Exam Type: | 2-day UBE exam |
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Bar Exam Fee: | $125 -- $1,250 |
On-Motion Application Fee: | $2,000 |
Late Fee: | $50 |
Selecting a lawyer is a personal matter. Ask family, friends, coworkers and others for recommendations or search online. The Oklahoma Bar Association does NOT refer attorneys to consumers, provide legal advice, license or regulate paralegals or other nonlawyers.
Selecting a lawyer is a personal matter. Ask family, friends, coworkers and others for recommendations or search online. The Oklahoma Bar Association does NOT refer attorneys to consumers, provide legal advice, license or regulate paralegals or other nonlawyers.
Applications may be accepted at any time. The application takes approximately four months to process.
Attorneys must have been engaged in the actual and continuous practice of law for at least five of the past seven years immediately preceding the application for admission. The practice of law must have occurred outside of Oklahoma. “Practice of law” includes:
MPRE Based on Reciprocity. The Multistate Professional Responsibility Exam (MPRE) requirement is based on reciprocity. Attorneys from jurisdictions that require the MPRE for Oklahoma attorneys seeking Admission on Motion must also take the MPRE as a condition for admission in Oklahoma.
The Admission on Motion procedure in Oklahoma is based on bar reciprocity. A reciprocal state grants Oklahoma judges and lawyers the right of admission on motion without the requirement of taking the bar exam. If the attorney’s home jurisdiction permits the admission of Oklahoma judges and lawyers upon motion, but the rules are more stringent and exacting and contain other limitations, restrictions, or conditions of admission and the fees required to be paid are higher, the attorney is governed by the more stringent rules and must pay the higher fees. This includes the Multistate Professional Responsibility Exam (“MPRE”) requirement, achieving a higher MPRE score, and achieving that score within the more stringent transfer time periods.
The process in Oklahoma is called Admission on Motion. Attorneys must be on active status in a reciprocal jurisdiction and must have been engaged in the actual and continuous practice of law for at least five of the past seven years immediately preceding the application for admission.
Government Attorneys (local state, territory, district, federal, or sovereign Indian nation) (primary duties of furnishing legal counsel, drafting legal documents and pleadings, interpreting and giving advice regarding the law, or preparing, trying, or presenting cases before the courts, executive departments , administrative bureaus, or agencies.)
Private practice (sole practitioner, law firm, legal services office, legal clinic, or similar entity) (provided such practice was subsequent to being admitted to the practice of law in the jurisdiction in which the practice occurred)
Reciprocity. Many states open the practice of law to out-of-state applicants who have already been admitted to the bar of another state. While each state establishes its own criteria for admission, reciprocal agreements between states are common. Depending on factors such as the number of graduating law students within the state, ...
GEORGIA: Georgia offers a shorter bar examination for lawyers admitted by examination and in good standing in another state for at least twelve months prior to taking its Attorneys’ Examination. Also offers admission without examination for lawyers from reciprocal states who have practiced at least five years.
VIRGINIA: Virginia will provisionally admit lawyers from other states who reciprocate for Virginia lawyers.
TEXAS: This state has limited admission for certain lawyers to be admitted without examination and after passage of the full student examination.
NEBRASKA: Lawyers who have graduated from an ABA accredited law school and who have passed a bar examination comparable to Nebraska’s, including the Multi-state Professional Responsibility Examination, or who have graduated from an ABA accredited law school and who have actively and substantially practiced law for five of the last seven years prior to application for admission can be admitted to the practice of law in Nebraska without having to take and pass a written bar examination.
OHIO: This state does not have formal reciprocity agreements with other states. However, it provisionally admits (without examination) applicants who have taken and passed a bar examination and been admitted as a lawyer in the highest court of another state or in the District of Columbia, and who have practiced law, as defined in the rule, subsequent to that admission for at least five full years of the ten years prior to filing an application. Applicants also must demonstrate that they intend to engage in the practice of law in Ohio actively on a continuing basis.