Legal

Paralegal

Do meaningful legal work — research, drafting, case preparation, and client contact — without law school. A 2-year program gets you into the legal field fast, with real career advancement and a clear path to specialization.

Training Time
1–2 Years
Certificate or associate's degree
Program Cost
$5–20K
Community college programs
Entry-Level Pay
$40–52K
National median starting range
Experienced / Specialty
$65–90K+
Corporate, IP, litigation support
Big Law Paralegal
$80–120K+
Major markets, senior roles

What the Job Actually Is

Paralegals perform substantive legal work under the supervision of an attorney — but cannot give legal advice, represent clients in court, or set fees. Within those boundaries, the work is genuine and often complex: legal research, drafting documents and correspondence, managing case files, coordinating discovery, interviewing clients and witnesses, preparing for trial, and tracking deadlines across complex matters.

The job varies significantly by practice area and employer. A litigation paralegal at a large firm spends a lot of time on discovery — organizing documents, managing databases, and coordinating with opposing counsel. A corporate paralegal handles entity formation, contract management, and regulatory filings. A real estate paralegal coordinates closings, title searches, and mortgage documents. The specialty shapes the day-to-day more than the "paralegal" title does.

One of the most accessible legal careers — and one of the most overlooked

Most people who want to work in law think the only path is law school. Paralegal work is substantive, well-paid (especially in major markets and corporate settings), and achievable in 1–2 years at community college cost. Senior paralegals at Big Law firms in New York and Los Angeles routinely earn $90,000–$120,000+. It's a career in its own right — not just a stepping stone.

Paralegal Specialties and What They Pay

Corporate
Corporate / Transactional Paralegal
Support corporate attorneys on mergers, acquisitions, entity formation, shareholder agreements, and securities filings. Document-heavy, deadline-driven, and well-compensated. In-house corporate roles at major companies are particularly strong.
Pay: $60,000–$100,000+ in major markets
Litigation
Litigation Support Paralegal
Manage discovery, coordinate document review, prepare trial exhibits, and support attorneys through the full lifecycle of civil litigation. eDiscovery skills (Relativity, Concordance) significantly increase earning potential in this specialty.
Pay: $50,000–$85,000; eDiscovery specialists higher
Intellectual Property
IP / Patent Paralegal
Manage patent and trademark prosecution — filing applications, tracking deadlines, responding to office actions, and maintaining IP portfolios. Technical background (STEM degree or experience) is a significant advantage and commands premium pay.
Pay: $65,000–$100,000+; STEM background adds $10–20K
Real Estate
Real Estate Paralegal
Coordinate residential and commercial closings, conduct title searches, prepare deed and mortgage documents, and manage escrow. High-volume closing firms provide fast skill-building. In-house roles at developers and REITs are also common.
Pay: $48,000–$75,000; commercial real estate higher
Immigration
Immigration Paralegal
Prepare visa petitions, green card applications, naturalization filings, and deportation defense documents. High volume, client-facing work. Strong demand in markets with large immigrant populations.
Pay: $42,000–$68,000; nonprofit and private firm vary significantly
Criminal
Criminal Defense Paralegal
Support defense attorneys with case investigation, witness coordination, evidence organization, and trial preparation. Work at public defender offices, private criminal defense firms, and prosecutor offices. Meaningful work with direct impact on clients.
Pay: $40,000–$65,000; public sector lower, private higher

How to Become a Paralegal — Step by Step

1
Choose your program — certificate, associate's, or bachelor's
Three levels of paralegal education exist. A paralegal certificate (6–12 months) is for people with an existing bachelor's degree entering the field. An associate's degree in paralegal studies (2 years at community college, $5,000–$15,000) is the most common entry path for those without a degree. A bachelor's in paralegal studies provides the broadest credentials but costs more. ABA-approved programs are preferred by most large firm employers.
2
Complete your paralegal program
Core coursework covers legal research and writing, civil litigation procedure, contracts, torts, criminal law, real property, and legal ethics. Many programs include an internship component — valuable for building your first legal employer relationship. Strong legal writing skills are the single most important output of paralegal training.
3
Consider professional certification (optional but valuable)
The Certified Paralegal (CP) credential from NALA (National Association of Legal Assistants) and the Registered Paralegal (RP) from NFPA are the two primary certifications. Neither is required for employment, but both signal commitment to the profession and are valued by larger firms. The CP exam requires education + experience; preparation takes several months.
4
Get your first position and choose a specialty
Entry-level paralegal positions are available at law firms of all sizes, corporations, government agencies, and nonprofit legal organizations. Your first position doesn't lock you in — paralegals move between specialties with experience. Starting at a small general practice firm gives broad exposure; starting at a large firm in a specific department gives deeper specialty training faster.
5
Build specialty expertise and advance
Advancement in paralegal careers comes through specialization, seniority, and technology skills. Senior paralegals manage junior staff, supervise projects, and handle more complex matters. In large firms, senior paralegal and paralegal manager roles carry significant responsibility and compensation. eDiscovery specialists and IP paralegals command the highest market rates.

