Texas Bar Exam Dates 2026: When Is the Texas Bar Exam?
Texas bar exam dates for 2026: February and July exam schedule, application deadlines, registration, and key dates for Texas law license candidates.

The Texas Bar Exam is administered twice per year: in February (typically the last full week of February) and in July (typically the last full week of July). For 2026, the exam dates are expected to fall on approximately February 24–25, 2026 (Tuesday–Wednesday) for the February administration and July 28–29, 2026 (Tuesday–Wednesday) for the July administration. The Texas Board of Law Examiners (TBLE) publishes confirmed dates and deadlines on its official website at ble.texas.gov — always verify there, as exact dates change annually.
The Texas Bar Examination is administered by the Texas Board of Law Examiners (TBLE), the state agency responsible for reviewing applications for admission to the Texas bar. Texas administers the Uniform Bar Examination (UBE), which is a nationally portable bar exam developed by the National Conference of Bar Examiners (NCBE) and now used in the majority of U.S. jurisdictions. Texas adopted the UBE in February 2021, replacing its prior state-specific exam format.
The UBE consists of the Multistate Bar Examination (MBE), the Multistate Essay Examination (MEE), and the Multistate Performance Test (MPT), administered over two consecutive days. Texas requires a minimum UBE score of 270 out of 400 for admission — one of the higher passing score thresholds among UBE jurisdictions, though several other states set the threshold at 266 or 270 as well.
Texas bar exam dates follow a consistent pattern established by the NCBE's national UBE administration schedule. The February administration is typically held on the last Tuesday and Wednesday of February — the Tuesday session covers the MPT and MEE (written components), and the Wednesday session covers the MBE (200 multiple-choice questions). The July administration follows the same two-day format in the last full week of July.
The TBLE announces confirmed exam dates for each year well in advance — typically by the spring of the preceding year — allowing candidates to plan their preparation timelines and arrange travel and accommodations for the testing location in Austin, Texas, where most TBLE-administered exams are held.
Application deadlines for Texas bar exam applicants are distinct from the exam dates and must be met well in advance. The application deadline for the February administration typically falls in mid-November of the preceding year — approximately three months before the exam. The application deadline for the July administration typically falls in mid-April — approximately three months before the July exam.
Late applications may be accepted with a late fee up to a specific cutoff date, but applications submitted after the late deadline are not accepted. The Texas Board of Law Examiners processes applications sequentially after the deadline, which means early applicants benefit from earlier processing and earlier notification of any issues with their application.
The character and fitness review that accompanies all Texas bar applications is a time-sensitive component that candidates should not underestimate. TBLE conducts a thorough investigation of each applicant's background including educational history, employment history, criminal record, financial responsibility (credit and civil judgments), and any prior discipline or adverse academic history. The review can take weeks to months for applicants with complex backgrounds.
Applicants who have prior criminal history, academic misconduct findings, prior bar discipline, or significant financial issues should begin the character and fitness process as early as possible and may benefit from consulting with a bar admission attorney before filing their application. Delays in character and fitness review are among the most common causes of candidates being delayed in sitting for the exam or in receiving bar admission even after passing the exam.
The Texas Board of Law Examiners maintains an online application portal where bar candidates create accounts, submit all application materials, upload supporting documents, track the status of their application and character and fitness review, receive exam admission materials, and access score results. All bar-related correspondence from TBLE is conducted through this portal — candidates must ensure their email address is current in the system and check the portal regularly throughout the application and post-exam process. Failing to monitor the portal is a common cause of candidates missing important requests from TBLE for additional documentation during the character and fitness review.
Texas adopted the Uniform Bar Examination (UBE) in February 2021. A passing UBE score earned in Texas (270+) is portable to other UBE jurisdictions for 2 years from the exam date — without retaking the exam. Similarly, a qualifying UBE score from another state can be transferred to Texas through a score transfer application at TBLE. This portability makes the Texas bar score more flexible than prior state-specific exam formats for attorneys who may practice in multiple states.
Score portability is one of the significant advantages of Texas's adoption of the UBE. A UBE score earned in Texas — or any other UBE jurisdiction — is portable to other UBE jurisdictions for two years from the exam date. Texas accepts transferred UBE scores from other jurisdictions, and Texas UBE scores can be transferred to most other UBE-adopting states.
This portability allows law students and graduates to sit for the exam in one jurisdiction and transfer the score to a second jurisdiction without retaking the exam, provided the score meets the passing threshold of the destination jurisdiction. Candidates planning to practise in multiple UBE jurisdictions should research the score threshold for each jurisdiction they are targeting, as thresholds range from 260 to 273 depending on the state.
