Warning

Info

When Should I Apply to Law School?

Soon, but not too soon, but also not too late.
Apr 2, 2023

Table of Contents

  1. What time of year is best to apply?
  2. When in my life should I apply?
  3. Unsolicited opinion
  4. Related Articles

When you ask this question you might mean a few things. You might mean: What time of the year is it best to apply to law school? or you might mean: When in my life should I apply to law school. The first one is easier so I will explain that one first. 

What time of the year is best to apply to law school?

Check out our recommended law school application timeline here

Pretty much every law school has rolling admissions. This means that their applications are ‘open’ from around September to May, but you are much more likely to get accepted if you apply as early as possible.

The best time to apply to law school is when you are ready to commit to the three years of study required to earn a Juris Doctor (JD) degree. The best time to apply to law school is also when you have a clear sense of why you want to become a lawyer and how you will use your law degree to achieve your professional goals. 

The process of applying to law school can be time-consuming and expensive, so it is important to make sure you are ready to commit to the process before you begin. The best time to apply to law school is when you have completed your undergraduate degree and taken the LSAT. 

The best time to apply to law school is also when you have a clear idea of what you want to do with your law degree. Are you interested in working in a particular field of law? Do you want to become a prosecutor or public defender? Do you want to work in a private law firm? Knowing what you want to do with your degree will help you choose the right law school and prepare for your career. 

The best time to apply to law school is also when you have a realistic idea of the time and effort required to succeed in law school and pass the bar exam. Law school is a demanding academic environment, and you will need to study hard to earn good grades. You should also be prepared to dedicate time to extracurricular activities, such as moot court and law review, which can help you develop important legal skills. 

Finally, the best time to apply to law school is when you are financially prepared to cover the cost of tuition and living expenses. Law school is a significant investment, and you will need to be sure you can afford the cost before you apply. 

If you are ready to commit to the time and effort required to earn a law degree, and you have a clear idea of why you want to become a lawyer, the best time to apply to law school is now.​​ 

When in my life should I apply to law school?

Simply put, you should go to law school when you want to be a lawyer, or when getting a JD will help your career. But I realize that that isn't really helpful.

First, some stats.

Between 20-30% of 1Ls are KJD (meaning they went straight from H.S. to Undergrad then straight to Law School). Another (probably) 10-15% got some kind of Master's right after undergrad but before law school so they aren't KJD, but have also always been in school. Over 50% of 1Ls are under 25. About 20% of 1Ls are over 30.

Cool, so those are a bunch of numbers that might not be helpful.

Honestly, the question is so personal, that I can't give you a good answer. But I can give some pros and cons that you might not be considering:

KJD aka Straight Through aka ~19 years of school with no break.

Pros:

  1. You never leave school mode so you might be better set to study every day
  2. Your guardians are more likely to support you financially
  3. You get started on a legal career younger

Cons:

  1. Undergrad academics are super different than law school academics (for most) so you might not have the right mentality to succeed at law school
  2. Experience might make you a better applicant and help you get into a better school. This is especially true if you don't have a stellar GPA
  3. Most people don't actually know what they want to do with the rest of their life when they are 22. (Sorry to those of you who are, but consider leaving the lasting decisions to Med School students).

~2-4 years out of undergrad

Pros:

  1. The most common age group to go, so you will be surrounded by people close to you in age
  2. You have some work experience so you will (hopefully) have a better sense of what you want to do professionally
  3. You might still get some support from your family and you can probably coast on their insurance for a little longer.

Cons:

  1. Social pressures might be strong, and your social life might encroach on academics.
  2. Your work experience might not be strong enough to help your application.
  3. Most financial aid offices will still consider your parents income, regardless of how much help they are giving you

~4-8 years out of undergrad

Pros:

  1. You're pretty likely to know what you want to do when you grow up, and if that is being a lawyer, you most likely won't regret it
  2. Your work experience is probably substantial enough to help your application
  3. Most financial aid offices stop looking at your parents/guardians income around age 28 so you are likely to get better financial aid

Cons:

  1. You will be a little older than many of your peers and might find it harder to fit in socially
  2. You will be ~30 when you start your legal career and you might feel behind younger peers
  3. Your family is probably less likely to give you money than when you were younger

~8+ years out of undergrad

Pros:

  1. At this point you have a good amount of work experience and probably have a really good sense that law school is for you (or not)
  2. You should be able to tell a compelling story about how law school will help you further your professional journey
  3. You are most likely mature enough to buckle down and crush law school academically if you want

