New York Law School

New York, NY [Private]

Admissions, Retention, and Bar Passage

2010
153 Low LSAT 25th
155 Low LSAT 50th
GPA
 25th
 3.00
GPA
 50th
 3.28
GPA
 75th
 3.48
82.5% 1st Time Bar
Pass Rate ?
2013
2011
151 Modest LSAT 25th
154 Low LSAT 50th
GPA
 25th
 2.98
GPA
 50th
 3.22
GPA
 75th
 3.44
72.73% 1st Time Bar
Pass Rate ?
2014
2014
148 High LSAT 25th
151 Modest LSAT 50th
GPA
 25th
 2.80
GPA
 50th
 3.20
GPA
 75th
 3.50
??? 1st Time Bar
Pass Rate ?
2017
2015
149 High LSAT 25th
152 Modest LSAT 50th
GPA
 25th
 2.88
GPA
 50th
 3.24
GPA
 75th
 3.48
??? 1st Time Bar
Pass Rate ?
2018
Entering Year Academic Attrition
Post-1L Post-2L Combined
2010
5%
0.2%
5.1%
2011
3.7%
0.4%
4.1%
2012
6.1%
0%
6.1%
2013
6.5%
0%
6.5%
2014
7.3%
??? ???
2015
6.9%
0%
6.9%
 
 
 
 
1L Enrollment -52.4%Since 2010
 
% Admitted +6.9%Since 2011
 

Job Outcomes + Tuition Paid

 

LT: Long Term FT: Full Time BPR: Bar Passage Req. JD Adv: JD Advantage Pro: Professional

Class Total Tuition Long Term, Full Time Jobs
Bar Req. JD Adv. or Prof.
2011 $134,860 35.5% 16.9%
2012 $139,060
39.6%
21%
2013 $143,485
44.5%
20.5%
2014 $146,265
43.1%
29.2%

Total tuition includes tuition for a full-time student who completed three years of law school on time. The total does not include cost of living, cost of borrowing, or accrued interest during school and before the first debt repayment. More details on debt-financing available here.

Tuition Change

Tuition+24.7%Since 2008
 

Total Federal Investment

 
Graduating Class Avg. Loan Disbursement % Borrowing Total Federal Investment
Class of 2010 481 graduates $119,437 92.7% $53,268,902
Class of 2011 515 graduates $146,230 81.7% $61,562,830
Class of 2012 601 graduates $154,647 83.5% $77,632,794
Class of 2013 562 graduates $164,739 84% $77,756,808
Class of 2014 415 graduates $166,622 83% $57,317,968

New York Law School declined to make available important information about its J.D. graduates' debt, thus at least one year of data is missing from the TFI table and chart.

Total federal investment does not include money borrowed by J.D. students who left school through attrition, transfer, or otherwise. Neither does it include money borrowed for non-JD coursework at the law school. More info on total federal investment available here.