Texas bar exam candidates must take the exam in Texas — specifically, the TBLE administers the exam in Austin at the Austin Convention Centre or similar large venue. Remote or online proctored administration is not available for the Texas bar exam, which means candidates who live outside Texas must arrange travel and accommodation for each exam attempt.
The TBLE provides a list of approved hotels near the exam venue for each administration through its website. Candidates should book accommodations early, as nearby hotels fill quickly as the exam approaches, particularly for the July administration which draws the largest number of first-time examinees immediately after spring law school graduation.
First-time pass rates for the Texas bar exam hover around 50% for all takers and approximately 65–70% for first-time takers from ABA-accredited Texas law schools. The higher pass rate for first-time accredited school graduates reflects the combination of strong legal education and the resources these candidates typically have access to for bar preparation.
Repeat takers have substantially lower pass rates — approximately 25–35% — reflecting the additional challenges that candidates face when retaking the exam, including managing anxiety, studying while potentially working, and maintaining motivation after an unsuccessful attempt. Candidates who have failed once or more benefit from a focused retake strategy that addresses the specific weaknesses identified in their score report rather than starting over with a generic preparation programme.
The Texas Board of Law Examiners provides a set of resources for bar candidates on its website including the exam information booklet, the character and fitness application guide, and the score reporting FAQ. Bar prep companies including Barbri, Themis, and Kaplan provide supplemental resources including released NCBE MBE questions, MEE sample questions with point sheets published by the NCBE, and MPT practice files from prior administrations.
Candidates who use the NCBE's own published materials — available through the NCBE website — get the most representative practice for the actual UBE format, as these materials are produced by the same organisation that writes the actual exam.
The timing of the Texas bar exam relative to graduation makes July an overwhelming preference for new law graduates. Most ABA-accredited law schools hold graduation ceremonies in May, which gives July first-time takers approximately ten weeks of bar preparation time. This tight timeline is why commercial bar prep programmes are structured as ten-week intensive courses — they are designed to fit exactly in the window between graduation and the July exam.
Candidates who graduate in December (a less common but not unusual circumstance) may take the February bar exam two to three months after graduation, with a somewhat compressed preparation period. TBLE application deadlines should be noted early — December graduates applying for the February administration must have their application in by mid-November, meaning they should begin the application process before graduation.

Texas Bar Exam: Key Facts

Exact Texas bar exam dates and application deadlines for 2026 are confirmed by the Texas Board of Law Examiners at ble.texas.gov. Dates in this guide are approximate based on historical patterns — the TBLE announces confirmed dates and deadlines well in advance. Always check the official TBLE website for confirmed dates before planning your preparation timeline, travel arrangements, or accommodation bookings for the Austin exam site.
The Texas bar exam's two-day format follows the standard UBE structure. Day 1 consists of the Multistate Performance Test (MPT) and the Multistate Essay Examination (MEE). The MPT presents two 90-minute tasks that require candidates to apply legal principles to a realistic legal scenario using a provided file of case materials — it tests lawyering skills rather than memorised substantive law.
The MEE consists of six 30-minute essay questions covering the standard MEE subject areas: Civil Procedure, Constitutional Law, Contracts, Criminal Law and Procedure, Evidence, Real Property, Torts, Trusts and Estates, Family Law, Secured Transactions, Agency and Partnership, and Corporations. Day 2 consists of the Multistate Bar Examination (MBE) — 200 multiple-choice questions across the seven core MBE subjects (Constitutional Law, Contracts, Criminal Law and Procedure, Evidence, Real Property, Torts, and Civil Procedure).
Preparation for the Texas bar exam typically begins immediately following law school graduation (for July candidates) or in the summer for February candidates who did not take the July exam immediately after graduating. The standard preparation timeline is ten weeks of full-time bar study — commercial bar prep companies including Themis, Barbri, and Kaplan structure their programmes around this timeline.
Full-time bar study means six to eight hours per day of active studying — watching lectures, completing practice questions, writing practice essays, and reviewing feedback. Part-time bar study for candidates who are working while preparing requires a longer timeline of fourteen to eighteen weeks to cover the same volume of material. The MBE component is the most heavily weighted portion of the UBE scoring and warrants the most preparation time — specifically, extensive practice with multiple-choice questions across all seven MBE subjects.
Score release for the Texas bar exam follows a timeline that varies by administration. TBLE typically releases February administration scores in early to mid-May — approximately ten to twelve weeks after the exam. July administration scores are typically released in mid-November — approximately fifteen to sixteen weeks after the exam.
The longer July score release timeline reflects the larger volume of July examinees compared to February. Candidates who passed receive a notice from TBLE and can proceed with the bar admission process; candidates who did not pass receive a score report showing performance by component area, which informs their retake preparation strategy.
