81% first-time passage puts SLU Law squarely at the national average. Read that as a baseline, not a verdict: average rates at hard-bar states and easy-bar states mean very different things, and the ABA’s own disclosures let you tell which story this is.
MetricFigureContextFirst-time bar passage81%The headline under reviewNational first-time average~75 to 80%Varies year to yearPrimary jurisdictionMissouriConfirm in the 509U.S. News rank#75Peer-tier context
It is solidly average, 81% sits inside the national 75 to 80% band. At this range, the state being measured and the credentials of the entering class explain most of the picture, which is why the 509 breakdown matters more than the headline.
The distance that matters: 4 points above the national midpoint at 81%, a gap small enough that state difficulty alone could account for it.
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: the ABA 509 disclosure is published annually for every accredited school and breaks bar results out by jurisdiction. Pull it, find the state line, and check whether the state you actually intend to practice in appears at all, a New York rate tells a California-bound student almost nothing. Verify the rate for your state, not the school’s headline.
SLU 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.
Hold the line on one standard: a pass rate means nothing until the state is named. Jurisdictions differ by twenty points or more in baseline difficulty; comparing bare percentages across schools is comparing weather reports without locations.
Approximately 81% of graduates pass on the first attempt, in line with the national 75 to 80% average. Verify the jurisdiction breakdown in the ABA 509 before comparing it to any other school’s figure.
Different inputs, different exams, different denominators. Admitted-student medians drive much of it; state difficulty drives more; and attrition policy quietly shapes who gets counted. Strip those out and the remaining gap, the part that is actually about teaching, is smaller than the raw numbers suggest.
Partly, but it equally reflects who was admitted and who persisted to graduation. Read it alongside the LSAT median and attrition data: when all three are strong, the rate means what it appears to mean.
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.