What Is the NYLE? New York Law Exam Guide 2026 June

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What Is the NYLE? New York Law Exam Guide 2026 June

What Is the NYLE?

The NYLE — New York Law Exam — is a mandatory component of admission to the New York State Bar. It tests an applicant's knowledge of New York-specific law on topics that the Uniform Bar Exam (UBE), which New York adopted in 2016, does not specifically assess. If you want to practice law in New York, you'll need to pass both the UBE and the NYLE. The two aren't taken together as one combined exam — they're separate tests, each with its own administration, registration, and passing requirements.

The NYLE exists because New York has its own distinct legal framework: the Civil Practice Law and Rules (CPLR), the Estates, Powers and Trusts Law (EPTL), the New York Rules of Professional Conduct, and other statutes that differ materially from other jurisdictions.

When the state adopted the UBE — a nationally portable exam — it retained the NYLE as a New York-specific supplement to ensure that all newly admitted attorneys understand the legal rules that govern practice in this state. The logic is that passing a uniform national exam demonstrates you can analyze legal problems generally; passing the NYLE demonstrates you understand New York's particular rules.

The exam is 50 multiple-choice questions administered over 2.5 hours. Questions are not grouped or labeled by topic during the exam itself — you receive a single question set and work through it within the time limit. The questions are drawn from nine subject areas, each representing a core area of New York practice. A passing score is 30 correct answers out of 50, which is 60%. This is a lower threshold than many bar exam components, reflecting that the NYLE is meant to confirm foundational familiarity with NY law rather than to function as a high-difficulty screening exam.

The NYLE is administered by the New York Board of Law Examiners twice a year, in February and July — the same months as the UBE. You can take the NYLE before you sit for the UBE (which some candidates do if they want to get it out of the way), at the same administration, or afterward.

There's no requirement that you pass the UBE before taking the NYLE, or vice versa. You simply need to pass both before you can be admitted. The BOLE administers the NYLE as an in-person, computer-based exam at the same testing centers used for the UBE.

If you fail the NYLE, you can retake it at any subsequent administration. There is no limit on the number of NYLE attempts allowed, and your UBE score (if you've already passed) remains valid during the period it's portable. Nyle exam dates are published by the Board of Law Examiners each year — check the BOLE website directly for current registration deadlines and examination dates. Deadlines typically fall several weeks before the exam date, and late registration is generally not available, so marking calendar reminders well in advance is important.

NYLE Subject Areas Tested

SectionQuestionsTimeNotes
Business RelationshipsNY Business Corporation Law, Partnership Law — LLCs, corporations, partner duties
Civil Practice & ProcedureCPLR — NY's distinct civil procedure rules: pleadings, service, motions, appeals
Contract LawNY contract formation, breach, remedies, defenses, UCC Article 2 applications
Criminal Law & ProcedureNY Penal Law offenses, NY Criminal Procedure Law — arrest, arraignment, trial
EvidenceNY Evidence Law — admissibility, hearsay exceptions, privilege rules (distinct from FRE)
Matrimonial & Family LawNY Domestic Relations Law — divorce, custody, support, adoption, equitable distribution
Professional ResponsibilityNY Rules of Professional Conduct — ethics, conflicts of interest, client confidentiality
Real PropertyNY Real Property Law — title, deeds, mortgages, landlord-tenant, recording acts
Wills, Trusts & EstatesNY EPTL — intestacy, probate, wills formalities, trusts, powers of attorney
Total502.5 hours
What is the Nyle - NYLE - New York Law Exam certification study resource

NYLE Study Tips

Nyle Practice Test - NYLE - New York Law Exam certification study resource

NYLE Preparation Checklist

Preparation Focus: First-Time Takers vs. Retakers

Nyle Test - NYLE - New York Law Exam certification study resource

NYLE First-Time Pass Rate

Pass Rate82%

Background: The NYLE and New York's Adoption of the UBE

The NYLE was introduced in 2016 when New York became one of several jurisdictions to adopt the Uniform Bar Exam (UBE) as its primary bar examination. The UBE — developed by the National Conference of Bar Examiners (NCBE) — is a three-part exam: the Multistate Bar Examination (MBE), the Multistate Essay Examination (MEE), and the Multistate Performance Test (MPT). Its defining feature is score portability — candidates who pass can transfer scores to any UBE jurisdiction without retaking the exam.

New York had previously administered its own bar exam with NY-specific essay questions that tested the CPLR, the EPTL, and other NY-specific statutes directly. When the UBE replaced those essays, the BOLE and New York's Court of Appeals created the NYLE to ensure that NY-specific legal knowledge was still assessed. Every attorney admitted to the NY bar — whether through taking the NY UBE or transferring a UBE score — must demonstrate working knowledge of New York law.

Since its introduction, the NYLE has remained structurally consistent. The nine subject areas have not changed, and the 50-question multiple-choice format has been maintained. The BOLE updates the content outline periodically to reflect statutory amendments and court decisions. Candidates should always review the current outline rather than relying on prior-cycle materials.

The exam's design reflects deliberate policy: broad familiarity at a 60% passing threshold, rather than narrow mastery at a higher bar. This acknowledges that newly admitted attorneys will develop deep expertise through practice — the NYLE confirms they understand the foundational NY rules well enough to recognize when those rules apply and when to research further.

Nyle practice questions aligned to the current BOLE content outline are the most reliable preparation resource. The NYLE is not designed to trick candidates or test obscure doctrine. It rewards lawyers who know the core rules and can apply them to clear fact patterns — exactly what structured, subject-focused preparation produces. Candidates who study the right material, do timed practice sets, and focus extra attention on CPLR, EPTL, and Professional Responsibility generally clear the 60% threshold on their first attempt.

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About the Author

Dr. Lisa PatelEdD, MA Education, Certified Test Prep Specialist

Educational Psychologist & Academic Test Preparation Expert

Columbia University Teachers College

Dr. Lisa Patel holds a Doctorate in Education from Columbia University Teachers College and has spent 17 years researching standardized test design and academic assessment. She has developed preparation programs for SAT, ACT, GRE, LSAT, UCAT, and numerous professional licensing exams, helping students of all backgrounds achieve their target scores.