Indiana University Maurer School of Law—Bloomington
The information on this page was provided by the law school.
Official Guide to ABA-Approved JD Programs
One of the nation’s oldest public law schools located in the heart of the Midwest, the Indiana University Maurer School of Law, offers an exceptional legal education in a supportive and collegial community. The school distinguishes itself with its global outlook, its deep commitment to public service and the local community, and its outstanding faculty and staff committed to our students and to advancing knowledge. The school is a charter member of the Association of American Law Schools, accredited by the American Bar Association, and a member of the Big 10 Academic Alliance.
Known for its academic rigor, the law school recruits and then launches the professional careers of some of the nation’s most promising students. The student body of about 500 is small, collegial and maintains a distinctive sense of community. Because of the law school’s national reputation and geographically diverse alumni network, career opportunities are available throughout the United States. Typically, around 60 percent of the incoming JD class comes from outside Indiana, and around 60-65 percent of graduates find jobs outside the state. At any given time, students from 20-25 countries are represented in the Graduate Legal Studies Program, and the law school has one of the longest-standing LLM programs in the United States, who interact and engage with JD students on a daily basis.
The school’s presence on the university’s flagship Bloomington campus enables students to take advantage of the academic and cultural resources of one of the nation’s leading teaching and research universities. The law school’s connections with IU Bloomington’s other schools— including the O’Neil School of Public and Environmental Affairs, the Kelley School of Business, the Luddy School of Informatics, Computing, and Engineering, and the Hamilton Lugar School of Global and International Studies, to name just a few—provide interdisciplinary and joint degree opportunities that few other schools can offer.
The law school has been a leader in innovative approaches to ensuring students succeed. Toward that end, upper-class mentors are assigned to each student to help them through their first year. A unique Practice/Peer Group Advisor Program provides exceptional support. The school’s award-winning Legal Profession courses (Legal Profession I and II) ensures that each student—whether they are from a family of lawyers or the first in their family to attend college—are positioned to succeed and understand the changing nature of the legal profession. Programs like the Stewart Global Fellows Program, the Rural Justice Initiative, the Bradley Fellows in Criminal Law and Procedure, the Summer Public Service Program, the Family Office Program, and summer externship programs in Washington, DC, New York, and Miami provides JD students with unique networking, job, and summer funding opportunities.
In addition to a well-rounded general legal education, the school offers many specialized areas of focus and opportunities to work closely with faculty who are pre-eminent in their fields. The law school offers programs in business/corporate law, civil rights, constitutional design, criminal justice, environmental law and conservation, information privacy and cybersecurity, intellectual property, international law, law and technology, and tax law and policy, among others. Live-client clinics, clinical practica, and pro bono projects, provide students not only exceptional experiential learning opportunities with live clients, but also ways to help low-income families, the poor, the elderly, and other underrepresented groups. Co-curricular opportunities are extensive, including five student-run journals; moot court, mock trial, negotiation, transnational drafting; and more than 30 student organizations. Four research centers of excellence provide other upper-division programs, speakers series, and community outreach initiatives. Other opportunities include a Semester in DC Program, as well as an array of semester exchange and joint degree programs with top law schools throughout the world.
The JD Program
As one of the nation’s leading public law schools, the Maurer School’s curriculum is strong in a range of fields with extensive offerings. The law school’s curriculum combines traditional doctrinal and analytical study with experiential learning and development of new approaches aimed at professional competencies. The school also emphasizes interdisciplinary opportunities and global experiences. The Law School provides students with unmatched opportunities to engage with world-recognized faculty, while gaining real-world lawyering experience by participating in clinics, practica, pro bono projects, externships, and simulations.
