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Preview Of The 2026-27 U.S. News Law School Rankings: Employment

In the current 2025-26 methodology, employment counts 33% in the overall ranking:

Outcomes 10 months after graduation (weighted 33%): This measures the extent to which graduates obtain the most in-demand jobs – namely those that are long term, full time and requiring (or taking advantage of) bar passage. Maximum credit was assigned for graduates with school-funded fellowships – as long as those fellowships were otherwise full-time, long-term jobs in which bar passage was required or the J.D. degree was an advantage. Maximum credit was assigned to law school graduates pursuing additional graduate studies.

This indicator was derived from the average of the 2022 and 2023 graduating class outcomes 10 months after graduation. Specifically, U.S. News took a nonweighted average by aggregating the score it previously computed from the 2022 graduating class with the newly calculated 2023 class score, then divided it by two.

For information purposes, U.S. News published in the rankings section of profiles a 10-months-after-graduation employment percentage outcome that equals the proportion of 2023 graduates in all the job types that U.S. News weighs 100% for the purpose of calculating a weighted average in the 10-month employment ranking indicator. However, the actual value used in the rankings is an index that also awards partial credit for other outcomes values, and is described below. As previously stated, U.S. News used data for two graduating classes only in the ranking calculations.

These partially weighted jobs that were some combination of particular factors, namely short term and part time, in many cases were funded by the law school and/or not utilizing bar passage received less credit by varying amounts, determined by an allocation of some or all of these factors.

Law schools are required to report these highly differentiated outcome measures each year to the ABA. For a more detailed explanation, see Notes on Employment Rates below.

Below is the projected 2026-27 U.S. News ranking of the 10-month “maximum employment” of the classes of 2023 and 2024. For comparison, the current 2025-26 U.S. News ranking of the 10-month “maximum employment” of the classes of 2022 and 2023 are also included.

