Emory Law is located in Gambrell Hall, part of Emory’s 630-acre (2.5km2) campus in the Druid Hills neighborhood, six miles (10km) northeast of downtown Atlanta.
Gambrell Hall
Gambrell Hall contains classrooms, faculty offices, administrative offices, student-organization offices, and a 325-seat auditorium. The school provides wireless Internet access throughout its facilities. Gambrell Hall also houses a courtroom.[7]
Hugh F. MacMillan Library
Emory's five-story Hugh F. MacMillan Law Library opened in August 1995. The library is situated adjacent to Gambrell Hall and includes access to over 400,000 volumes and more than 4,000 serials subscriptions.[8]
Admissions and academics
Admissions
Admissions for Emory Law is selective. For the JD class entering in the fall of 2023, 40.87% of applicants were accepted with 19.53% of those accepted enrolling. The 25th and 75th LSAT percentiles for the Class of 2026 were 161 and 168, respectively, with a median of 166. The 25th and 75th undergraduate GPA percentiles were 3.62 and 3.93, respectively, with a median of 3.82.[9]
Nearly half of Emory Law students are women, and about 32% are from underrepresented ethnic groups. Approximately 60% of students come from outside the Southeastern U.S.[10]
Rankings
Emory Law is ranked 38th (tied) among ABA-approved law schools in the 2025 rankings by U.S. News & World Report. In the 2024 Above the Law (website) Top 50 Law School rankings, Emory Law is ranked 24th among ABA-approved law schools.[11]
Emory Law also offers joint-degree programs through cooperation with the Goizueta Business School (JD/MBA and JM/MBA), the Candler School of Theology (JD/MTS and JD/M.Div.), the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences (JD/Ph.D.), the Rollins School of Public Health (JD/MPH), the Emory Center for Ethics (JD/MA in bioethics), and joint JD and Master of Laws degree (JD/LLM) through Emory University School of Law.
LLM Programs
In partnership with Central European University, Emory also provides an LLM program for students with a U.S. law degree seeking advanced training in international commercial law and international politics. Emory also has a separate LLM program for qualified foreign professionals seeking training in international and comparative law.
Master of Legal Studies (MLS) Program
Emory Law's Master of Legal Studies degree is a 30-credit hour program that is intended to supplement a student's interest or professional experience in allied fields to law. The program offers a range of customized concentrations to allow students to enhance their skills in their home profession or interest area through a greater understanding of the law, legal concepts and frameworks. The coursework can be completed either full-time in nine months or part-time in up to four years.
Clinics and programs
Students' expertise is developed through several clinics and programs. Emory Law also offers several summer study abroad programs in Budapest at the Central European University (CEU) and throughout the world.[12]
Academic programs
A team from Emory Law's TI:GER IP/patent/technology program, a collaborative program between Emory and Georgia Tech, was featured on CNN Money.[13]
Other academic programs at Emory Law include:
The law school has an externship program. Students have the opportunity to experience what it's like to work in a public defender or prosecutor's office, government agency, nonprofit organization, judge's chambers, or in-house counsel's office in the Atlanta metro area.
Publications
Emory Law Journal, which hosts the annual Randolph W. Thrower Symposium.
Emory Bankruptcy Developments Journal, the only national bankruptcy journal edited and produced entirely by law students, which hosts an annual banquet.[17]
Emory Corporate Governance and Accountability Review, a law journal focusing on corporate law and compliance issues.
Emory International Law Review, which publishes articles on topics ranging from human rights to international intellectual property issues.[18]
Journal of Law and Religion, a peer-reviewed, interdisciplinary journal edited by the Center for the Study of Law and Religion, with student participation, and published in collaboration with Cambridge University Press
Emory Law journal articles are accessible online through its Open Access institutional repository, Emory Law Scholarly Commons[19]
Employment
According to Emory's official 2023 ABA-required disclosures, 89.1% of the Class of 2023 obtained full-time, long-term, JD-required, non-school funded employment (i.e. as attorneys) nine months after graduation.[20] Emory's Law School Transparency under-employment score is 4.7%, indicating the percentage of the Class of 2023 unemployed, pursuing an additional degree, or working in a non-professional, short-term, or part-time job nine months after graduation.[21]
Costs
The total cost of attendance (indicating the cost of tuition, fees, and living expenses) at Emory for the 2023–2024 academic year is $96,884.[22]
Notable alumni
This section is missing information about the kind of degree and date granted usually supplied for alumni. Please expand the section to include this information. Further details may exist on the talk page.(January 2024)
↑Emory Law News Center (October 20, 2020). "Emory Law launches Scholarly Commons". Emory University Law in Action. Archived from the original on November 28, 2022. Retrieved January 20, 2023.