- 1. What Is CLAT PG
- 2. Who Should Consider This Exam
- 3. Courses Accessible Through CLAT PG
- 4. Colleges and Universities Accepting CLAT PG
- 5. Exam Pattern and Structure
- 6. Syllabus Explained for Beginners
- 7. Eligibility Criteria
- 8. Application Process (Step-by-Step)
- 9. Official Exam Portal and Important Links
- 10. Preparation Timeline and Strategy
- 11. Cut-Offs, Ranks, and Admission Reality
- 12. Cost vs Outcome Analysis (For Parents)
- 13. Common Myths and Misconceptions
- 14. Final Evaluation: Is PG Worth It
1. What Is CLAT PG
CLAT PG stands for Common Law Admission Test – Postgraduate. It is a national-level entrance examination primarily used for admission to LL.M. (Master of Laws) programmes offered by National Law Universities (NLUs) and a limited number of other institutions in India.
Core identity of the exam
| Parameter | Details |
|---|---|
| Full form | Common Law Admission Test – Postgraduate |
| Conducting authority | Consortium of National Law Universities |
| Primary purpose | Admission to LL.M. programmes |
| Year introduced | 2011 (PG stream introduced after UG CLAT) |
| Exam level | National |
| Frequency | Once a year |
| Mode | Offline (pen-and-paper) |
What CLAT PG is not
- It is not a judiciary examination.
- It is not required to practice law.
- It is not mandatory for most litigation or corporate careers.
PG is an academic gateway, not a professional license.
Explore- Maharashtra National Law University (MNLU), Mumbai
2. Who Should Consider This Exam
PG is a specialised exam. Many law graduates prepare for it without fully understanding whether they actually need it.
5-year LL.B. graduates
Students completing a 5-year integrated law degree who want:
- Academic specialisation
- Teaching or research exposure
- Policy, think-tank, or doctoral pathways
3-year LL.B. graduates
Equally eligible. PG does not differentiate between 5-year and 3-year LL.B. holders.
Career-specific suitability
| Career Orientation | Relevance of CLAT PG |
|---|---|
| Academia / Teaching | High |
| Legal research / policy | High |
| Corporate law firms | Low to moderate |
| Litigation | Low |
| Judiciary preparation | Indirect, optional |
Who should not rely on CLAT PG
- Graduates who want immediate litigation practice
- Students expecting LL.M. to automatically improve placements
- Aspirants with no interest in academic reading or writing
- Candidates unwilling to invest 1 additional year with uncertain ROI
CLAT PG is not a default next step after LL.B.
3. Courses Accessible Through CLAT PG
CLAT PG is primarily an LL.M. entrance exam. Its scope is narrower than CLAT UG.
| Course | Eligibility | Is CLAT PG Mandatory |
|---|---|---|
| LL.M. (1-year / 2-year*) | LL.B. degree | Yes (for most NLUs) |
| Ph.D. (Law) | LL.M. | No |
| 3-year LL.B. | Graduation | No |
| 5-year LL.B. | Class 12 | No |
*Duration depends on university regulations and UGC norms applicable in that academic year.
4. Colleges and Universities Accepting CLAT PG
A. National Law Universities (Primary Users)
Most NLUs use CLAT PG as the sole admission criterion for LL.M.
| Institution | Type | Programme |
|---|---|---|
| National Law School of India University, Bengaluru | NLU | LL.M. |
| NALSAR University of Law, Hyderabad | NLU | LL.M. |
| WBNUJS, Kolkata | NLU | LL.M. |
| NLU Jodhpur | NLU | LL.M. |
| NLU Delhi | NLU | Does not accept CLAT PG |
| Other NLUs (approx. 20+) | NLU | LL.M. |
Seat numbers and specialisations vary annually and must be verified from the official brochure.
B. Non-NLU Institutions
Some universities accept CLAT PG scores optionally, often alongside their own criteria.
| Category | Use of CLAT PG |
|---|---|
| Central universities | Limited / case-specific |
| State universities | Rare |
| Private universities | Optional or merit-based |
There is no uniform rule outside NLUs.
5. Exam Pattern and Structure
Overall structure
| Feature | Details |
|---|---|
| Mode | Offline |
| Duration | 2 hours |
| Total questions | 120 MCQs |
| Total marks | 120 |
| Negative marking | –0.25 per wrong answer |
Sectional structure
CLAT PG does not have multiple aptitude sections. It is subject-centric.
| Component | Nature |
|---|---|
| Core law subjects | Constitutional, Contract, Criminal, etc. |
| Questions | Passage-based + direct |
| Skill tested | Legal understanding and application |
6. Syllabus Explained for Beginners
CLAT PG tests foundational legal knowledge, not advanced research.
