MPRE Exam Eligibility and Registration: Complete Guide
MPRE registration guide: who is eligible, how to register through NCBE, exam dates, score requirements by state, and how to prepare for the ethics exam.

MPRE Exam Eligibility and Registration: How to Qualify and Enroll
The MPRE is required for admission to the bar in 49 US jurisdictions (all states except Wisconsin and Puerto Rico, which waive the MPRE for graduates of in-state law schools). It tests knowledge of the rules of professional conduct and legal ethics — specifically the ABA Model Rules of Professional Conduct and the ABA Model Code of Judicial Conduct. The exam doesn't test whether you're a person of good character; it tests whether you understand the ethical rules that govern attorney conduct. That's a specifically learnable body of knowledge, and most law students who prepare adequately pass on the first attempt.
Eligibility for the MPRE is more flexible than most bar exam components. NCBE requires that you be enrolled in law school — you don't have to have completed your degree first. Most jurisdictions allow you to register during your second or third year of law school, and many students take the MPRE during or just after completing their required Professional Responsibility course (often called PR or Legal Ethics). Taking the MPRE while the ethical rules content is fresh from coursework is the most time-efficient approach. The MPRE score remains valid for several years in most jurisdictions — check your target state's specific validity period, as some states expire scores after 3–5 years. Working through an mpre client-lawyer relationship practice test covers the formation, scope, and termination of attorney-client relationships — the foundational framework on which most Model Rules content is built.
The content of the MPRE maps closely to the ABA Model Rules. The test covers the client-lawyer relationship broadly, including competence, diligence, communication duties, fees, confidentiality, and conflicts of interest. It also covers special duties in litigation (candor to the tribunal, fairness to opposing parties, the prohibition on improper contacts with witnesses and jurors), duties when dealing with third parties and non-clients, law firm supervision responsibilities, public service obligations, and the rules governing advertising and solicitation. The judicial conduct component tests the rules applicable to judges — disqualification requirements, ex parte communications, and the Code of Judicial Conduct. Practicing with an mpre confidentiality practice test targets one of the highest-tested areas on the MPRE — the attorney's duty of confidentiality under Model Rule 1.6 and its exceptions, which generate more exam questions than almost any other single rule. Reviewing an mpre conflicts of interest practice test quiz covers the Model Rules 1.7 through 1.12 conflicts framework — concurrent conflicts, former client conflicts, and third-party conflicts — which collectively represent a substantial portion of MPRE exam content.
How to Register for the MPRE
Registration is through NCBE's online portal at ncbex.org. You create an NCBE account (if you don't have one already from other bar exam registrations), complete the MPRE registration form, pay the $85 fee, and select your test date and testing center. MPRE administrations occur three times per year: typically in March, August, and November. Registration opens approximately three months before each exam date and closes several weeks before. Late registration is available for a surcharge up to a closer deadline. If you miss the registration window entirely, you'll need to wait for the next exam cycle.
Once registered, NCBE provides an admission ticket with your testing center location and reporting time. The exam is computer-based and administered at Pearson VUE test centers. You'll need to bring your admission ticket and a government-issued photo ID. No scratch paper, calculators, or reference materials are permitted — you answer from memory. The test has 60 questions in 2 hours, which is generous timing; most candidates have time to review flagged questions before submitting. Scores are released approximately five weeks after the exam date and reported directly to the jurisdictions you designate during registration. You can designate up to three jurisdictions for free; additional designations cost extra.
Practicing with an mpre competence and diligence practice test covers Model Rules 1.1 (Competence) and 1.3 (Diligence) — foundational duties that appear in fact patterns throughout the exam, often as baseline requirements for evaluating whether other conduct was or wasn't proper. An attorney's failure to maintain competence or act with reasonable diligence is relevant background in conflicts questions, malpractice-adjacent scenarios, and discipline analysis questions.


MPRE Overview
- Client-Lawyer Relationship: Competence, diligence, communication, fees, file retention, termination of representation, organizational clients
- Confidentiality: Scope of Rule 1.6, exceptions (prevent serious bodily harm, prevent crime or fraud, self-defense, court order), duty vs. privilege distinction
- Conflicts of Interest: Current client conflicts (1.7), former client conflicts (1.9), imputed conflicts (1.10), government lawyer conflicts (1.11), judge-attorney conflicts (1.12)
- Litigation and Advocacy: Candor to tribunal (3.3), fairness to opposing parties (3.4), impartiality of tribunal (3.5), trial publicity (3.6), prosecutorial duties (3.8)
- Transactions with Non-Clients: Truthfulness in dealings (4.1), communications with represented persons (4.2), unrepresented persons (4.3), respect for rights of third persons (4.4)
MPRE Breakdown
- ▸Confidentiality exceptions (Rule 1.6): the specific circumstances allowing disclosure (imminent serious bodily harm, prevent crime or fraud using attorney's services, attorney self-defense, compliance with court order) are heavily tested — know each exception's precise scope
- ▸Conflicts analysis sequence: always ask (1) Is there a current conflict? (2) Can it be waived? (3) Is it imputed to the firm? Following this analytical sequence correctly answers most conflicts questions
- ▸Communication duties (Rule 1.4): client must be reasonably informed about status; client must be consulted about means; client must be given information needed for informed decisions — specific applications are commonly tested
- ▸Fee arrangements (Rule 1.5): contingency fee requirements (writing, percentage, settlement consultation), prohibited contingent fees (criminal cases, domestic relations for outcome-contingent fees), fee sharing with non-attorneys
- ▸Candor to tribunal (Rule 3.3): disclosure of adverse controlling legal authority, prohibition on false statements to court, duty when client commits perjury — the Model Rule 3.3 framework is heavily tested in context
- ▸Read the ABA Model Rules text directly — not just study guides. The MPRE tests the specific language and nuances of the rules; secondary summaries sometimes omit distinctions that matter on exam questions
- ▸Practice with MPRE-format questions, not general legal ethics trivia — the question format (60 scenario-based MC questions) requires comfort with how the rules apply in specific factual contexts
- ▸Focus extra time on confidentiality, conflicts, competence/diligence, and candor to tribunal — these four areas generate a disproportionate share of MPRE exam questions
- ▸Don't ignore judicial ethics — the Code of Judicial Conduct questions appear on every exam and are frequently underestimated by students focused on the attorney conduct rules
- ▸Two to four weeks of focused preparation is sufficient for most students taking the MPRE contemporaneously with their PR course; students who took PR a year or more ago may need 4–6 weeks
- ▸Applying state rules instead of the ABA Model Rules — the MPRE specifically tests ABA Model Rules, not the rules of any particular state (even if your state has adopted modified versions)
- ▸Confusing attorney-client privilege with the duty of confidentiality — privilege is an evidentiary concept controlled by courts; confidentiality under Rule 1.6 is a professional conduct obligation; they overlap but are not identical
- ▸Misreading conflicts questions — a conflict question often tests whether a conflict exists, whether it's consentable, and whether it's imputed separately; answer the specific question being asked
- ▸Forgetting the organizational client rules — when a client is an organization, the attorney represents the organization, not its constituents; Rule 1.13 governs the specific duties when constituent conduct threatens the organization
- ▸Not reading all answer choices — MPRE wrong answers are often plausible; the correct answer is the one that's specifically right under the Model Rules, not just the most sympathetic or fair-seeming

