The MPRE (Multistate Professional Responsibility Examination) is one of the requirements for bar admission in most U.S. jurisdictions. Unlike the bar exam itself, the MPRE is shorter, offered multiple times per year, and can be taken before or after the bar exam depending on your state's rules. Many law students take it during their second or third year of law school while the material is fresh.
Passing the MPRE is straightforward with the right approach—but underestimating it is a common mistake. This guide covers the best MPRE study materials, how to structure your preparation, and what actually matters on exam day.
The MPRE is a 60-question multiple-choice exam administered by the NCBE (National Conference of Bar Examiners) three times per year—in March, August, and November. It tests knowledge of professional conduct rules for attorneys, primarily based on the ABA Model Rules of Professional Conduct and the ABA Model Code of Judicial Conduct.
The exam is 2 hours and 5 minutes. Of the 60 questions, 50 are scored and 10 are unscored pretest items. You won't know which items are unscored.
Scores are reported on a scale of 50–150. The passing score varies by jurisdiction—most states require 75–85, with a few outliers. California requires 86; some states require as low as 75. Check your specific jurisdiction's requirement before you schedule.
The MPRE tests your understanding of professional responsibility rules, not case law or state-specific rules. Everything is tested through the lens of the ABA Model Rules, even if your state has adopted modified versions. The exam is explicit about this—you're tested on the Model Rules, not your state's rules.
The major content areas:
Conflicts of interest is the highest-weight topic and deserves significant study time. It's also where the Model Rules are most nuanced—distinguishing between concurrent conflicts, former client conflicts, imputed conflicts, and exceptions to imputation requires careful rule analysis.
Themis offers a free MPRE prep course that most law students consider the best overall resource for the exam. It includes video lectures covering each major topic, outlines, and a substantial question bank with detailed explanations. The course is genuinely free—no purchase required—and it covers the content comprehensively.
For most students, Themis alone is sufficient for the MPRE. Start here before buying anything else.
BARBRI's MPRE prep course is another strong option, particularly for students who are already enrolled in BARBRI for the bar exam. It includes an MPRE lecture, outline, and practice questions. The BARBRI materials are more concise than Themis—which can be an advantage if you're studying on a tight schedule.
The NCBE sells packets of retired MPRE questions. These are authentic exam questions, which makes them the most accurate representation of what the real test looks like. If you use Themis or BARBRI for content review, supplementing with a packet of official NCBE questions is excellent practice. The explanations aren't as detailed as commercial prep courses, but the question quality is the highest available.
For students who want a deeper doctrinal grounding—or who feel like video lectures aren't sticking—Emanuel's Professional Responsibility outline covers the Model Rules comprehensively with clear analysis and examples. It's more thorough than most students need for just the MPRE, but it's useful if you're simultaneously preparing for professional responsibility courses.
If you've taken a professional responsibility course, your casebook notes are a legitimate study resource. The MPRE tests the same Model Rules covered in standard PR curricula. The difference is that the MPRE questions are more rule-focused and less case-analysis-focused than your exam questions in class.
Most students pass the MPRE with 1–2 weeks of dedicated preparation—20–40 total hours. Here's the realistic range:
Don't underestimate the practice question component. The MPRE's scenario format means you need to be able to apply rule language to fact patterns—not just state the rules. Students who read outlines without working through practice questions consistently underperform relative to those who do both.
MPRE questions follow a consistent structure: a fact pattern describing an attorney's conduct, followed by a question about whether the conduct violates the Model Rules. Four answer choices, one best answer.
Common patterns that come up:
The most effective question approach: read the question stem before the fact pattern to know what rule issue you're looking for. Then read the fact pattern with that issue in mind. This prevents you from getting distracted by irrelevant facts in long scenarios.
Most jurisdictions require 75–85 on the MPRE's 50–150 scale. Here's a rough breakdown:
Always confirm the current passing score requirement for your state directly with the state bar. Requirements occasionally change, and using outdated information can lead you to stop studying after hitting a score that's no longer sufficient.
A few patterns that cause otherwise prepared students to miss questions:
The MPRE is administered at Prometric testing centers. Arrive 15–30 minutes early. Bring your NCBE testing ticket (printed or on your phone) and acceptable photo ID. No notes, no outlines—this is a closed-book exam.
The exam is 2 hours 5 minutes for 60 questions. That's about 2 minutes per question. You'll have time to flag and return. Don't spend 5 minutes agonizing over one scenario—flag it, move on, and return when you've finished the rest.
Results are typically available 5–6 weeks after the exam date through your NCBE online account.