Cons:

  1. You will be the oldest person many rooms at law school. Maybe even older than some of your professors. This can be isolating
  2. Implicit agism will come into play in admissions and your chances of getting in might not be as high as if you were younger

My unsolicited opinion

I think that many undergrads feel like if they don't immediately go to law school that they will not have succeeded, or they use it as way to put off going to work. While this works for some people, a lot of KJD (or even people who are 2 years out) don't really know why they are at law school. As a result, it is really hard to give law school the focus required to really excel and subsequently younger applicants don't do as well during and after school. The flip side of that is that a lot young law students (more than older law students) make social connections in law school that are much stronger than older peers.

Overall, everyone is different so it is hard to give one-size fits all advice. What I can say with confidence is that you should go to law school when you know that you are ready, and when you are prepared to put into law school what you want to get out of law school. If that is a social life, great. If that is a killer job after, also great. Just make law school something you did, not something that happened to you.

Related Articles

  1. Is Law School Worth It?
  2. Lawyer or Paralegal
  3. How do I apply to Law School?
  4. How Much do Lawyers Make?
Windsor MIT '22, Harvard College Advisor

I am the half of LSD that didn't take the LSAT, or go to law school (Sorry about that). But I did go to MIT business school while surrounded by law students and lawyers, so I am somewhat qualified to talk about the intricacies of law school apps and finances.

Windsor (the dog) didn't write this but he WAS a Resident Tutor and career advisor at Harvard College with me, so deserves some credit.

General

General chat about the legal profession.
main_chatroom
👍 Chat vibe: 0 👎
Help us make LSD better!
Tell us what's important to you
17:24
i plan to go in public interest, i wont have that kinda money lol
omg same
I also don't feel bad for Fulbrights. They'll be alright
17:24
i'll be lucky to afford a home lol
17:24
omg yess
International status generally being a debuff sucks tho for sure
LegalUsername
17:26
There are waitlist sessions for GULC? I never got one after receiving the SPWL.
LegalUsername
17:27
Or maybe it's because I got it yesterday?
SplitOnMe
17:27
yeah they happened a while ago
theres one for NU coming up
17:29
Georgetown waitlists 4000 people a year, they basically have to divvy the waitlistees up across multiple sessions over time
yeah I'll be logged into the NU one so they don't ding me for missing but no shot I'll actually be able to pay attention bc I'll be working
17:30
Imagine being the admissions staffer(s) who need to monitor Q&A for a 4,000 person zoom
USNWR needs to just bump schools back 20 places if they waitlist more than like 10% of apps
17:32
Penn Purge, the reprise
Everyone who was on the WL at the time got that invite but you might not have gotten it if you applied later
Re: GULC WL session
i didnt get it but i believe i received the wl notif after the email went out which like, fair
17:34
It *is* somewhat tricky to plan waitlists, because there are a whole bunch of subgroups you need there. Not just the stats you need to tune and needs people fill (URM, veteran, regional balance, international, STEM), but buckets like "These are the specific STEM majors we might take if we have a bunch of STEM majors go elsewhere, and we've locked down our GPA median, and we need to shore up our LSAT median, and our aid budget is almost exhausted so we need people that would accept a waitlist A with minimal aid (not the 180s)
17:38
And how much "padding" you need in your waitlist is inversely related to how patient applicants will be for that school (HYS can cover their bases with a small waitlist because most people on the list would drop everything and commit; Georgetown needs a large waitlist because a lot of people on their list will end up with better options)
17:38
But even understanding why schools do this, the result sucks for anyone on the WL
kimchi queen if you see this im sorry but i dont have the talent to paint birds on my nails and i have shaky hands today so i went with skittle nails
KimchiQueen
17:47
@manifestT14acceptances: Haha no need to apologize! Skittles and candy style nail art is super cute!
LegalUsername
17:48
Just praying for the WL gods now :(
trees1234567
17:49
Oh damn penn wtf sorry to everyone that got hit
@KimchiQueen: thank you i do like how they came out i always feel bad fielding suggestions and then doing something else
KimchiQueen
18:07
Suggestions can always be used next time! No need to feel bad :)
any idea if we will hear from usc today?
even if it is an R, I just want to know. I want my cycle over so badly
@jb2028: how many people are part of the hls slack rn?
LSD+ is ad-free, with DMs, discounts, case briefs & more.