Projecting the 2025-2026 USNWR law school rankings (to be released March 2025 or so)

Fifty-eight percent of the new USNWR law school rankings turn on three highly-volatile categories: employment 10 months after graduation, first-time bar passage, and ultimate bar passage. USNWR has tried to smooth these out by using a two-year average of these scores. (Next year, it might well use a three-year average or three-year weighted average.)

Because USNWR releases its rankings in the spring, at the same time the ABA releases new data on these categories, the USNWR law school rankings are always a year behind. This year’s data include the ultimate bar passage rate for the Classes of 2019 and 2020, the first-time bar passage rate for the Classes of 2021 and 2022, and the employment outcomes of the Classes of 2021 and 2022

We can quickly update all that data with this year’s data (as I made an effort to do, with some modest success, early last year). And given that the other 42% of the rankings are much less volatile, we can simply assume this year’s data for next year’s and have, within a couple of ranking slots or so, a very good idea of where law schools will be. (Of course, USNWR is free to tweak its methodology once again next year. Some volatility makes sense, because it reflects responsiveness to new data and changed conditions; too much volatility tends to undermine the credibility of the rankings as it would point toward arbitrary criteria and weights that do not meaningfully reflect changes at schools year over year.) Some schools, of course, will see significant changes to LSAT medians, UGPA medians, student-faculty ratios, and so on relative to peers. Some schools have significantly increased school-funded positions after the change in USNWR methodology. And the peer scores may be slightly more volatile than years. Likewise, lawyer and judge scoring of law schools appears to be more significantly adversely affecting the most elite law schools, and that trend may continue.

But, again, this is a first, rough cut of what the new (and volatile) methodology may yield. High volatility and compression mean bigger swings in any given year. Additionally, it means that smaller classes are more susceptible to larger swings (e.g., a couple of graduates whose bar or employment outcomes change are more likely to change the school’s position than larger schools).

If you are inclined to ask, “How could school X move up/down so much?” the answer is, bar and employment, bar and employment, bar and employment.

Here’s the early projections. (Where there are ties, they are sorted by score, which is not reported here.)

UPDATE: I continue to have difficulty assessing Wisconsin’s two law schools due to diploma privilege and how USNWR purports to measure bar passage statistics, so their rankings may be lower than would be expected.

School Projected Rank This Year's Rank
Stanford 1 1
Chicago 2 3
Yale 3 1
Virginia 3 4
Penn 5 4
Harvard 5 4
Michigan 7 9
Duke 7 4
Northwestern 9 9
Columbia 9 8
NYU 9 9
UCLA 12 13
Berkeley 13 12
Vanderbilt 14 19
Washington Univ. 14 16
Georgetown 14 14
Texas 14 16
North Carolina 18 20
Cornell 18 14
Notre Dame 20 20
Minnesota 21 16
Boston Univ. 22 24
Wake Forest 22 25
Georgia 24 20
USC 24 20
Texas A&M 24 26
Boston College 27 28
Florida 28 28
William & Mary 29 36
Alabama 29 33
Ohio State 29 26
George Mason 29 28
BYU 33 28
Washington & Lee 33 33
Utah 33 28
Irvine 33 42
Florida State 37 48
Iowa 37 36
George Washington 37 41
Emory 40 42
Baylor 40 46
Fordham 40 33
SMU 43 42
Arizona State 43 36
Wisconsin 45 36
Illinois 45 36
Colorado 45 48
Indiana-Bloomington 48 42
Villanova 48 48
Davis 48 55
Connecticut 48 55
Pepperdine 52 52
Kansas 52 46
Washington 52 48
Temple 52 54
Tennessee 56 52
San Diego 56 68
Missouri 58 61
Penn State Law 58 68
Arizona 58 55
Penn State-Dickinson 58 75
Oklahoma 58 55
Maryland 63 55
Wayne State 63 55
Kentucky 65 61
Loyola-Los Angeles 65 61
Pitt 65 91
Houston 65 68
Cardozo 65 61
South Carolina 65 66
UNLV 71 78
Cincinnati 71 78
St. John's 71 68
Tulane 71 78
Seton Hall 71 61
Nebraska 71 82
Catholic 71 94
Northeastern 71 68
Florida International 71 68
Richmond 80 66
LSU 80 91
Drexel 80 75
Georgia State 80 75
Maine 84 120
Loyola-Chicago 84 78
Belmont 86 91
Marquette 86 68
Texas Tech 88 82
Miami 88 82
Denver 88 89
UC Law-SF 88 82
Drake 92 82
Duquesne 92 94
Stetson 92 98
Lewis & Clark 95 82
Oregon 95 82
St. Louis 95 94
Chapman 98 108
American 98 98
Buffalo 98 108
Dayton 98 108
Rutgers 98 103
This content was stolen from ExcessOfDemocracy.com

(Any mistakes are my own. One data collection note. I often transpose some schools due to inconsistencies in how the ABA reports school names. Schools beginning with Chicago, Saint, South, or Widener are most susceptible to these inconsistencies.)