From the School
Seton Hall Law University School of Law is a uniquely collegial community of talented faculty, students and alumni who value commitment to service and excellence. Students enjoy close relationships to professors and each other throughout their law school experience and beyond. Our strong network of dedicated alumni and great law school professors are invaluable and accessible resources to our students.
What is the Seton Hall Law difference? Our "One Student At a Time" approach to teaching and engagement. The phrase "student-centered" can mean many things. At Seton Hall Law, it describes our focus on each student as an individual — someone with their own history, responsibilities, and aspirations. Seton Hall Law focuses on the whole person, urging our students to balance their personal and professional lives. Our faculty and professional administrators partner with students to discover their passion in the law.
"You'll be surprised to find out that choosing a law school is much easier than you think. Every school has a culture, and the key is to find the culture that reflects your values."
-Kathleen Boozang, Dean, Seton Hall Law School
First-year applications are considered for Fall Semester admission only. In order to apply, you must have or plan to obtain a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited college or university or a foreign equivalent prior to your anticipated date of enrollment. The application is available electronically at www.lsac.org, and all supporting documentation must be submitted through a valid Credential Assembly Service (CAS) account.
Admission to Seton Hall Law is selective and competitive with an entire student's profile taken into consideration including academic background, professional expertise, personal statements, and standardized testing results.
April 1 is the General Admission and Financial Aid priority deadline as well as the final deadline for the Legal Education Opportunity Program (LEO).
Overview
From The School
First-year applications are considered for Fall Semester admission only. In order to apply, you must have or plan to obtain a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited college or university or a foreign equivalent prior to your anticipated date of enrollment. The application is available electronically at www.lsac.org, and all supporting documentation must be submitted through a valid Credential Assembly Service (CAS) account.
Admission to Seton Hall Law is selective and competitive with an entire student's profile taken into consideration including academic background, professional expertise, personal statements, and standardized testing results.
April 1 is the General Admission and Financial Aid priority deadline as well as the final deadline for the Legal Education Opportunity Program (LEO).
Test Scores
(enrolled students)
Deadlines
Application Process
Other Admission Factors
LSAT Score
Undergraduate GPA
Selectivity Rating
Overall
From The School
Degrees Offered
Seton Hall Law School offers an unparalleled legal education complete with hands-on experiential learning opportunities where students can take advantage of a curriculum designed by forward-thinking professors and pursue a degree that fits their professional interests. From JD programs to our online degree offerings, Seton Hall Law provides students an array of options:
Full-Time JD Program:
The full-time JD program may be completed in three years. Students attend class during the week at the law school campus with their assigned section. Neither the full-time nor part-time programs require summer classes, but summer classes are offered, both on-campus and through our summer study abroad options.
Weekend JD Program:
The part-time Weekend JD Program is an ABA-accredited hybrid program enabling professionals to balance work, life, and law school. Students spend alternating weekends on campus each semester and engage in asynchronous online coursework while off-campus. Weekend students have the same academic and co-curricular opportunities as full-time students. The program is designed to take four years, but may be accelerated.
LEO Fellows
The Legal Education Opportunity (LEO) program provides a pathway and transition to law school for students who have demonstrated resiliency and perseverance in the face of social, economic, educational, or other challenges and who bring talent, determination, and leadership skills to the law school community. LEO's success relies on mentoring opportunities, academic enrichment, and a support network for personal and professional growth.
Non JD Offerings
M.S.J. (Master of Science in Jurisprudence) or Graduate Certificates
Concentrations available:
General Legal Studies
Pharmaceutical & Medical Device Law & Compliance
Health & Hospital Law
Law and the Creative Industries
Financial Services Compliance
Privacy Law and Cyber Security
Compliance Programs
Healthcare Compliance Certificate
Gaming Law, Compliance, and Integrity Certificate
Data Privacy Compliance Certificate
LL.M. (Master of Laws)
Programs and Curriculum
Real Client Training ? Clinics and Pro Bono
Seton Hall Law offers students multiple opportunities to develop their practical skills and gain hands-on experience by working in real lawyering contexts. Through clinics, externships, and the pro bono program, students provide thousands of hours of service to individuals and the community.
Intro to Lawyering
During 1L year, students take a six-credit year-long Introduction to Lawyering course designed to provide students with opportunities to exercise and receive intensive feedback on a broad range of practical lawyering skills including research, writing, interviewing, counseling, negotiation, and oral advocacy. Throughout the course, Intro to Lawyering professors continue to work with students as they develop core legal research, writing and communication skills.
