At 85% first-time passage, Wake Forest 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 passage85%8 pts above the national midpointNational first-time average~75 to 80%Varies year to yearPrimary jurisdictionNorth CarolinaVerify in the ABA 509U.S. News rank#22Peer-tier context
By any reasonable benchmark, yes: 85% 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 85%, margin that survives jurisdiction adjustments in most states.
A bar passage rate is manufactured from three components. The raw material is the entering class, medians in, results out, more correlated than anyone’s marketing admits. The process is the curriculum: curves, writing volume, doctrinal coverage. And the quiet third factor is who gets counted: schools with aggressive academic attrition graduate a pre-filtered cohort, which flatters the rate without improving the teaching. Read all three before crediting any one.
Withheld Tip: compare the school’s rate to the state baselinenot the national one. A 74% rate in a state where the average sitter passes at 60% is excellent; the same 74% where the state average is 85% is a warning. The state bar examiners publish overall pass rates, two minutes of context that reorders most school comparisons.
Wake Forest 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.
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.
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 85% 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.
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.
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.
Treat every outcome statistic the way a lawyer treats a witness: useful, partial, and improved by cross-examination. The rate is real; what it means depends on facts the headline omits. Pull the 509, ask the four questions, and let the documents, not the brochure, make the case.