US Bar Exam Flashcards
State bar exam prep resources with jurisdiction guides, practice questions, flashcards, and coverage for core legal subjects, essays, performance tests, and professional responsibility.. Build active recall with mapped term-definition sets, then move into the matching free practice questions and study guides.
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Flashcard sets
150
Term-definition cards
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Related exam IDs
Free US Bar flashcard sets
Open the exact exam set first. Each flashcard page keeps the term, definition, topic, and AI explanation together.
California Bar Flashcards
Covers contracts, torts, constitutional law, criminal law, evidence, civil procedure, real property, community property, and professional responsibility for California attorney licensure.
FL Bar Flashcards
Covers the MBE's 7 national subjects plus Florida-specific civil procedure, evidence, torts, family law, wills/trusts, business entities, and professional responsibility.
MPRE Flashcards
Covers all 12 NCBE-weighted MPRE subject areas — ABA Model Rules on conflicts of interest, confidentiality, and the client-lawyer relationship, plus the Model Code of Judicial Conduct — with original recall prompts, not rewritten quiz questions.
Related free exam resources
Use flashcards for recall, then continue into matching practice questions, study guides, videos, glossary terms, and comparisons.
US Bar flashcard FAQ
What should I study first for US Bar?
Start with the flashcard set that matches your exact exam, then review the shared concepts across this family. This page includes 150 flashcards across 3 sets, including California Bar Exam, Florida Bar Exam, MPRE Multistate Professional Responsibility Exam.
Do US Bar flashcards replace a study guide?
No. Flashcards are best for active recall of terms and definitions. Use the matching study guide for full explanations and the practice questions to test application under exam-style conditions.
Why are multiple US Bar exams grouped together?
OpenExamPrep groups related credentials by taxonomy family so candidates can compare closely related exams and reuse shared vocabulary without browsing unrelated domains.
How often should I review US Bar flashcards?
Short daily sessions usually work better than cramming. Review missed cards more often, then use practice questions to confirm whether the definition is strong enough to recognize in a realistic exam item.


