Passed the DE bar last July — here's what actually changed with my job situation

by NervousNellie 275 views5 replies
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NervousNellieOP
July 3, 2026

So I passed in July after failing once, and I wanted to come back and post this because when I was studying I kept wondering if the grind was even worth it. Short answer: yes, but not in the way I expected. I didn't get some magical salary bump the day results came out. What changed was leverage. Before passing, I was a law clerk making $62k at a small firm in Wilmington, and my boss kept dangling "once you're barred" like a carrot. Two weeks after results, I had an associate offer at $110k. Same firm. Same desk, honestly.

The part nobody tells you: Delaware is a weird market. It's small, everyone knows everyone, and the Chancery Court work means firms actually pay attention to who passes. My classmate who passed the same administration got three interview requests within a month just from updating her bar status. That doesn't happen in bigger states where you're one of 5,000 new admittees. Here you're one of a couple hundred.

As for prep — the Delaware essays killed me the first time. I'd done a commercial course that was maybe 80% MBE-focused, and I walked in soft on the state-specific stuff. Second time around I hammered de bar specific law questions until I could recite the corporate law distinctions in my sleep. That was the difference. Not more hours, just better-aimed hours. If you're planning your exam prep now, don't make my mistake of treating Delaware law like an afterthought.

One more thing on practice test strategy, since someone asked me this in a DM. I did a full timed de bar test simulation every Saturday for the last six weeks. Miserable? Completely. But the second attempt, nothing about the timing or fatigue surprised me. First attempt I ran out of gas on the last essay and it showed in my score report.

Was the year of stress worth an extra $48k and actual respect in meetings? Yeah. It was. If you're on the fence about retaking after a fail, that's my data point.

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BoothcampGrad_R
July 3, 2026

Passed back in 2019, so I've had some time to watch this play out. The leverage thing is real, but here's what I didn't appreciate until years later: in Delaware specifically, the bar itself is the moat. It's one of the hardest exams in the country and there's no UBE score transfer, so the pool of licensed attorneys stays small. That scarcity matters way more over a five-year horizon than whatever your first post-admission raise looks like. Firms doing Chancery work can't just import laterals from New York without making them sit for it.

What I'd tell my just-passed self: the essay grind you did on DE-specific stuff — corporations, the Chancery procedure quirks — don't let that knowledge rot. That's the material clients and partners actually expect you to know cold, and it's the stuff that made me useful in ways that showed up at bonus time. The MBE half evaporates. Nobody's ever asked me a Property question since.

Also, congrats on getting it done on the second try. Almost nobody remembers or cares how many attempts it took. I know people who failed twice and are partners now.

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FlashcardFan
July 3, 2026

Congrats — and the leverage point is real. One thing I wish someone had told me before my first attempt: stop treating the DE essays like MEE essays. Delaware graders want Delaware law, and the corporations questions especially will punish you for writing generic ExamSoft-brand fiduciary duty analysis. I made an actual one-page sheet of the DGCL sections that kept showing up in past essays — 102(b)(7), 141, 145, 220, 251 — and drilled turning each one into a two-sentence rule statement from memory. Sounded dumb. Worked.

The other concrete thing: the Board of Bar Examiners posts old essay questions, and since the exam's only given once a year there's a pretty stable pattern in what rotates through. I mapped the last several years by subject before deciding where to spend my final month. Equity and corporations showed up like clockwork, so I stopped burning hours polishing subjects that appear once a decade. That triage was probably worth more than any commercial outline I bought.

And honestly, with a July-only exam, failing costs you a full year — so front-load the DE-specific stuff early instead of saving it for the last two weeks like the big prep courses schedule it. That was my first-attempt mistake.

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PracticeTestFan
July 4, 2026

The thing that finally clicked for me second time around was treating the Delaware essays as their own animal instead of leftover UBE prep. First attempt I basically studied MBE subjects and hoped the essay knowledge would transfer. It doesn't. DE tests its own stuff — DGCL, Chancery procedure, the local rules — and Barbri barely touches it. So I pulled the last ten years of released essay questions from the Board of Bar Examiners and made a one-page attack outline per recurring topic. Corporations came up in some form almost every single year. That's not a coincidence, that's a roadmap.

The other concrete change: I wrote out two full essays a week under timed conditions starting in April, not just outlining them in my head. Handwrote a few too, which felt dumb but wasn't. My first attempt I "knew" the law and still ran out of time on essay three because I'd never actually practiced budgeting 45 minutes. You can't fix pacing by reading more outlines.

And since DE only offers the exam once a year — congrats on getting it done. Failing means waiting twelve months, so the pressure your second time is brutal. Totally get the leverage point you made. The credential didn't change my paycheck overnight either, but it changed every conversation after.

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FocusedStudent
July 4, 2026

Passed back in 2019, so I've had some years to see how this plays out. The leverage thing OP mentions is real, but here's what nobody told me: in Delaware, the license itself is only half the door. The other half is the clerkship period and who you met during it. This bar is tiny — like, everyone-knows-everyone tiny — and the partners who saw you grind through that five-month clerkship remember you. Two of my best referrals years later came from attorneys I met during that stretch, not from anything on my resume.

The other hindsight thing: passing DE specifically carries weight that took me a while to appreciate. It's offered once a year, the pass rate is ugly, and people in Chancery and corporate circles know that. When I moved into more corporate governance work, "admitted in Delaware" did quiet work in rooms I wasn't even in. Nobody hands you a bonus for it. But it compounds.

If you're studying right now and wondering whether the essay grind is worth it — the DE essays felt like hazing at the time, and honestly they kind of are. But learning to write like a Delaware examiner wants turned out to be weirdly close to how Chancery briefs actually read. Didn't expect that.

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CertHunter
July 6, 2026

I almost quit after my first fail. Seriously, I had the "maybe law just isn't for me" spiral going full speed. The conflict of laws section specifically wrecked me because I couldn't find good focused practice — ended up using de bar/questions/conflict of laws and it was the first time the rules actually clicked instead of just feeling like a wall of exceptions I had to memorize.

Passing didn't change everything overnight and I won't pretend it did. But six months out I've got options I didn't have before — better offers, a promotion conversation that actually went somewhere, and honestly just confidence walking into rooms. If you're in the middle of it right now and wondering if it's worth the grind, it is. Keep going.

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