MPRE Training Programs and Tutors: How to Prepare for the Ethics Exam
Find the best MPRE training programs and tutors—self-study courses, bar prep add-ons, free vs. paid options, and a study plan for passing the ethics exam on your first attempt.
The MPRE (Multistate Professional Responsibility Examination) is required for bar admission in 54 jurisdictions and stands between law students and their law license. It's not the bar exam — it's a two-hour, 60-question test on professional conduct rules — but it trips up a surprising number of students who underestimate it. Whether you're looking for a formal MPRE training program, a tutor, or just an efficient self-study plan, this guide covers your options.
MPRE Quick Facts:
Questions: 60 (50 scored + 10 unscored experimental)
Time: 2 hours 5 minutes
Format: Multiple choice
Passing score: 75–86 scaled score depending on jurisdiction (85 is the safe target for most states)
Administered by: NCBE (National Conference of Bar Examiners)
Offered: 3 times per year (March, August, November)
Do You Need a Formal MPRE Training Program?
Let's be honest first: the MPRE is not the bar exam. Most law students pass it on their first attempt with 2–4 weeks of focused study. A $1,000 tutoring package is probably overkill unless you've already failed the exam once or are particularly anxious about the material.
That said, choosing the right prep resource matters. The ABA Model Rules of Professional Conduct — which the MPRE is based on — are nuanced, and the exam tests them in specific ways that benefit from targeted preparation. Here's what's actually available:
MPRE Training Program Options
Bar Prep Company Add-Ons (Barbri, Themis, Kaplan)
If you're already enrolled in a full bar prep course, you almost certainly have MPRE prep included or available as an add-on:
Barbri MPRE Review: A widely used MPRE-specific course. Includes a video lecture series covering all tested topics, a written outline, and a bank of practice questions. Barbri's MPRE content is solid — it's focused, efficient, and developed by people who understand how the NCBE tests the rules. Typically included with full Barbri bar prep or available separately for $100–$200.
Themis MPRE Review: Shorter than Barbri's but structured similarly — lectures, outlines, practice questions. Themis is generally considered strong for bar prep and their MPRE content is comparable. Often included with full Themis enrollment.
Kaplan MPRE: Available as part of Kaplan's bar prep package. Practice-question heavy; useful if you're a student who learns best through volume drilling rather than lecture review.
Free and Low-Cost MPRE Resources
Many students pass the MPRE using free or near-free resources:
NCBE Official Practice Exams: The NCBE releases free released exams — actual prior MPRE exams with answer keys. These are the most valuable prep resource available, and they're free at ncbex.org. If you do nothing else, work through the official released exams. They're the gold standard for understanding how questions are framed and what level of detail is tested.
AdaptiBar MPRE: Primarily known for MBE prep, AdaptiBar also has an MPRE module with adaptive question drills. Useful if you want software-based tracking of your weak areas. Modest cost ($50–$100).
Quimbee MPRE Review: Video lecture review course available through Quimbee. Clean, concise, and well-organized. Accessible to law students who already use Quimbee for case briefs. Free trial available.
Law school outlines and materials: Your Professional Responsibility course outline is actually excellent MPRE prep material — the exam tests exactly what's covered in most PR courses. If your school had a good PR professor, your class notes and outline cover most of the substantive content you need.
MPRE Tutors
Private MPRE tutoring is available, typically from:
- Law school academic support offices: Many schools offer free peer tutoring or faculty-supervised tutoring for MPRE prep. Ask your academic support director — this is often underutilized.
- Private bar prep tutors: Tutors on platforms like Wyzant, TutorMe, or via bar prep company referral programs. Rates run $75–$200/hour. A 2–4 session MPRE-focused tutoring package is usually sufficient if you're struggling.
- Online tutoring companies: Some bar prep companies (like Test Masters, Brooklyn Bar Review) offer individual MPRE tutoring. Compare rates and look for tutors with documented MPRE pass rates from prior students.
If you're using a tutor, be specific about what you need: work through official practice questions together, have the tutor explain the Model Rules nuances that keep tripping you up, and do a mock exam under timed conditions in your final session.
What the MPRE Actually Tests
Understanding the exam's content distribution helps you allocate study time effectively. The MPRE tests:
- Regulation of the Legal Profession (6–12%): State bar admission standards, disciplinary proceedings, unauthorized practice of law
- Lawyer-Client Relationship (10–16%): Formation, competence, diligence, fees, communication
- Client Confidentiality (6–12%): Attorney-client privilege vs. duty of confidentiality; exceptions
- Conflicts of Interest (12–18%): Current client conflicts, former client conflicts, personal interest conflicts, imputation
- Competence, Legal Malpractice, and Civil Liability (4–10%): Standard of care, malpractice elements
- Litigation and Other Forms of Advocacy (10–16%): Candor to tribunal, fairness to opposing counsel, trial publicity, prosecutors
- Transactions and Communications (6–12%): Truthfulness, dealing with unrepresented parties, respect for third parties
- Different Roles of the Lawyer (4–10%): Advisor, evaluator, mediator, arbitrator
- Safekeeping Funds and Other Property (2–8%): Trust accounts, client property
- Communication About Legal Services (4–10%): Advertising, solicitation, firm names
- Lawyers in Law Firms (4–10%): Supervision responsibilities, restrictions on practice
- Public Service (2–8%): Pro bono obligations, positions of public trust
- Judicial Conduct (2–8%): Rules of judicial ethics, recusal, campaign conduct
Conflicts of Interest and Client Confidentiality consistently produce the most questions and the most mistakes. These two areas alone justify spending disproportionate study time.
An Efficient 3-Week MPRE Study Plan
Most students don't need more than 3 weeks for the MPRE. Here's how to structure it:
Week 1 — Content Review:
- Work through the Model Rules systematically using Barbri, Themis, or your PR course outline
- Focus extra time on Conflicts of Interest (Rules 1.7–1.9, 1.10) and Confidentiality (Rule 1.6)
- Learn the key exceptions, duties, and permitted-vs-required distinctions
Week 2 — Practice Questions:
- Do 20–30 practice questions daily from commercial or NCBE sources
- Review every wrong answer and understand the rule it tested
- Don't just note what the right answer was — trace it back to the specific rule provision
Week 3 — Full Mocks and Targeted Review:
- Take one full timed NCBE released exam (2 hours 5 minutes, 60 questions)
- Review errors, re-read the relevant rules
- Take a second full mock 2 days before the exam
- Final day: light review only, no new material
What Score Do You Need?
Passing scores vary by jurisdiction. The scaled score range is roughly 50–150, with most jurisdictions requiring between 75 and 86:
- 85: Required in California, New York, and several other competitive jurisdictions
- 80: Required in many other states
- 75: The lowest minimum in use (a small number of jurisdictions)
Targeting an 85 gives you a safe margin regardless of jurisdiction. In practice, the scaled score of 85 corresponds to roughly 66–70% of the 50 scored questions answered correctly — a solid but manageable target with proper preparation.
After You Pass: MPRE Score Reporting
MPRE scores are valid for 5 years in most jurisdictions and must be transferred directly from NCBE to the state bar during your bar application. You don't submit a score report yourself — NCBE transfers scores electronically. Make sure you request the score transfer to your target jurisdiction through your NCBE account when you apply for bar admission.
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.