California Berkeley 21% 166 3.78 13610
- The University of Michigan Ann Arbor 28% 168 3.76 14479
- Duke University 23% 169 3.76 14590
- Northwestern University 23% 168 3.77 11110
- Cornell University 31% 167 3.74 11809
- University of California Los Angeles 30% 166 3.74 12803
- Georgetown University 25% 167 3.76 20337
- Vanderbilt University 38% 166 3.74 10245
- University of Texas Austin 22% 167 3.73 9605
- Washington University in St Louis 28% 167 3.67 8910
- University of Southern California 30% 166 3.76 9764
- Boston University 38% 163 3.67 10920
- University of Florida 62% 157 3.5 3881
- University of Notre Dame 35% 164 3.66 6101
- The University of Minnesota Twin Cities 44% 164 3.79 5246
- The University of North Carolina Chapel Hill 45% 161 3.49 3881
- University of Alabama 37% 163 3.76 2757
- Arizona State University 43% 161 3.63 3855
- George Washington University 40% 165 3.71 14197
- University of Georgia 33% 162 3.71 4183
- University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign 46% 161 3.51 4895
- University of Wisconsin Madison 49% 161 3.54 3538
- Boston College 45% 162 3.56 9820
- Brigham Young University 40% 161 3.77 751
- Emory University 32% 165 3.77 8072
- University of Iowa 43% 161 3.61 2749
- Washington and Lee University 49% 160 3.41 6288
- Fordham University 35% 163 3.53 9166
- University of California Davis 31% 163 3.51 4955
- College of William Mary Law School 36% 163 3.69 8271
- University of California Irvine 27% 162 3.56 2250
- Whittier Law School 63% 148 2.85 869
- Ohio State University 50% 159 3.61 3182
- George Mason University 31% 161 3.59 5452
- Wake Forest University 56% 161 3.6 4284
- Indiana University Bloomington 53% 161 3.76 4391
- University of Utah 47% 158 3.57 1135
- University of Washington 27% 164 3.65 3999
- Pepperdine University 49% 159 3.6 3328
- University of Arizona 33% 160 3.51 2490
- University of Colorado Boulder 46% 161 3.6 4089
- Florida State University 44% 158 3.52 3161
- The University of California Hastings 42% 159 3.5 6209
- University of Maryland 54% 157 3.46 3624
- Southern Methodist University 41% 161 3.63 3207
- Temple University 43% 160 3.5 4639
- Villanova University 49% 156 3.57 3177
- Cardozo-Yeshiva University 52% 159 3.42 5888
- University of Richmond 42% 160 3.51 2373
- Texas A&M University School of Law 20% 156 3.38 1646
- University of Connecticut 51% 156 3.34 2203
- Baylor University 29% 160 3.53 3400
- Penn State University (Dickinson) 0% 0 0 3645
- University of Nevada Las Vegas 32% 158 3.32 1259
- University of Tennessee Knoxville 37% 158 3.64 1568
- Tulane University 60% 159 3.42 3565
- University of Houston 38% 159 3.54 3434
- University of Missouri Columbia 59% 157 3.41 801
- Loyola Law School 42% 159 3.51 5069
- Northeastern University 35% 161 3.55 3919
- University of Pittsburgh 37% 156 3.36 2544
- University of Oklahoma 49% 157 3.56 992
- University of Kentucky 60% 155 3.42 1160
- Seton Hall University 49% 156 3.42 2929
- University of Kansas 66% 156 3.42 858
- Case Western Reserve University 42% 159 3.44 2732
- Wayne State University 52% 157 3.42 766
- St. John’s University 41% 158 3.54 2933
- University of Oregon 49% 157 3.48 1972
- University of Miami 54% 157 3.36 5180
- Loyola University Chicago 54% 158 3.34 3974
- University of Denver 45% 157 3.43 3021
- Georgia State University 28% 158 3.4 2185
- Drexel University 54% 155 3.31 1672
- University of Cincinnati 58% 155 3.59 1456
- Brooklyn Law School 52% 155 3.36 5030
- American University 59% 155 3.29 9049
- University of San Diego 40% 159 3.52 4659
- University of Nebraska Lincoln 62% 156 3.65 710
- University of New Hampshire 0% 0 0 907
- Lewis and Clark College 59% 158 3.32 2757
- Florida International University 29% 156 3.63 1442
- Chicago-Kent College of Law (IIT) 62% 156 3.36 3407
- Michigan State College of Law 46% 154 3.46 2634
- Howard University 43% 150 3.28 1486
- St. Louis University 65% 155 3.44 1560
- Rutgers University 48% 155 3.28 630
- University of South Carolina 59% 154 3.3 1875
- University of Arkansas Fayetteville 67% 154 3.37 880
- University of Hawaii 37% 154 3.27 611