RankSchool2026-2027 Employment2025-2026 Employment2025-2026 Employment Rank
1Texas A&M100.00%99.71%1
2Washington U.99.82%98.90%4
3Virginia98.98%99.19%2
4Penn98.98%99.03%3
5North Carolina98.97%98.15%9
6Wake Forest98.79%98.20%7
7SMU98.70%98.20%6
8Chicago98.56%97.91%10
9G. Wash.98.45%93.83%38
10Duke98.41%98.48%5
11Vanderbilt98.10%96.19%22
12Northwestern97.99%98.17%8
13Michigan97.78%97.48%12
14Baylor97.65%94.77%35
15W & L97.65%96.53%20
16NYU97.59%97.37%13
17G. Mason97.38%96.68%18
18Iowa97.37%97.26%14
19UCLA97.11%97.11%15
20Cornell97.00%95.31%33
21Boston U.96.99%96.38%21
22Columbia96.93%97.51%11
23Pepperdine96.92%92.86%50
24Florida State96.84%96.59%19
25Stanford96.81%95.43%31
26Wisconsin96.70%95.14%34
27BC96.65%95.65%30
28Kentucky96.62%95.74%27
29Texas96.62%95.77%26
30Florida96.22%95.43%32
31San Diego96.09%93.22%47
32UC-Berkeley96.02%94.37%37
33Notre Dame95.97%95.91%24
34Minnesota95.71%96.83%17
35Wayne State95.55%93.34%45
36Montana95.51%90.12%81
37Harvard95.50%95.70%28
38Missouri-Col.95.28%92.22%60
39Georgetown95.24%95.78%25
40Yale95.21%97.06%16
41Georgia94.75%96.10%23
42UC-Irvine94.72%93.15%48
43Alabama94.64%95.67%29
44Emory94.56%92.35%56
45Kansas94.42%93.08%49
46SUNY-Buffalo94.31%89.35%88
47South Dakota94.08%88.98%93
48BYU93.97%91.59%66
49Fordham93.85%93.35%44
50St. John’s93.82%93.78%39
RankSchool2026-2027 Employment2025-2026 Employment2025-2026 Employment Rank
51Temple93.79%92.49%54
52Illinois93.75%91.64%65
53USC93.51%93.38%43
54S. Carolina93.50%92.44%55
55Villanova93.18%92.64%53
56Penn State93.17%93.62%40
57Nebraska93.15%92.86%51
58Marquette93.04%91.99%63
59Utah92.79%94.57%36
60Catholic92.76%92.24%58
61Houston92.74%88.80%97
62Stetson92.64%91.12%70
63Arizona State92.60%91.52%67
64Loyola-Chic.92.49%87.81%103
65Drexel92.38%93.52%41
66Ohio State92.24%93.23%46
67Duquesne92.16%90.17%80
68UC-Davis92.16%92.83%52
69Wm. & Mary92.16%91.39%68
70Tulsa92.13%88.28%101
71Washburn91.95%86.18%117
72Oklahoma91.95%92.24%59
73Mercer91.72%88.83%95
74Regent91.59%90.01%82
75Albany91.37%89.05%92
76St Thom MN91.20%91.02%73
77Ind. Maurer91.19%91.11%71
78Colorado91.15%92.31%57
79Cardozo90.96%90.50%76
80LSU90.96%89.23%90
81Texas Tech90.91%90.27%78
82Connecticut90.83%91.86%64
83Pittsburgh90.66%89.43%87
84Hofstra90.62%88.80%96
85Florida Int’l90.55%86.86%112
86NYLS90.54%88.41%99
87Miss-KC90.46%90.25%79
88Loyola-L.A.90.40%88.88%94
89St. Louis90.38%89.24%89
90Georgia State90.26%89.54%86
91U. Arizona90.24%91.32%69
92Tulane90.02%89.95%83
93Drake89.73%90.56%75
94Dayton89.64%90.67%74
95Chapman89.61%92.19%61
96Tennessee89.58%89.67%85
97Northeastern89.54%89.18%91
98Richmond89.36%87.11%111
99Belmont89.35%88.26%102
100Miami88.96%84.55%127
101Wyoming88.68%87.80%104
102U. Washington88.63%88.37%100
103Rutgers88.46%87.66%105
104Samford88.44%90.41%77
105UNLV88.30%92.06%62
106Brooklyn88.24%86.22%116
107South Texas88.21%83.08%131
108Seton Hall88.11%87.52%106
109Detroit Mercy88.06%87.29%109
110Akron88.01%86.64%113
111Howard87.89%86.26%114
112Pace87.78%85.89%118
113Maryland87.73%87.35%107
114Cincinnati87.57%91.04%72
115N. Kentucky87.47%83.15%129
116West Virginia87.15%88.50%98
117Elon86.91%81.10%138
118Loyola-NO86.80%84.48%128
119Maine86.78%89.91%84
120Case Western86.57%81.94%133
121Mississippi86.35%87.35%108
122N. Illinois85.89%85.64%120
123Oregon85.86%84.70%126
124Ind. McKinney85.81%85.80%119
125Chicago-Kent85.73%85.13%125
126UCSF85.70%85.55%122
127Denver85.49%87.23%110
128Suffolk85.42%85.30%124
129American84.90%85.52%123
130Cleveland St.84.87%86.25%115
131Ark.-Fayett.84.69%78.31%150
132Syracuse84.43%79.91%145
133Mich. State84.33%82.09%132
134Hawaii83.51%81.85%134
135Quinnipiac83.45%77.99%153
136New Mexico83.23%81.20%136
137Toledo83.10%80.75%140
138Ark.-LR82.92%80.57%141
139Louisville82.89%78.28%152
140Baltimore82.56%79.54%146
141Campbell82.35%81.65%135
142Idaho82.35%80.98%139
143Creighton82.32%77.56%155
144Memphis81.85%75.84%161
145Widener (DE)81.64%73.10%175
146Vermont81.62%75.98%160
147Lewis & Clark81.52%85.61%121
148Gonzaga81.34%80.56%142
149North Dakota81.33%73.14%174
150St. Mary’s81.26%78.29%151
151Touro81.08%77.28%156
152Ave Maria81.05%83.12%130
153OKC80.84%77.89%154
154Seattle80.73%80.43%144
155DePaul80.51%79.36%148
156Western State80.21%74.46%169
157Faulkner80.14%73.28%173
158UNH79.94%80.54%143
159Pacific79.12%71.36%178
160UMass79.11%81.14%137
161St Thom FL79.07%76.33%159
162Charleston78.65%74.22%170
163Miss. ollege78.61%79.39%147
164Liberty78.06%76.34%158
165Roger Wms.77.43%76.52%157
166Illinois-Chic.77.25%74.86%167
167Willamette75.82%78.81%149
168W. New Eng.75.78%75.12%165
169Santa Clara75.64%71.24%179
170North Texas75.39%72.31%176
171Widener (PA)75.35%74.97%166
172S. Illinois75.09%75.64%163
173Southwestern74.60%75.64%164
174Ohio Northern74.58%73.54%172
175Cal-Western74.49%71.47%177
176Appalachian74.22%75.79%162
177San Francisco74.17%68.84%183
178New England74.04%74.01%171
179Capital73.71%68.57%184
180D.C.72.47%69.30%182
181Mitch. | Ham.72.21%70.18%181
182Nova71.01%67.90%185
183Barry70.99%65.86%188
184Florida A&M70.69%66.84%187
185CUNY70.38%70.90%180
186Lincoln Mem.70.34%74.57%168
187NC Central67.42%65.25%189
188Cooley64.89%62.97%191
189Texas South.61.90%66.98%186
190J. Marshall GA59.75%64.16%190
191Puerto Rico54.89%52.15%193
192Southern54.21%56.52%192
193Inter-Amer.50.22%46.36%194
194Pont. Catholic32.32%23.97%195

