At 72%, Tulane Law School’s headline employment figure is exactly the kind of number that requires decomposition before judgment. Full-time long-term bar-required is the category that means “working as a lawyer”; everything else, part-time, JD-advantage, school-funded, is context. The 509 separates them, and so will this page.
MetricFigureContextEmployment rate (10 months)~72%The headline blendPrimary placementNew Orleans and LouisianaWhere the pipeline pointsNetwork strengthMaritime law, energy law, civil law systemStrongest for matching plansU.S. News rank#50Peer-tier context
Taken literally: ten months after graduation, 72% of the class had a job, any kind, any duration, any funder. The figure that should drive your decision is narrower: full-time, long-term, bar-passage-required employment as a share of all graduates, because that category and only that category means practicing law. The rest of the blend, part-time, JD-advantage, school-funded, is context worth reading and discounting.
This is not Tulane Law School being evasive; it is the standard format every school reports in, which is exactly why the ABA requires a disclosure that lets you take the blend apart.
Every accredited school publishes a Standard 509 report and an employment summary annually, the raw, audited version of the brochure. Four moves, ten minutes: One, isolate the real categoryfull-time, long-term, bar-required, computed as a share of the whole class, not of “employed graduates.” Two, check who’s payingschool-funded positions are listed separately; a school employing its own graduates is supporting them, not placing them. Three, read the JD-advantage line skepticallysome of those roles are chosen, some are landed on; the line deserves attention when it is large. Four, map geography to your lifeplacement power is local, and a network concentrated somewhere you will not live is a discount, not an asset.
Withheld Tip: compare the same school’s 509 across two or three years before trusting any single one. One strong year is a cohort; three is a pipeline. Trendlines are harder to stage than snapshots.
Employment data only becomes a decision once you add the one variable the school cannot publish: your destination. Placement strength is geographic, here, New Orleans and Louisiana., and a powerful network in the wrong city is a weak network for you. So invert the usual order, choose the market, then choose the school as the best vehicle into it. Never the reverse.
Roughly 72% report employment ten months after graduation, across all categories. The more meaningful figure, full-time, long-term, bar-required placement, requires the ABA 509 breakdown, which is exactly where you should look next.
Primarily New Orleans and Louisiana, with particular strength in maritime law, energy law, civil law system. Read the geography as infrastructure: alumni, employers, and on-campus recruiting all live where the school’s history lives, and your outcomes will too.
They do, and the 509 isolates them on a dedicated line so you can decide what they mean. Read them as institutional support for graduates, valuable to those in them, and distinct from market hiring when you evaluate the school.
The discipline this page teaches, decompose the headline, locate the geography, verify across years, is the same discipline the career itself will demand. Treat the school’s employment summary as your first case file. The applicants who read it that way tend to end up on the right side of the statistics they once scrutinized.