This year's Selected Findings reveals the Class of 2023 crushed four of the primary metrics NALP has been tracking over the past five decades.
Highlights:
The employment rate for the Class of 2023 improved by half of a percentage point, to 92.6% of graduates for whom employment status was known — the highest rate ever recorded.
The unemployment rate was 5.8%, the lowest unemployment rate since the Class of 2007.
The percentage of graduates securing jobs for which bar passage is required or anticipated rose by 2.2 percentage points, reaching 82.1% for the Class of 2023 — an all-time high for the period since 2001, when NALP began using the current job classifications.
Overall, 58.2% of employed graduates obtained a job in private practice, an increase of one-fifth of a percentage point over the Class of 2022. This is the highest percentage of graduates working in law firms since the Class of 1992 — a span of over 30 years.
The national median salary for the Class of 2023 grew to a record high of $90,000, up 5.9% compared to the median of $85,000 for the Class of 2022.
For graduates working in private practice, the median law firm salary increased by 10% to $165,000, compared to $150,000 for the Class of 2022. By firm size, median salaries ranged from $75,000 in firms of 1-10 lawyers to $215,000 in firms of more than 500 lawyers.
Although many large firms announced in late 2023 and early 2024 that they were increasing first-year associate salaries to $225,000, fewer than 16% of all law firm salaries were reported at this amount.
The share of law firm jobs in the largest firms of more than 500 lawyers rose by 1.5 percentage points to 34.3%, another all-time high.
In contrast, the percentage of jobs in firms of 1-10 lawyers accounted for 27.0% of all law firm jobs, the lowest this figure has been since 1989.
Public service jobs, including military and other government jobs, judicial clerkships, and public interest positions, accounted for 32.2% of jobs taken by employed graduates, up from 30.7% for the Class of 2022. All three public service employer categories experienced growth this year.
In particular, public interest employment has been increasing in popularity with graduates over the last several years and set new highs for the Class of 2023 in terms of both the percentage (9.7% of all jobs) and total number of jobs (nearly 3,100 jobs) in this sector.
Just 7.3% of employed Class of 2023 graduates were seeking a different job than the one they are currently employed in, a record low.
Nearly two-thirds of employed graduates (65.3%) were employed in the same state in which they attended law school.
Read more at: www.nalp.org/classof2023.
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