It was a Wednesday when the email arrived. April 22 marked the end of the waiting period for thousands of candidates who had spent months reciting the rule against perpetuities like a prayer in windowless library carrels. The complete list was made public by the New York State Board of Law Examiners by the following morning, and the numbers quickly spread through Slack channels for law firms and group chats.
41% is the headline number. The overall passing rate is two points higher than it was in February of last year. Technically, this is good news, but anyone who has taken a bar prep course knows that a two-point increase doesn’t seem like much when you’re the one checking the portal at six in the morning.
| Examination | February 2026 New York State Bar Examination |
| Results Released | April 22, 2026 (via candidate BOLE accounts) |
| Public List Available | April 23, 2026, after 10:00 AM ET |
| Total Candidates Examined | 3,855 |
| Overall Passing Rate | 41% (up 2% from Feb 2025) |
| First-Time NY Law School Graduates | 320 candidates, 78% pass rate |
| First-Time Out-of-State ABA Graduates | 307 candidates, 77% pass rate |
| Foreign-Educated Candidates | 2,173 (56% of all takers), 32% pass rate |
| Repeat Takers | 2,530 (66% of all candidates), 30% pass rate |
| Pro Bono Scholars Program | 131 participants, 122 passed (93%) |
| Re-Application Deadline (July 2026) | 11:59 PM ET, April 29, 2026 |
| Governing Body | New York State Board of Law Examiners, Albany, NY |
| Established | 1894 (over 125 years) |
| Next Major Change | NextGen Bar Exam replaces UBE in July 2028 |
To be honest, what’s hidden beneath is more fascinating. New York law school graduates who took the test for the first time scored 78%, which was one percentage point higher than the previous year. Their peers from ABA-approved out-of-state schools increased by four points to reach 77%. Long a quiet source of pride for in-state programs, the gap between the two groups is closing. It’s possible that the difference will eventually vanish completely. This could also be noise.
Then there is the group of people who were educated abroad, where this administration subtly became historic. 2,173, or roughly 56%, of the 3,855 applicants who were evaluated attended foreign law schools. The Board has never recorded a higher share than that. They had a 32% passing rate, which was two points higher than in February of last year. The math here is harsh but not new: these candidates continue to show up despite an exam written in a legal tradition that isn’t always their own. In July, a lot of people will retake it.

Thirty percent of the room, or 66% of the total, were repeat takers. Seldom does that number receive the recognition it merits. People on their second, third, and occasionally fourth attempt are behind it, burning through patience and savings in equal measure. They care about a three-point improvement over the previous year in ways that don’t translate into a press release.
Meanwhile, the Pro Bono Scholars carried out their routine. 122 out of 131 participants passed, indicating a 93% success rate that both reflects the type of student who self-selects into the program and suggests something genuine about it. Before they even enter the exam room, they are, by most accounts, already among the best applicants.
The calendar looms over all of this. The NextGen Bar Exam will take the place of the Uniform Bar Examination in New York beginning in July 2028, and the state will not accept NextGen transfer scores from any administration prior to that date, as the Court of Appeals confirmed last year. Candidates who are seated between July 2026 and February 2028 are navigating a period of transition that is still unclear. Speaking with recent graduates gives the impression that some are hurrying to complete their degrees under the well-known system while they still have the opportunity.
The deadline to reapply for July is 11:59 PM on April 29 for those who failed this time. This gives them precisely one week to mourn, reassemble, and submit their application. There’s not much time. It never is.
Disclaimer
Nothing published on Creative Learning Guild — including news articles, legal news, lawsuit summaries, settlement guides, legal analysis, financial commentary, expert opinion, educational content, or any other material — constitutes legal advice, financial advice, investment advice, or professional counsel of any kind. All content on this website is provided strictly for informational, educational, and news reporting purposes only. Consult your legal or financial advisor before taking any step.
