2 More States Consider Bypassing Bar Exam to License Lawyers
Connecticut and New Mexico have joined the growing list of states offering or considering lawyer licensing pathways that do not require a traditional bar exam, amid concerns that public service lawyers and attorneys in rural areas are in scarce supply.
The Connecticut Bar Foundation has launched an alternative licensing task force to create a pipeline of attorneys committed to public service careers. The group will examine programs in other states that allow law graduates to become licensed after working under supervision or after an assessment of their legal work.
The Supreme Court of New Mexico has also convened a committee to develop a supervised practice licensing pathway, with a final report expected later this spring. Law graduates in the state would receive a conditional license to practice under supervision and then would submit their work to the New Mexico Board of Bar Examiners to be fully admitted.
The efforts reflect growing skepticism that the traditional bar exam is the best or only way to gauge the practice-readiness of law graduates. Much of the concern has come from advocates of expanding legal services for poor or underserved communities: According to a 2025 report from the Legal Services Corporation, 41% of U.S. counties are “legal deserts” with few or no lawyers to serve residents.
Connecticut’s task force is “an opportunity to align licensure with the realities of practice while directly addressing our well documented access to justice challenges,” Brian Gallini, Dean of the University of Connecticut School of Law and Co-Chair of the Task Force, said in a statement.
Such programs have yet to gain traction in any large states, where the supervision of a significant number of law graduates would pose a bigger challenge. Proponents of the traditional bar exam argue the test has decades of success in assessing the competence of new lawyers.
The California Supreme Court in 2024 rejected a proposed alternative pathway that would have enabled law school graduates to become licensed after spending four to six months working under the supervision of an experienced attorney and submitting an acceptable portfolio of legal work.
The court said the proposal would have implicated an “array of ethical and practical problems.”
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