The Right Start: Our innovative approach begins in the first year. First-year students take the usual introductory courses, along with a rigorous legal writing and research program, and two courses on the legal profession. Unlike other legal ethics courses, the law school’s legal profession courses (Legal Profession I and II) teach the law of lawyering in context— by examining practice settings, law firm norms, and nondoctrinal skills that all successful lawyers need. In the Legal Profession I course, students meet with Career Services Office professionals, so that all students have a resume, cover letter, and other materials necessary to apply for summer jobs soon after beginning law school. A range of practitioners visit the school and talk about their careers and professional experiences, providing insight into the broad way alumni use their law degrees. From day one at Orientation, the school’s distinctive, community-supportive approach is evident.
Exceptional Experiential Opportunities: After the first year, students complement classroom study with a variety of clinics, externships, and skill-building courses. The school offers several live-client clinics, including the Community Legal Clinic, Conservation Law Clinic, Elmore Entrepreneurship Law Clinic, Intellectual Property Law Clinic, and the Viola J. Taliaferro Children and Mediation Clinic, in addition to several clinical practicums focused on Habeas Litigation, Student Legal Services, and practica related to law and film and music. The school also offers an Access to Justice pro bono program, which brings students and faculty together in alliances with public service agencies. Students take part in several projects, including immigration, protective orders, LGBTQ+ issues, incarcerated individuals legal assistance, wills assistance, and income tax preparation. In a typical year, more than 1,000 members of the Bloomington community are helped through real-life legal assistance from Indiana Law students.
The school also offers numerous externships—hands-on, on-site experiences offered for credit in various public- interest settings, including attorneys general, judges, legal services organizations, prosecutors, and other professionals. For third-year students, full-semester, onsite externships with public interest and public sector employers take place in Washington, DC. The full- semester externships are accompanied by a course on lawyering in the public interest. The school also offers skill- building courses in simulated environments, including litigation, estate planning, and negotiations. Summer externship programs are also run in Miami, New York, and Washington, D.C.
Collaborative Research and Emerging Areas: Upper-class students can also take advantage of research opportunities in the law school’s research centers, working with professors on timely, important issues such as constitutional democracy in post-conflict nations; cybersecurity and information privacy; the global legal profession; law, society and culture; and intellectual property. The research centers are internationally known and respected for their impact, and the inclusion of students in their work fortifies the school’s holistic approach toward its students’ professional competency. An extensive upper-division curriculum enables students to not only take foundation courses for subjects covered on the bar exam, but offerings on many of emerging areas of law and the most cutting-edge issues involving law and policy. Lawyers need to understand the basics and foundations of how social, political, technological, and environmental factors can affect the law, and the law school’s curriculum ensures that happens.
Wintersession: At no additional cost, second- and third-year students may participate in a Wintersession, an intensive one-week course offered just before the spring semester. Courses are focused on practical, hands-on subjects , such as depositions, ethics, pretrial litigation, and business operations.

Student Life
Career Placement and Bar Passage
Tuition and Aid
Expense | Cost |
---|---|
Tuition |
$36,750.00
|
Fees |
$1,435.00
|
Expected Cost of Attendance |
$62,053.00
|
Admission Decisions: Beyond the Numbers
Generally, the quality and size of the applicant pool forces the Admissions Committee to rely heavily on the undergraduate grade-point average and the LSAT score. However, numerical indicators are not the only considerations used in evaluating applications. The committee considers the quality of the applicant’s undergraduate institution; level and rigor of coursework; letters of recommendation (particularly those from faculty); graduate work; employment during and after college; extracurricular activities; potential for service to the profession; educational, geographic, and socioeconomic diversity; and personal statement. Applicants are encouraged to explain matters that may have adversely affected their undergraduate performance. Applicants who feel they have been disadvantaged because of economic, educational, racial, or cultural factors are urged to bring this to the attention of the Admissions Committee.
Transfer Students
Indiana Law welcomes transfer applications from students who have successfully completed at least 24 units at an ABA-accredited law school. While transfer applicants are required to submit their undergraduate record and LSAT scores, the Admissions Committee places particular importance on the performance in law school, letters of recommendation, and reasons for transferring when making admission decisions.