MPRE Study Resources and Exam Day Approach
The MPRE has a specific, learnable content scope. The ABA Model Rules are the primary source — the exam is explicit that it tests the Model Rules framework, not common law professional responsibility. NCBE publishes an official MPRE subject matter outline that identifies the tested topics and their approximate weighting. Working from the subject matter outline rather than just a general legal ethics textbook ensures you're studying what's actually tested rather than broader professional responsibility concepts that don't appear on the exam.
Commercial bar prep materials from Themis, Barbri, and similar providers include MPRE-specific modules. These are typically brief compared to the full bar prep curriculum — the MPRE is a focused exam, and most candidates prepare in a concentrated period rather than over months. The prep material quality matters: look for resources that include practice questions in the same format as the actual MPRE (scenario-based, answer choices requiring application of Model Rules) rather than just explanatory outlines. Practice questions reveal how the rules are tested in context, which is a different skill from reading the rule text itself.
Exam day approach is straightforward. Arrive at the test center with your admission ticket and ID. You have 2 hours for 60 questions — that's 2 minutes per question, which is generous. Read each fact pattern carefully: the examiners include specific facts that trigger or defeat specific rules. Use the flagging feature to mark questions you want to revisit. On conflicts questions, work through the analytical sequence (current conflict, consentability, imputation) rather than pattern-matching to a specific scenario you remember. The MPRE passes the large majority of candidates who prepare adequately — most failures are students who treated the exam as easier than the bar and under-prepared, not students who prepared and still struggled.
One nuance worth understanding before you register: NCBE tracks your testing history, and all of your MPRE registrations and scores appear in your NCBE account. Bar admission applications typically ask about prior MPRE attempts and scores. There is no penalty for multiple attempts — bar applicants routinely take the MPRE two or three times without issue. But knowing that your testing history is part of your record is a reason to prepare adequately before your first attempt rather than treating early attempts as low-stakes practice runs. Most law students who prepare for 2 to 4 weeks and take the exam during or shortly after their Professional Responsibility course pass with a comfortable margin above the required score.
The MPRE is also one of the few bar examination components where the preparation directly improves your understanding of the rules you will actually need to follow as a practicing attorney. Learning the Model Rules deeply enough to pass the MPRE is not just an academic exercise. The confidentiality, conflicts, and candor rules you study for the exam are the same rules that will govern your practice for your entire career. Bar disciplinary proceedings, malpractice exposure, and professional reputation all turn on whether attorneys apply these rules correctly in practice. The preparation investment pays beyond exam day.
MPRE Pros and Cons
- +Limited content scope — the MPRE tests a specific, defined body of rules (ABA Model Rules + Code of Judicial Conduct) with a published subject matter outline; preparation is focused and bounded
- +Three exam dates per year — flexible scheduling allows most law students to find a convenient time that aligns with their PR course
- +Generous time limit — 2 hours for 60 questions leaves time to review flagged questions for most candidates
- +Computer-based with rapid score reporting — results within approximately five weeks of the exam date
- +No limit on retakes — candidates who don't reach their target state's minimum can retake without a waiting period beyond the next exam cycle
- −State score thresholds vary — candidates applying in California (86) or other high-threshold states need to score above average just to pass
- −Score validity limits mean early takers may need to retake — if you pass the MPRE in 2L year but don't sit for the bar until 3 years later, some states require a current score
- −Fact patterns require close reading — quickly scanning and missing a specific fact that changes the analysis is the most common cause of wrong answers
- −ABA Model Rules vs. state rules distinction catches candidates — studying your state's adopted rules instead of the ABA model can lead to wrong answers when the rules differ
- −Limited official practice materials — NCBE provides some sample questions but the official practice exam set is small; most candidates rely on commercial prep materials
Step-by-Step Timeline
Determine Your State's Score Requirement
Register Through NCBE
Study (2–4 Weeks)
Practice Exams
Receive and Submit Your Score
MPRE 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.