Retaking the Texas bar exam after an unsuccessful attempt is permitted without restriction on the number of attempts, though candidates must reapply and pay the application fee for each attempt. Candidates who do not pass on the first attempt should review their score report carefully — the TBLE provides component-level scores for the MBE (by subject area) and MEE/MPT (by question), which allows targeted remediation in the weakest areas rather than uniformly re-studying all content.
For candidates who score close to the 270 passing threshold, the most efficient retake preparation strategy is identifying the specific subject areas where performance was lowest and allocating additional practice in those areas while maintaining the competency already demonstrated in stronger areas.
Disability accommodations for the Texas bar exam are available to candidates with documented disabilities. Requests for testing accommodations — including extended time, separate testing rooms, assistive technology, and other modifications — must be submitted with the bar application and supported by documentation from a qualified professional. TBLE reviews accommodation requests and notifies candidates of approved accommodations before the exam. Candidates with disabilities who need accommodations should submit their documentation as early as possible in the application process, as the accommodation review adds additional processing time beyond the standard application timeline.

Texas bar exam pass rates average approximately 50% for all takers and 65–70% for first-time takers from ABA-accredited Texas law schools. Repeat takers pass at much lower rates (~25–35%). Passing on the first attempt requires structured, full-time preparation — candidates who treat bar study casually or start late significantly increase their risk of needing to retake. Ten weeks of full-time study using a commercial bar prep programme is the standard successful approach.
Bar admission after passing the Texas bar exam involves additional steps beyond receiving the passing score. Candidates must complete the character and fitness process (if not already complete), take the Texas attorney's oath of office, and pay the State Bar of Texas licensing fee.
The State Bar of Texas — the mandatory professional association for all licensed Texas attorneys — charges an annual membership fee (currently $235 for attorneys in their first three years of practice) and requires compliance with Continuing Legal Education (CLE) obligations including annual ethics hours. The full path from sitting for the exam to being formally enrolled as a licensed Texas attorney typically takes one to three months after receiving the passing score, depending on the completion status of the character and fitness review.
Texas bar exam candidates who have taken the bar exam in another UBE jurisdiction and wish to transfer their score to Texas must submit a score transfer application to TBLE demonstrating that the score meets Texas's 270 threshold and was earned within the past two years. TBLE charges a fee for processing score transfers, which is less than the full bar exam application fee.
Candidates who took the UBE in a different state and earned a score of 270 or higher can typically complete Texas admission through the score transfer pathway without retaking the exam, subject to satisfactory completion of the character and fitness review. This pathway is particularly used by attorneys who moved to Texas from other UBE states.
Law school-specific bar passage data for Texas is publicly available through the American Bar Association (ABA), which requires all ABA-accredited law schools to report first-time bar passage rates for graduates. This data allows prospective law students and current students to compare bar passage rates across Texas law schools and assess the effectiveness of each school's bar preparation support programmes.
Schools with lower pass rates sometimes offer more intensive bar preparation programmes — including bar prep stipends, mandatory bar course enrollment, and academic support — to improve outcomes for graduates who are at higher risk of not passing on the first attempt.
Texas-specific law content is not separately tested under the UBE format — unlike the prior Texas bar exam, which included Texas-specific essay questions, the UBE uses the same national MEE questions across all UBE jurisdictions. However, attorneys admitted to the Texas bar who practise in Texas must still understand Texas-specific law in their practice areas.
Bar prep companies note that while the UBE does not directly test Texas-specific law, candidates who will practise in Texas should be familiar with key Texas-specific provisions including Texas community property rules, Texas Penal Code basics, and Texas Rules of Civil Procedure, even though these will not appear directly on the UBE.
Texas Bar Exam Preparation Checklist
Texas Pros and Cons
- +Texas has a publicly available content blueprint — you know exactly what to prepare for
- +Multiple preparation pathways accommodate different schedules and budgets
- +Clear score reporting shows specific strengths and weaknesses
- +Study communities share current insights from recent test-takers
- +Retake policies allow recovery from a difficult first attempt
- −Tested content scope requires substantial preparation time
- −No single resource covers everything optimally
- −Exam-day performance can differ from practice test performance
- −Registration, prep, and retake costs accumulate significantly
- −Content changes between versions can make older materials less reliable
Texas Bar Exam Questions and Answers
About the Author
Attorney & Bar Exam Preparation Specialist
Yale Law SchoolJames R. Hargrove is a practicing attorney and legal educator with a Juris Doctor from Yale Law School and an LLM in Constitutional Law. With over a decade of experience coaching bar exam candidates across multiple jurisdictions, he specializes in MBE strategy, state-specific essay preparation, and multistate performance test techniques.