At 86% first-time passage, Ohio State Law clears the national average with room to spare, a real signal, worth exactly as much as your understanding of what produced it. Pass rates compress incoming credentials, program rigor, and jurisdiction difficulty into one figure, and this page decompresses it.
MetricFigureContextFirst-time bar passage86%The headline under reviewNational first-time average~75 to 80%Annual benchmarkPrimary jurisdictionOhioState of recordU.S. News rank#30Peer-tier context
By any reasonable benchmark, yes: 86% beats the national band with margin, and rates at that level usually mean strong inputs and a program that holds its middle. Confirm which state produced the figure, then credit it.
The distance that matters: 8 points above the national midpoint at 86%, margin that survives jurisdiction adjustments in most states.
Decompose the number and it stops being mysterious. Inputs: the credentials of admitted students, which track bar results closely. Program: how hard the school works its middle of the class, rigor and writing predict passage better than prestige. Denominator: attrition decides who even sits for the exam, so two schools with identical teaching can post different rates by graduating different fractions of their entrants. The 509 disclosure exposes each piece.
Withheld Tip: trend beats snapshot. Pull three consecutive years of the school’s 509 bar data before believing any single figure, one strong year is a cohort, three is a program. Rates that swing widely year to year are telling you about the denominator, not the teaching.
Ohio State Law’s bar prep apparatus will resemble the industry standard, commercial course partnerships, a readiness program, advising, and the differences that matter live in the details: what is subsidized, what is required, and when it begins. Make admissions name all three.
Keep one eye forward: the licensing exam itself is in transition, with states adopting the NextGen bar exam on a rolling basis through 2028. The emphasis shifts toward applied lawyering skills, which rewards exactly the habit the LSAT should have taught you: training the underlying skill under feedback rather than memorizing around it. Ask any school how its bar curriculum is adapting; the question itself signals you understand what you are buying.
The rule: no jurisdiction, no judgment. Until you know which state’s exam a rate describes, the figure cannot be compared, contextualized, or trusted, and any school materials that present it bare are asking you not to check.
Roughly 86% on the first attempt, above the national first-time average of roughly 75 to 80%. Treat the figure as jurisdiction-specific until the 509 says otherwise, and read it across years, not in isolation.
Because they compress three things into one number: the credentials of admitted students, the rigor of the program, and which state bars graduates sit for. Comparing rates without comparing states and inputs is comparing headlines, not outcomes.
Sometimes. A strong rate built on strong inputs and low attrition is the genuine article; a strong rate built on heavy academic dismissal is a denominator trick. The 509 lets you tell the difference in about ten minutes.
The bar exam is the final feedback loop of a process that started with your diagnostic LSAT. Schools with honest numbers survive the questions on this page; schools with marketing numbers don’t. Reading outcomes data skeptically isn’t cynicism, it’s the first legal skill.