Legal

Trial Lawyer

The courtroom version most people picture when they think "lawyer." Here's what litigation actually looks like day to day, what it pays across different settings, and what law school doesn't tell you before you sign up for seven years and six figures of debt.

Total Training
7 Years
4-yr undergrad + 3-yr law school
Law School Cost
$120–220K
3 years tuition at most schools
Public Sector Start
$55–80K
Public defender, DA, legal aid
Big Law Associate
$215K+
Major firm first-year salary
Plaintiff Trial Lawyer
Varies widely
Contingency fee — low floor, high ceiling

What Trial Practice Actually Is

A trial lawyer litigates disputes — representing clients in court through the full arc of a case: investigation, pleadings, discovery, motions, settlement negotiations, trial, and sometimes appeal. The reality is that the vast majority of civil cases settle before trial, meaning most litigators spend far more time on depositions, document review, and negotiations than they do in a courtroom.

Actual trial experience — standing before a jury and presenting a case — is increasingly rare in civil practice and comes much faster in criminal prosecution and public defense work. If courtroom time is what you want, criminal practice gets you there faster than big firm civil litigation.

The three very different paths in litigation

Criminal prosecution (DA's office), criminal defense (public defender or private), and civil litigation (plaintiff or defense) are fundamentally different careers with different cultures, compensation, and day-to-day realities. A prosecutor and a plaintiff's personal injury attorney have almost nothing in common except a law degree. Understanding which track interests you before applying to law school matters enormously.

Three Litigation Tracks

Criminal
Prosecutor / Public Defender

The fastest path to actual courtroom trial experience. DAs and public defenders handle high caseloads of real trials early in their careers — often within the first 1–2 years. Pay is modest ($55,000–$85,000 in most markets) but the courtroom experience is unmatched. Many litigators spend 3–5 years in public sector criminal practice before moving to private practice at significantly higher pay.

Civil — Plaintiff
Plaintiff's Trial Attorney

Represent individuals suing corporations, employers, or other defendants — personal injury, medical malpractice, employment discrimination, mass torts. Most plaintiff attorneys work on contingency — no fee unless you win. Income is variable: slow early years followed by potentially significant earnings on successful cases. The top plaintiff trial lawyers earn seven figures annually. The bottom many earn modestly.

Civil — Defense
Defense Litigation (Big Law / Insurance Defense)

Represent corporations, insurance companies, and institutions defending against claims. Big Law associates ($215,000+/year starting) primarily handle defense-side work. Hours are demanding — 60–80 hours per week at major firms. Actual trial time is rare; most cases settle. Insurance defense work pays less ($65,000–$90,000) but offers more manageable hours and earlier courtroom experience.

Federal
Federal Prosecutor / U.S. Attorney's Office

The most competitive litigation positions in the country. AUSA (Assistant U.S. Attorney) positions typically require 3–7 years of prior litigation experience plus strong academic credentials. Handle white-collar crime, drug trafficking, national security, and complex federal cases. Pay is federal GS scale ($80,000–$160,000). Prestige and experience are exceptional.

How to Become a Trial Lawyer — Step by Step

1
Complete a bachelor's degree — any major
Law schools have no undergraduate major requirement. Political science, English, philosophy, and history are common but not required. What matters is GPA (aim for 3.5+) and critical thinking ability. Some pre-law advisors suggest majoring in something that develops writing and argumentation skills. STEM majors who do well are also competitive — especially for patent law or technical litigation.
2
Take and score well on the LSAT
The Law School Admission Test (LSAT) measures logical reasoning, analytical reasoning, and reading comprehension — skills directly relevant to legal practice. It's scored 120–180; median accepted student at top-14 schools scores 170+. LSAT preparation takes 3–6 months of serious study. Unlike the MCAT, the LSAT has no science content — it's entirely logic and reading.
3
Attend law school — 3 years
1L (first year) covers core doctrine: contracts, torts, civil procedure, constitutional law, criminal law, property, and legal writing. It's academically demanding and heavily curved — class rank in 1L significantly affects summer internship and job prospects. 2L and 3L allow specialization, clinics, moot court, law review, and practical experience.
4
Secure a law clerk, internship, or associate position
Summer associate positions at law firms (often during 2L summer) frequently convert to associate offers. Judicial clerkships — working for a federal or state judge after graduation — are prestigious, highly competitive, and excellent preparation for litigation careers. Public sector positions (DA, public defender) are competitive but more accessible than federal clerkships.
5
Pass the bar exam
The bar exam is a 2-day standardized exam required for licensure in every state. Most states use the Uniform Bar Exam (UBE), which is portable to other UBE states. Preparation takes 8–10 weeks of full-time study with commercial bar prep courses (Barbri, Themis). Pass rates vary by state — California has historically been the most difficult. You cannot practice law without passing the bar.
6
Build trial experience deliberately
If you want actual trial experience — not just litigation work — choose your first employer accordingly. Public defender and prosecutor offices provide real trials fast. Big Law provides excellent training, strong pay, and brand name recognition, but actual courtroom time may be years away. Be deliberate about this tradeoff when you accept your first position.

What It Costs

The debt reality

Private law school tuition (3 years): $150,000–$220,000
Public law school, in-state (3 years): $60,000–$120,000
Living expenses during law school: $45,000–$75,000
Average law school debt at graduation: ~$130,000

Loan Repayment Assistance Programs (LRAP) at many law schools help graduates in public interest work manage debt. Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF) applies to public sector attorneys — prosecutors, public defenders, and legal aid attorneys who make 10 years of qualifying payments can have remaining federal balances forgiven.

