CLAT 2025

CLAT 2025 to be conducted on December 1 by NLUS - Know eligibility, syllabus, exam pattern

Our Correspondent
Our Correspondent
Posted on 28 May 2024
18:11 PM
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Summary
Through this exam, eligible students will be selected for admission to various National Law Universities in LLB and LLM courses across the country
The examination will be held throughout the country at various examination centres from 2 PM to 4 PM on December 1

The Common Law Admission Test (CLAT), 2025 will be conducted by the Consortium of National Law Universities (NLUS) on December 1. The examination will be held throughout the country at various examination centres from 2 PM to 4 PM.

Through this exam, eligible students will be selected for admission to various National Law Universities in LLB and LLM courses across the country.

Eligibility

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To appear in the UG exam, candidates must have obtained 45 percent marks in the 10+2 or an equivalent examination.

Candidates belonging to SC/ST categories must have obtained 40 percent marks.

For the PG entrance exam, candidates must have qualified an LLB degree programme with at least 50 percent marks in the examination.

Candidates belonging to SC/ST categories will have the secure at least 45 percent marks in the exam.

Syllabus

The undergraduate entrance exam will comprise of questions on English Language, current affirs including general knowledge, Legal Reasoning, Logical Reasoning and Quantitative Techniques,

The post graduate entrance exam will consist of Constitutional Law, Jurisprudence, Administrative Law, Law of Contract, Torts, Family Law, Criminal Law, Property Law, Company Law, Public International Law, Tax Law, Environmental Law, and Labour & Industrial Law.

Exam Pattern

For UG, students will be provided an exam duration of 2 hours for a maximum 120 marks and a negative marks of 0.25 for every wrong answer.

For PG, the exam will be of 2 hours duration with a total 120 marks. Students will have to answer a total of 120 questions with a negative marking of 0.25 for every wrong answer.

Last updated on 29 May 2024
21:55 PM
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