Constitutional Law
- Fundamental Rights
- Structure of the Constitution
- Judicial review
Why tested: Core to all Indian legal practice.
Contract, Tort, Criminal Law
- Basic principles
- Case law understanding
Skill focus: Application, not memorisation.
Jurisprudence
- Legal theories
- Schools of thought
Skill focus: Conceptual clarity.
Optional / Variable areas
- Administrative law
- International law
- Property law
Limitation: Weightage varies annually; official syllabus provides broad scope, not exact distribution.
7. Eligibility Criteria
| Requirement | Details |
|---|---|
| Minimum qualification | LL.B. degree |
| Minimum marks | General: 50%, SC/ST: 45% |
| Age limit | None |
| Attempt limit | None |
| Category reservation | As per rules |
Explore- Dharmashastra National Law University (DNLU), Jabalpur
8. Application Process (Step-by-Step)
- Visit the official CLAT portal
- Register using email and mobile number
- Fill academic and personal details
- Upload required documents
- Pay application fee
- Submit and download confirmation
Documents required
- LL.B. marksheets / certificate
- Photograph and signature
- Category certificate (if applicable)
Application fee (indicative)
| Category | Fee |
|---|---|
| General/OBC | ₹4,000 |
| SC/ST/BPL | ₹3,500 |
Common mistakes
- Entering incorrect graduation details
- Uploading provisional certificates incorrectly
- Ignoring NLU preference order
9. Official Exam Portal and Important Links
- Official website: https://consortiumofnlus.ac.in
- Information brochure: Published annually on the same portal
- Application portal: Accessible only through the official website
No third-party platform controls PG admissions.
10. Preparation Timeline and Strategy
Ideal preparation duration
| Candidate Type | Duration |
|---|---|
| Final-year LL.B. student | 6–8 months |
| Graduate with gap | 4–6 months |
| Repeater | 3–4 months |
Self-study vs coaching (objective view)
| Aspect | Self-Study | Coaching |
|---|---|---|
| Cost | Low | High |
| Flexibility | High | Fixed |
| Content depth | Depends on discipline | Structured |
| Outcome | Individual-dependent | Usage-dependent |
Coaching does not compensate for weak fundamentals.
11. Cut-Offs, Ranks, and Admission Reality
Rank vs college reality
| Rank Range | Admission Possibility |
|---|---|
| Top 50–100 | Top NLUs |
| 100–500 | Mid-tier NLUs |
| Beyond 500 | Limited / category-dependent |
Seat limitation reality
- Total LL.M. seats across NLUs are very limited
- Many NLUs offer 10–20 seats per specialisation
Competition is disproportionately high compared to seats.
12. Cost vs Outcome Analysis (For Parents)
Cost side
| Component | Approximate Range |
|---|---|
| Exam + preparation | ₹30,000 – ₹1.5 lakh |
| LL.M. tuition (1 year) | ₹1.5 – ₹3.5 lakh |
| Living expenses | City-dependent |
Outcome reality
- LL.M. does not guarantee placements
- Academic careers require further qualifications
- Corporate salary impact is inconsistent
LL.M. is an investment in depth, not income certainty.
13. Common Myths and Misconceptions
- “LL.M. is mandatory to be a good lawyer” – False
- “CLAT PG rank defines professional success” – False
- “All NLUs provide equal LL.M. outcomes” – False
- “LL.M. guarantees teaching jobs” – False
- “CLAT PG is easier than CLAT UG” – Misleading
Explore- CLAT UG (Common Law Admission Test – Undergraduate)
14. Final Evaluation: Is PG Worth It
CLAT PG benefits most:
- Academically inclined graduates
- Research and policy-oriented students
- Aspirants planning Ph.D. or teaching careers
Keep backup options if:
- You want immediate courtroom practice
- You expect guaranteed placements
- You are financially constrained without clear academic goals
Strategic conclusion
CLAT PG occupies a narrow but important space in India’s legal education ecosystem. It is valuable for specialisation and academic depth, but it is not a universal career accelerator.
The decision should be driven by clear academic intent, not momentum or peer pressure.
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