The headline at Tennessee Law is the price: $19,180 a year, around $117,540 all-in, modest by legal-education standards. Do not let the modest sticker end the analysis. The same LSAT leverage that moves six figures at premium schools moves real money here as well, and on a smaller base, every discounted dollar changes the debt math faster.
Line itemFigureNoteAnnual tuition$19,180Published rate, pre-awardThree-year tuition$57,540Three years, undiscountedLiving expenses~$20,000 / yrKnoxville, TennesseeThree-year cost of attendance~$117,540The honest denominatorMerit money opensLSAT 162+Where awards beginIn-state rateLower, verifyPublic-school advantage
Less than the table says, if you bring leverage: merit awards open above an LSAT of 162 and scale from there, and they routinely cut the real cost well under the published figure. Sticker is what the unleveraged pay, treat it as a starting quote.
Strip the sentiment and the mechanism is plain: rankings are built on medians, medians are bought one admit at a time, and Tennessee Law’s discount budget is the purchasing instrument. Awards therefore behave like prices, set above the median, escalating with distance from it, and revisable when a documented competitor bids. Treat the process accordingly: numbers in writing, deadlines respected, sentiment omitted.
Tennessee Law is public, which adds a variable most applicants under-weight: the in-state rate. Resident tuition can undercut the sticker substantially, confirm the current figure with the school, and if you are out-of-state, ask the registrar one precise question: what does establishing residency for year two require? At public prices, that answer can be worth more than a scholarship.
Withheld Tip: sequence matters more than persistence. The largest allocations go to the early pool, apply by November 1, but your negotiating position is set by the offers you hold when awards are decided. Build the peer-school applications first, so the competing numbers exist before the school prices you, not after.
Here is the spreadsheet the decision deserves: three years of ($19,180 minus award, plus ~$20,000 living), interest from day one, totaled. Beneath it, the income rows, $65 to 130K regional, $55 to 90K government, $215K BigLaw where it genuinely applies. At sticker, this degree costs about 1.2 years of a regional first-year salary, the single most clarifying ratio in the decision. If the comfortable rows cannot service the total, you have learned something now that costs nothing, the same lesson after enrollment compounds at student-loan rates.
The rule that protects you from the brochure: price the degree at the median outcome, not the maximum. BigLaw salaries make every debt number look survivable and most graduates never see them. If your plan is public interest, add one verification step, read the current LRAP terms yourself; assistance programs change, and “there’s loan help” is not a term sheet.
Sticker tuition is $19,180 per year, roughly $39,000 once living costs are added. Competitive applicants frequently pay meaningfully less through merit awards that open above an LSAT of 162.
In practice, yes, documented peer offers move awards. Send the competing letter, ask directly for reconsideration, and keep everything in writing. Applicants who never ask reliably pay the most.
That is the sticker question, and sticker is the wrong denominator. Worth is your scholarship-adjusted cost against the school’s real placement outcomes, a calculation that takes ten minutes and changes more decisions than any ranking.
Treat tuition as the output of a process you control, not a fact you absorb. The applicants who pay least are not the luckiest, they are the ones who built leverage on purpose: a score above the median, peer offers in hand, and a November application. Price is the last thing the LSAT buys you, and it is usually the biggest.