The MPRE—Multistate Professional Responsibility Examination—is a two-hour, 60-question multiple-choice exam testing knowledge of the ethical rules governing attorneys in the United States. Administered by the National Conference of Bar Examiners (NCBE), the MPRE is a mandatory component of bar admission in 51 U.S. jurisdictions (all states except Wisconsin and Puerto Rico, which have their own requirements).
In plain terms: if you want to practice law almost anywhere in the United States, you need to pass the MPRE first. It's typically taken during law school—many students sit for it after completing a Professional Responsibility or Legal Ethics course—and a passing score must be on file with the appropriate state bar before or alongside your bar exam application.
This guide explains what the MPRE covers, when to take it, what scores you need, and how to prepare.
Law students and lawyers planning to be admitted to the bar in any U.S. jurisdiction that requires the MPRE must sit for the exam. That's effectively every aspiring attorney in the U.S. except those applying exclusively to the Wisconsin bar (where law school graduates from certain Wisconsin law schools are admitted under diploma privilege) or Puerto Rico.
You don't have to have graduated from law school to take the MPRE. The NCBE allows individuals who are attending accredited law schools and have completed (or are currently enrolled in) a Professional Responsibility or Legal Ethics course to register.
Most students take the MPRE during their second or third year of law school. The timing makes sense—you take it while your ethics course material is fresh, and you have the score available when you register for the bar exam after graduation.
The MPRE consists of 60 multiple-choice questions, of which 50 are scored and 10 are unscored pretest items. You won't know which questions are pretest items. You have 2 hours to complete the exam.
Each question presents a legal scenario—typically involving an attorney's conduct, a proposed course of action, or a client-attorney relationship issue—and asks you to apply the applicable ethical rules to determine the correct answer.
The MPRE is administered via computer at Prometric testing centers and through online proctoring. It's offered three times per year: in March, August, and November. Registration deadlines are typically about four weeks before the exam date.
The MPRE is based on the American Bar Association's Model Rules of Professional Conduct, with some questions also drawing on the Restatement Third of the Law Governing Lawyers and general principles of professional responsibility. The exam specifically tests:
About 75–80% of questions focus on the Model Rules of Professional Conduct. The remaining questions draw on supplementary sources including court rules, state ethics opinions, and agency law principles applicable to the attorney-client relationship.
The MPRE is scored on a scale of 50–150, with the passing score varying by jurisdiction. Most states require a score of 75–86. Here's the breakdown:
Always verify the current passing score requirement for the specific jurisdiction where you're applying. Scores can change, and some states have unique requirements. Read our detailed guide on MPRE state requirements for current state-by-state scores.
The most common strategy is to take the MPRE immediately after completing your Professional Responsibility course in law school, typically during your second or third year. The content is freshest right after the course ends, and your score will be ready before you need to submit bar exam materials.
A few timing considerations:
Take it while the course material is fresh. Students who take the MPRE in the same semester as their ethics course, or immediately after, consistently report that the material feels manageable. Students who wait a year after the course often have to re-learn significant portions of the Model Rules.
Check your bar exam jurisdiction's requirements. Most jurisdictions require your MPRE score before or alongside your bar exam application. If you're sitting for the bar exam in February, you'd typically want to have your MPRE score from the prior November or August administration.
MPRE scores are valid for life in most jurisdictions. Unlike bar exam scores, MPRE passing scores generally don't expire. Some jurisdictions have specific validity windows—check yours—but most accept scores earned years before bar admission.
The MPRE is generally considered one of the more manageable bar admission requirements for students who prepare appropriately. Pass rates are not publicly released by NCBE, but law school data suggests most prepared students pass on their first or second attempt.
The exam's difficulty lies in the nuance of the scenarios, not the breadth of the material. You're not being tested on obscure legal doctrine—you're being asked to apply well-established ethical rules to fact patterns that often have arguable answers. The difference between a passing score and a failing score often comes down to how carefully you read the scenarios and how well you understand the distinctions between similar rules.
Common traps include:
MPRE preparation doesn't need to be extensive if your ethics course was thorough. Here's what works:
Know the Model Rules: You don't need to memorize every rule verbatim, but you need to understand the substance and structure of the rules. Focus on the rules with the most real-world applications: Rules 1.1–1.18 (the client relationship rules), Rules 3.1–3.9 (courtroom duties), and Rules 8.1–8.5 (bar admission and discipline).
Do practice questions: MPRE preparation is primarily about practice questions. The scenario-based format rewards pattern recognition—the more scenarios you've seen, the better you'll handle new ones. Aim for 150–200 practice questions before your exam date. Review every wrong answer and understand exactly why the correct answer is correct.
Use our MPRE exam prep resources to access practice questions organized by rule topic.
Use a reputable bar prep outline: Barbri, Themis, and Kaplan all offer MPRE-specific materials, often free for enrolled students. These outlines distill the Model Rules into exam-focused summaries and are worth working through even if you've taken an ethics course.
Don't over-prepare: Many law students spend too long on MPRE prep at the expense of other priorities. Two to three focused weeks of preparation—combined with careful attention during your ethics course—is typically sufficient. The MPRE is not the bar exam; it's a targeted, manageable test on a defined body of material.
Before registering, confirm you meet NCBE's eligibility requirements: you must be attending or have attended an ABA-accredited law school and have completed or be currently enrolled in a Professional Responsibility or Legal Ethics course. See our full guide on MPRE registration and eligibility for the complete requirements.
Passing the MPRE signals that you understand the ethical obligations of the legal profession—not just that you can pass a test. The rules you learn for the MPRE are the rules you'll apply every day as a practicing attorney: when to disclose information, when to decline representation, how to handle conflicts, what you owe your clients and the courts.
Practicing attorneys who take ethics seriously—who understand the rules deeply, not just well enough to pass a test—are better positioned to avoid disciplinary complaints, build client trust, and navigate the genuinely difficult situations that arise in legal practice. The MPRE is a test, but what it covers is the ethical foundation of a legal career.