- University of Louisville 68% 154 3.39 828
- University of Mississippi 48% 155 3.41 1238
- University at Buffalo 52% 154 3.44 1147
147 Golden Gate University 66% 148 2.94 1262
Law School Admission FAQs
Nearly every university and college in the United States provide online application information for their Juris Doctor programs and begin accepting applications by late summer every year. Many families have unanswered questions about applying, the percentage of student applicants making it into law school, and the acceptance rate at the schools they are considering.
Some of those frequently asked questions or answers are below.
What percentage of students get into law school?
In the United States, the average acceptance rate declined in 2019 from 46.1% the previous year to 45.1%. Statistics show that 115 law schools in America had declines in their acceptance rates in recent years, and 35 schools had an acceptance rate of 30% or less.
In 2019, over 73% of all newly admitted law school students received a scholarship. About 75% of all law students in the United States were paying much lower for their education than the posted price.
What is the average law school acceptance rate?
The average acceptance rate for law schools across the United States varies significantly between the highest rank schools and those considered less prestigious, requiring a lower GPA than average. The top 5 ranking law schools in the United States have very low acceptance rates, including Yale (10%), Stanford (11%), Harvard (18%), the University of Chicago (22%, and Columbia University (22%).
Other colleges and universities have a significantly higher acceptance rate like New York University (33%), Boston University (45%), University of Pennsylvania (19%), University of Virginia (20%), Northwestern University (23%), Georgetown University (25%), and Duke University (23%).
What is a good GPA to get into law school?
Only a very few law schools and colleges accept potential student candidates with an undergraduate GPA of 3.49 or lower. Most prestigious law schools require a GPA of 3.85 or higher.
However, statistics show that some undergraduates have been accepted at Yale and Harvard with a GPA score of 3.56 and 3.50, respectively, although they likely had a higher LSAT score, excellent recommendations, and an optimal personal statement.
What is a good LSAT score in 2020?
The higher the LSAT score, the better your chances of being considered by the Law School Admission Council. Many law school applicants receiving offers for admission submitted their applications with a median LSAT score of 163 and a GPA of 3.5 and higher.
More prestigious law schools in the United States, including Yale, Harvard, Stanford, and the University of Chicago, have made admissions offers to undergraduates with an LSAT score of 165 or higher.
The Cost of Attending Law School
In 2020, a US news report revealed the average annual cost of attending a public law school (out of state) at $41,726, including tuition and fees. In-state (resident) public law schools cost approximately $28,604 on average, including tuition and fees.
Over three years, a graduate has likely paid nearly $85,000 to cover the total cost of their law degree. Private schools are even more expensive.
The total cost of attending prestigious law schools, including Yale Law School, Stanford University, Georgetown University, Columbia University, Northwestern University, Stanford Univ., the University of Virginia, and the University of Pennsylvania, could cost up to $148,644.
Many graduates face mounting student debt loans during their first few years of practicing law while earning an average age of $122,960 (Bureau of Labor Statistics). Only the top 10% of all attorneys in the United States earn over $208,000 annually.
Paying for law school is just a part of enjoying a long career path in the legal profession. Data shows that approximately 23% of law school graduates stated that their legal education was worth the price.
Resources:
- Stanford University Law School Admissions Information
- US News Best Law Schools (2021)