Business courses for lawyers
In their 2L year, students are required to complete two business-related courses: Financial Concepts for Lawyers (1 credit) and Business Associations (4 credits). Given the nature of contemporary legal practice, the Seton Hall Law faculty believes these courses are necessary to equip all future lawyers with basic business law knowledge and an understanding of key financial concepts and tools.
Concentrations
As society has become more complex, demand for specialists has increased. To help students prepare for today's sophisticated legal landscape, Seton Hall Law offers three concentrations ? Health Law, Law and Technology (which includes entertainment law and intellectual property), and Compliance Can you check the web and see if these are still the current names?. Students can specialize in one of these designated areas of law by taking a core curriculum developed by Seton Hall Law faculty in consultation with attorneys and government officials working in the field.
Faculty
The Seton Hall Law faculty consists of nationally respected scholars and sought-after experts in fields ranging from corporate governance and finance, to health law, intellectual property law, international law, labor and employment law, and public interest law.
Dynamic, talented and accomplished, this diverse group of scholars and practitioners is unified by a commitment to provide both academic excellence and professional mentorship — one student at a time — helping students to achieve their personal aspirations and ultimate career paths.
"Faculty aren't just leading practitioners of law. Seton Hall Law invests in making us better educators."
-Margaret Lewis, Professor of Law
Special Programs
Academic Success Offerings
Through targeted workshops, academic coaching, and strategic advising, Seton Hall Law provides wide-ranging support to optimize students' academic efforts. Topics include healthy study strategies, exam preparation, academic goals, time management and organization. Competence in these areas equips students for future success, both in academics and beyond.
Bar Examination Preparation
Irrespective of whether a student plans on the long-term, post-graduate goal of law practice or doing something else entirely with their law degree, Seton Hall Law urges every graduate to sit for the bar. As such, its curriculum incorporates substantial practical training and strategies for bar exam preparation.
The effectiveness of bar preparation training at Seton Hall Law is evident in our bar passage rate of 90.4% (July 2019).
Diversity, Equity and Inclusion are Cornerstone Values
We are invested in transforming our profession and value diversity in all its forms cultural, religious, ethnic, and gender as well as thought and perspective. Diversity is the lens through which we analyze both doctrine and our systems of justice. Engagement from students of different economic and educational backgrounds, geographic regions, and perspectives enriches our understanding of the history of the law, as well as its ability to achieve justice and equity.
Seton Hall Law is committed to producing lawyers from underrepresented communities. Creating a class of students with different histories enables Seton Hall Law to produce lawyers who will come to their clients with empathy. Knowing that inequity exists is the necessary condition precedent to reform. Understanding the human impact of injustice inspires the passion for change.
Faculty Information
Students Say
The classroom environment at Seton Hall Law is “very conducive to discussion.” “There aren’t many horrible professors,” and “Most rave about their professors.” Students say the faculty is full of some of “the wittiest, most passionate, brilliant, best-looking legal minds in the country.” “Each of the first-year professors I’ve had has been really impressive,” reports a 1L. “Some of them are pretty idiosyncratic, which provides for some good entertainment outside the classroom, and behind their backs.” The faculty is “very accessible,” as well. Many students also find the administration “generally helpful.” The support staff goes out of its way to accommodate and even anticipate student needs,” says a 2L. “It is reliable and makes few mistakes.” Other students charge, “The administration at this school is a tsunami of disorganization.” We also hear a number of complaints about the legal writing program, which a 3L calls “abhorrent.”
“There’s very much an on-your-own-feel to finding a job,” and some students with middling grades feel “left out in the cold.” Nevertheless, most students are pretty satisfied with their job prospects. State and federal court houses “are very close,” and “the school has a strong connection to the New Jersey judiciary, so a lot of students get judicial clerkships at graduation.” The alumni network is notably loyal, and “Seton Hall Law has a good networking system set in place.” “We have the run of New Jersey,” boasts a 2L. However, students who want to work in Manhattan have only moderate success. “You can see the city from the library,” observes a 1L, “but it seems more like a beautiful dream than a reality for most students.” That’s not necessarily a drawback, though. “There are plenty of pretty great law firms right here in Newark.”
The facilities here are definitely above average. “There can be no debate about that.” Not everyone loves “the modern-esque style of the interior,” and “The classrooms are more functional than aesthetically pleasing,” but upgrades are “constant,” and students have few serious grievances. Technology is “particularly smooth.” “The library is fantastic,” declares a 3L. “It provides especially good electronic resources, even in obscure areas.” “I love how everything is in one place,” adds a 2L.