What It Costs

Cost by program type

Certificate program (post-bachelor's): $3,000–$12,000
Associate's degree at community college: $5,000–$15,000
Bachelor's degree in paralegal studies: $40,000–$80,000
CP or RP certification exam: $250–$500

The associate's path offers the best cost-to-entry ratio for most people. A $10,000 community college program leading to a $48,000 starting salary — with a clear path to $80,000+ in 5–7 years of experience in a good specialty — represents one of the strongest return-on-education ratios in any legal career.

Who It's Right For

Good fit if you...
  • Want to work in law without committing 7 years and $130,000+ to law school
  • Are detail-oriented, organized, and a strong writer
  • Are interested in legal work as a long-term career — not just a path to law school
  • Want to enter the workforce quickly with a clear, accessible training path
  • Have a STEM background interested in IP or patent work — high demand and premium pay
Think carefully if you...
  • Want to give legal advice or represent clients directly — only attorneys can do this
  • Are using paralegal work purely as a "safe" plan while hoping for law school — be honest about your goals
  • Expect courtroom work — most paralegal roles are office-based research and document work
  • Are in a small market — paralegal salaries vary significantly by geography

What Most People Get Wrong

Common assumption
"Paralegal is just a stepping stone to law school."
Many paralegals build 20–30 year careers in the field with no interest in law school — and earn very well doing it. Senior paralegals at major firms, eDiscovery specialists, and corporate paralegals at Fortune 500 companies are respected professionals with substantive careers. Treating paralegal work as inherently temporary undersells what is a real and rewarding profession.
Common assumption
"Paralegals and legal assistants are the same thing."
They're related but distinct. Legal assistants (also called legal secretaries) primarily handle administrative tasks — scheduling, correspondence, filing, and clerical support. Paralegals perform substantive legal work — research, drafting, case preparation. The distinction matters for pay, career trajectory, and the nature of the work. Job postings sometimes blur the titles; clarify the actual duties before accepting a position.
Common assumption
"You need a bachelor's degree to become a paralegal."
An ABA-approved associate's degree or certificate program is sufficient for entry-level paralegal employment at most firms, including large ones. A bachelor's is preferred by some employers and helps with advancement, but it is not a universal requirement. Many successful senior paralegals entered the field with an associate's degree and built from there.

Common Questions

What is an ABA-approved paralegal program? +
The American Bar Association approves paralegal education programs that meet its curriculum and faculty standards. ABA-approved programs are recognized by most large law firms and corporate employers as the preferred credential. A list of approved programs is available on the ABA's website. Non-ABA programs aren't disqualifying — many produce good paralegals — but ABA approval is the recognized quality standard for the field.
Can paralegals work independently or start their own businesses? +
Paralegals must work under attorney supervision and cannot provide legal services directly to the public — doing so constitutes unauthorized practice of law. However, some states allow "legal document preparers" or "legal document assistants" who prepare legal forms for self-represented parties without giving legal advice. This is a separate designation with its own rules. Freelance paralegals (contracting to multiple law firms) are common and growing.
Do eDiscovery skills actually make a difference in pay? +
Significantly. eDiscovery — managing electronic evidence in litigation using platforms like Relativity, Concordance, and Everlaw — is a specialized technical skill in high demand at large firms and litigation support companies. Paralegals with strong eDiscovery credentials routinely earn $10,000–$25,000 more than generalist litigation paralegals in the same market. Relativity certification in particular is a recognized credential that translates directly to higher compensation.

Next Steps

1
Find ABA-approved programs in your area
Visit americanbar.org/groups/paralegals for the list of ABA-approved programs. Community college programs are typically the most affordable. Compare curricula and internship opportunities.
2
Decide which specialty interests you before you start
Choosing a direction early helps you target electives, internships, and first job applications. Corporate and IP paralegals earn the most; criminal defense and immigration offer the most meaningful work with modest pay in some markets.
3
Learn a legal research platform during your program
Westlaw and LexisNexis are the two primary legal research databases. Most paralegal programs include access during training. Proficiency in both — plus document management systems like iManage — makes you a stronger hire.
4
Join NALA or NFPA as a student member
The National Association of Legal Assistants (nala.org) and the National Federation of Paralegal Associations (paralegals.org) offer student memberships, job boards, networking events, and certification resources. Both are worth joining before graduation.
Last updated: April 2026