Law School Applicant Volume Dropped Significantly from the Historic Spike in 2021

The number of law school applicants dropped significantly in 2022, -11.7 percent, from the historic spike seen in 2021. The decline may seem striking, but taking a longer-term view shows that this year’s applicant pool may just be a return to the mean after a dramatic surge in 2021 rather than a concerning decline. When this year’s applicant numbers are compared to 2020, there is just a -0.5 percent decline, and the number of applications actually increased by 13 percent, demonstrating a continuing trend of prospective law students applying to more schools. 

The largest decline in 2022 occurred among applicants who identify as White/Caucasian (-13.9 percent). There were also significant declines in applicant groups who are historically underrepresented in law, and which the legal community is actively working to attract. There was a 10.1 percent drop in Black or African-American applicants, as well as declines from applicants identifying as Puerto Rican (-8.0 percent) and Hispanic/Latino (-5.7 percent). Other groups including Canadian Aboriginal/Indigenous (-13.7 percent), Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander (-13.1 percent), American Indian or Alaska Native (-11.0 percent) also had large declines, although the smaller applicant numbers in these groups create more variability in the change. Asian applicants also saw a decline (-4.8 percent).

This year’s data also shows that the largest applicant decline stemmed predominantly from the top end of the LSAT score distribution. The largest decline came from applicants scoring between 170 and 174 (-14.4 percent), followed by those scoring between 160 and 164 (-14.3 percent) and then those scoring in the highest range between 175 and 180 (-14.0 percent). 

LSAT scores are down overall from 2021, but it is worthy of note that applicants’ score distribution for this year compares favorably to applicants in previous years (2018, 2019, and 2020). The number of applicants scoring in the top three brackets, 165-169, 170-174, and 175-180 are all higher, while the number of applicants submitting lower LSAT scores (below 149) has declined.