The headline at UMKC Law is strong: roughly 82% of graduates pass the bar on the first try, comfortably above the 75 to 80% national norm. Strong headlines deserve the same scrutiny as weak ones, which state, which denominator, which inputs, and UMKC Law’s number holds up better when you know how to check it.
MetricFigureContextFirst-time bar passage82%4 pts above the national midpointNational first-time average~75 to 80%The comparison bandPrimary jurisdictionMissouriState of record
Yes, 82% first-time passage sits clearly above the national average and signals a school whose academic program and incoming class are both doing their jobs. The honest qualifier: state mix matters, so verify the jurisdiction before comparing across schools.
Placed on the national curve, UMKC Law’s 82% lands 4 points above the midpoint of the 75 to 80% band, a gap small enough that state difficulty alone could account for it.
Bar rates are built, not bestowed, from three materials: who enrolled (medians forecast passage with uncomfortable accuracy), what the program demanded (curves, writing, doctrine), and who remained to be counted (attrition quietly edits the denominator). A school controls each lever differently, which is why the honest comparison is never rate against rate, but rate against inputs, against jurisdiction, against the count of who actually sat.
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.
Like most ABA-accredited schools, UMKC Law supports bar preparation through commercial-course partnerships, readiness programming, and faculty advising, ask admissions for specifics rather than assuming the label covers the substance.
One forward-looking note belongs in every bar conversation now: the NextGen bar exam is rolling out across states through 2028, moving the test toward applied skills and integrated tasks. Schools differ in how seriously they are re-tooling for it, make “how is your bar prep changing for NextGen?” a standard admissions question and listen for specifics, not slogans.
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 82% of graduates pass on the first attempt, above the national first-time average of roughly 75 to 80%. Verify the jurisdiction breakdown in the ABA 509 before comparing it to any other school’s figure.
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.
It means inputs, instruction, and attrition jointly produced a number. Untangle them, median in, dismissal rate, jurisdiction, before crediting the classroom. When all three check out, so does the rate.
You are about to spend three years learning to interrogate evidence for a living. Start now, on the school itself: jurisdiction, baseline, trend, denominator. A school that welcomes those questions is telling you something. So is a school that doesn’t.