Career overview
From The School
One Student at a Time, we empower individuals to think beyond landing a job to launching a career. A Seton Hall Law degree offers limitless opportunities.
The Office of Career Services (OCS) counselors provide an array of tools and services, including individual counseling, resume review, interview skills training, workshops and numerous networking opportunities. OCS acts as a partner, helping students define and chart their paths as they seek guidance along the way to make the choices that will help them meet their professional goals. The counselors' advice and access to employment networks reflect decades of experience in the nation's legal employment field.
Seton Hall Law School was named a Top 50 Go-To Law School for 2021. Seton Hall Law ranked 47th in the country on the National Law Journal's list of Go-To Law Schools. The survey ranks schools according to the percentage of graduates who get jobs at the largest 100 law firms in the country.
Additionally, Seton Hall Law ranked #1 of more than 200 law schools in placing their 2019 graduates into State and Local Clerkships.
Career Services
Graduates Employed by Area
Graduates Employed by Region
Prominent Alumni
Overview
From The School
The tuition and fees for the Law School are $58,472 for incoming full-time students and $43,852 for incoming part-time students for the 2021-2022 academic year.
All students interested in applying for financial aid (including student loans) must file a Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA).
All applicants for admission are eligible for merit scholarship awards — no separate application is required for consideration. Merit scholarships are selective awards based on outstanding LSAT scores, standardized test scores, undergraduate academic performance, and academic promise and are renewable by maintaining required GPA standards or designated class rank.
Seton Hall Law is proud to report 90% of incoming students in 2021 received scholarship funding; 86% of students who matriculated in 2020 fully retained their scholarships.
Dates
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Expenses per Academic Year
Overall
From The School
The Seton Hall Law community is both distinct and sustaining. Students develop networks of professional relationships and friendships that last a lifetime. Student organizations play a central role in life at Seton Hall Law. Throughout the year, the Student Bar Association and 40 student organizations sponsor a variety of social and educational events that will enrich your experience and provide opportunities to get involved with other students and the community around you.
Student Body Profile
Demographics
Campus Life
Students Say
Outside of class, there are frequent seminars and tons of organizations and activities. Attitudes concerning the surrounding city of Newark are seriously mixed. Detractors call it “a notoriously terrible city” that’s “lacking in sophistication and charm.” “Newark may be the least desirable place to go to law school in the country,” reckons a 2L. Other students insist that the Brick City’s reputation is unwarranted. “Just because Newark looks crappy doesn’t mean it’s dangerous,” they say. “I feel like a lot of the kids from New Jersey just hate Newark because they bring their prejudices with them,” claims a 2L. “Downtown Newark is as safe—if not safer—than any block in NYC. It is a professionally developed area” full of courts and multiple government offices. Whatever the case, the school is “about two blocks from Penn Station, so it’s easy enough to commute from a nice area.” Despite the commuter ambience, students tell us that there’s “a very vibrant social community” at Seton Hall Law. Events sponsored by the student bar association are “pretty awesome,” and students “regularly” go out en masse in Hoboken or New York City.
More Information
Admissions Office Contact
From The School
Campus and Location
Seton Hall University School of Law is located just 8 miles west of Manhattan in Newark, NJ. Newark is part of the largest legal market in the nation and is home to federal, state, and county courthouses and leading law firms.
Located in busy downtown Newark, the Law School is within a few short blocks of NJ's Penn Station, the Prudential Center, the Newark Museum, the New Jersey Center for Performing Arts, and the Ironbound — giving students convenient access to sporting events, concerts, world-renowned works of art, and wonderful food.
Sign up for virtual info-sessions here: https://law.shu.edu/prospectivestudents/visit.cfm
Facilities
The Peter W. Rodino Law Library Center for Information and Technology:
The Peter W. Rodino Law Library Center for Information and Technology brings together library and information technology professionals, providing a streamlined research experience for our students. The facility is open from 6 a.m. to midnight each day, providing seating and study space for nearly 600 students.
Center for Social Justice:
The Center for Social Justice at Seton Hall Law School is one of the nation's strongest pro bono and clinical programs. The CSJ empowers students to gain critical, hands-on experience by providing pro bono legal services for economically disadvantaged residents in the region.
Assistant Dean for J.D. and Graduate Admissions
Newark, NJ 07102