What You Can Earn

Pay by practice setting

Public Defender / Prosecutor (starting): $55,000–$80,000
Insurance Defense (starting): $65,000–$90,000
Mid-size firm litigation associate: $90,000–$150,000
Big Law associate (years 1–3): $215,000–$235,000
Big Law partner: $500,000–$5,000,000+
Plaintiff trial lawyer (contingency): Highly variable — $60,000–$1,000,000+

Law has a bimodal salary distribution — a large cluster around $70,000–$90,000 and a smaller cluster at $215,000+ (Big Law). The middle is thin. Understanding where you're likely to land based on your law school's employment outcomes is critical before committing to law school debt.

Who It's Right For

Good fit if you...
  • Genuinely enjoy argument, research, and constructing logical cases
  • Can write clearly and persuasively under pressure
  • Have the academic ability for competitive law school admission
  • Understand the debt load and have a realistic plan to manage it
  • Are drawn to advocacy — representing a client's interests as your primary job
  • Have shadowed or worked with attorneys and confirmed the day-to-day work appeals to you
Think carefully if you...
  • Are going to law school because you don't know what else to do — debt without direction is dangerous
  • Expect to be in a courtroom immediately — most attorneys never see a courtroom in their careers
  • Aren't prepared for the reality that most legal work is writing and research, not argument
  • Are attending a lower-ranked school and expecting Big Law outcomes — school ranking heavily affects employment

What Most People Get Wrong

Common assumption
"Most lawyers spend their time in court."
The overwhelming majority of legal work is research, writing, document review, negotiation, and client communication — not courtroom argument. Many attorneys at large firms never appear in court at all. If courtroom practice is what draws you to law, criminal practice (prosecution or defense) gets you there far faster than most civil litigation paths.
Common assumption
"All lawyers make great money."
Legal salaries are highly bimodal. A significant percentage of law graduates earn $65,000–$85,000 — meaningful but modest relative to $130,000+ in average law school debt. Big Law salaries ($215,000+) are real but go to a small minority of graduates at top schools. Research your specific law school's employment outcomes — not national averages — before deciding.
Common assumption
"Law school rank doesn't matter that much."
For Big Law, federal clerkships, and top government positions, school rank matters significantly. Most Big Law firms recruit almost exclusively from the top 14 law schools (T14) and occasionally from strong regional schools. For public sector and local practice, regional school reputation matters more than national ranking. Be clear about your goals before choosing where to attend — and where you're likely to be admitted.
Common assumption
"You can decide what kind of lawyer to be after law school."
The decisions that shape your legal career happen during law school — the clinics you join, the summer associate positions you take, the journals you join, the classes you take. Waiting until after graduation to figure out your practice area puts you behind peers who have been deliberately building toward a specialty since 1L. Have a direction before you enroll.

Common Questions

What is Big Law and do I need it? +
Big Law refers to large national law firms (typically 500+ attorneys) that pay associates on the Cravath scale — currently $215,000–$235,000 for first-year associates. These positions are extremely competitive, concentrated at T14 graduates, and come with demanding hours (2,000+ billable hours per year). Big Law is not the only path to a successful legal career — it is one path, with specific tradeoffs. Many excellent litigators never work at a large firm.
Should I start at a DA's office or public defender for trial experience? +
Both are excellent for real trial experience. DA's offices typically offer more structured training and slightly higher starting salaries in many markets. Public defender offices often have higher caseloads, giving even faster trial exposure. The choice depends on which side of criminal law interests you — prosecution or defense. Both are respected starting points that open doors to private criminal defense practice, civil litigation, and other legal careers.
What is a judicial clerkship and should I pursue one? +
A judicial clerkship is a 1–2 year position working directly for a judge — researching legal issues, drafting opinions, and observing proceedings. Federal clerkships (especially circuit and Supreme Court) are among the most prestigious credentials in the legal profession and open doors at Big Law, DOJ, and academia. State court clerkships are less competitive but still valuable. If you're in the top 10% of your class at a strong law school, clerkship applications are worth pursuing seriously.
Is there a faster path to practicing law than 7 years? +
California allows "reading the law" — apprenticing under a licensed attorney without attending law school — but this path is extremely rare, difficult, and has poor bar passage rates. A handful of online law schools offer lower-cost JD programs, though graduates face limited employment options. Accelerated 3+3 programs (3 years undergrad + 3 years law school) exist at some universities but are uncommon. For most practical purposes, 7 years is the standard path.

Next Steps

1
Shadow or intern with a practicing attorney before applying to law school
Seeing what legal work actually looks like day-to-day — document review, client calls, depositions — confirms or disconfirms whether it's right for you. Do this before taking on law school debt.
2
Start LSAT preparation 6 months before your target test date
The LSAT is a learnable, coachable exam. Khan Academy offers free LSAT prep in partnership with LSAC. Prep courses (PowerScore, 7Sage, Blueprint) provide structured preparation. Your LSAT score has an outsized impact on admissions — treat it seriously.
3
Research employment outcomes at specific schools — not law school generally
Law School Transparency (lawschooltransparency.com) publishes detailed employment outcome data for every law school. Look at where graduates actually end up, what they earn, and what percentage pass the bar. This data should drive your law school list.
4
Consider the debt-to-income ratio of your specific school and likely career path
If you're attending a school where median graduate salary is $70,000 and you're taking on $150,000 in debt, model out what that repayment looks like. The decision to attend law school should be a financial analysis, not just an aspiration.
Last updated: April 2026