When do law school graduates receive job offers?

Feel like you’re the only one without a job offer? 

Don’t worry — you’re not. 

There are some employers — notably large law firms, judges hiring judicial clerks and JAG Corps — that extend offers before graduation. More than 70 percent of state and federal judicial clerkship positions are hired before graduation. Law firms with more than 100 lawyers make three-quarters of their job offers before graduation, while even larger firms make an even greater percentage of offers early in the year, according to the NALP “Class of 2014: Jobs & JDs” report. 

But other employers, such as prosecutor offices and small law firms, do a substantial portion of their hiring after graduation. 

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Table titled “Timing of job offer by employment type” showing percentages of job offers received before graduation, after graduation but before bar results, and after graduation and bar results across various employer types such as business, government, judicial clerkships, private practice by firm size, and public interest.

 

Timing of job offer by employment type
Employer/Job type Before graduation, % After graduation, but before bar results, % After graduation and after bar results, %
All employers 52.1 20.5 27.4
Business 39.4 28.2 32.4
Government 42.4 24.6 33
Judicial clerkships 75.7 14.1 10.2
Private practice: 1-10 lawyers 36.3 25.9 37.8
Private practice: 11-25 lawyers 47 22.6 30.4
Private practice: 26-50 lawyers 57.7 20.3 22
Private practice: 51-100 lawyers 65.2 15 19.8
Private practice: 101-250 lawyers 76.5 10.9 12.6
Private practice: 251-500 lawyers 88.5 6.7 4.8
Private practice: 501+ lawyers 92.3 4.5 3.2
Public interest 40.9 24.3 34.8

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