2025-26 methodology:

Notes on Employment Rates

Due to enhanced ABA reporting rules, law schools must provide more information about the many types of employment that law graduates gain. Each year, schools are required to report to the ABA how many of their most recent graduates had various types of jobs lined up after graduation.

As in previous years, the ABA mandated that schools report law school and university positions separately from all other nonuniversity-funded positions to make the difference between the two types of jobs very clear. U.S. News continued to use this standard for data collection for the classes of 2022 and 2023 for 10 months after graduation, which is the ABA-required time frame. The ABA chose that 10-month time frame to provide enough time for J.D. graduates to take the bar exam in the state of their choosing, get results and look for a job.

These ABA standards require law schools to go into great detail by reporting 45 different job types, as well as employment status and duration. That includes, for example, whether each graduate’s employment was long term – defined as lasting at least a year – or short term, whether it was full or part time, and whether it required passage of a bar exam.

U.S. News collected these same statistics when schools were surveyed for the annual rankings and gathered the same data on members of the class who were employed 10 months after graduation. U.S. News also collected data on students’ jobs when the law school was unable to determine length of employment or full- or part-time status, as well as when employment status was unknown.

U.S. News incorporated this rich 10-months-after-graduation data into its computation of the employment measure for the classes of 2022 and 2023 at 10 months after graduation. Placement success was calculated by assigning various weights to the number of graduates employed in 45 of these different types of post-J.D. jobs, employment statuses and durations.

Full weight was given for graduates who had these 45 types of jobs. The 100% weighted jobs were those who had a full-time job that lasted at least a year and for which bar passage was required, or a full-time job that lasted at least a year where a J.D. degree was an advantage.

Plus, we give full weight to school-funded full-time, long-term fellowships where bar passage is required or where the J.D. degree is an advantage. We also give full weight to those enrolled in graduate studies in the ABA employment outcomes grid.

Less weight went to full-time, long-term jobs that were professional or nonprofessional and did not require bar passage, and to positions whose start dates were deferred. The lowest weight applied to jobs categorized as both part time and short term, and those jobs for which a law school was unable to determine length of employment or whether they were full time.

In terms of all law school and university positions, U.S. News continues to apply a discount for some law school-funded jobs which aren’t fully weighted in our rankings calculations.

These weighted employment figures were divided by the number of graduates, then used to produce a weighted employment value for the 2022 and 2023 graduating J.D. classes, and then averaged. They were used in the ranking formula only and are not published.

To reduce the year-to-year volatility in this indicator given the small sizes of some graduating J.D. classes, this 10-months-after-graduation indicator, for the second year in a row, was based on the average of the 2022 and 2023 graduating classes’ outcomes 10 months after graduation.

Actual rates for the other types of positions of each school’s latest graduating class of 2023 appear in the profiles.

Editor’s Note:  If you would like to receive a daily email with links to legal education posts on TaxProf Blog, email me here.


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