Nevada Bar Exam details
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Bar exam details

A typical Nevada Bar Exam is a 3-day bar exam.

Day 1

  • Six 60-minute essay questions

Day 2

  • Multistate Bar Exam (MBE), a 200-question, multiple-choice exam (100 questions in the AM, 100 questions in the PM)

Day 3

  • One 60-minute essay question and two 2-hour Nevada PTs

Subjects tested

MBE

  • Constitutional Law
  • Contracts/Sales
  • Criminal Law/Procedure
  • Evidence
  • Federal Civil Procedure
  • Real Property
  • Torts

Nevada Essay Subjects

  • Agency and Partnership
  • Community Property
  • Conflict of Laws
  • Corporations
  • Persons and Domestic Relations
  • Remedies
  • Uniform Commercial Code (Articles 2 and 9)
  • Wills
  • Estates
  • Trusts
  • Pleadings and practices under both the Nevada Rules of Civil Procedure and the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure
  • Plus all MBE subjects

Both fundamental legal principles and Nevada law are tested and may embrace more than a single subject.

Nevada Performance Test

  • “Closed universe” practical questions using instructions, factual data, cases, statutes and other reference material supplied by examiners.

MPRE

  • A scaled score of 85 on the MPRE achieved within three years prior to or three years after successful completion of the Nevada Bar Exam is required for admission.

Click here to learn more about the MPRE.

Scoring

MBE (weighted one-third) and written scores (weighted two-thirds) are combined for an overall passing score.

In order to pass the Nevada Bar Exam, an applicant must have a total scaled score of 75 or higher and a converted score of 75 or higher on at least three written essay questions. This equates to a passing score of 140 on a 200-point scale.

Reciprocity

Acceptance of MBE Score

  • Nevada does not accept an MBE score from an exam taken in another jurisdiction.

Admission on Motion

  • Nevada does not provide for admission on motion. Examination is required of all applicants.

Admission of House Counsel

  • Attorneys interested in limited practice, who are exclusively employed for a single government entity or for a single corporation qualified to do business in Nevada, whose business consists of activities other than the practice of law, may apply for certification under Nevada Supreme Court Rule 49.1(1)(h). The application filing fee is $1,000.

Foreign law school graduates

  • Foreign-educated applicants, and other non-ABA law school graduates, may seek a functional equivalency certification in order to apply for admission to the State Bar of Nevada. 

BARBRI Bar Exam Digest

We compile all of the information that you need to know about the dates, format, subjects tested, deadlines, fees and more - for each U.S. state - in the free BARBRI Bar Exam Digest.

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