Every year a steady stream of Argentine law graduates and practising abogados and abogadas turn their attention to the United States. The motivations are familiar from Buenos Aires to Cordoba and Mendoza: a vast legal market, international firms, cross-border work linking Latin America and the US, arbitration and energy mandates, and the chance to build a global career. The encouraging news is that the door is genuinely open to foreign-trained lawyers, and there is more than one way through it. The candid news is that the routes are long, costly, and governed by rules that change from one US state to the next. This guide maps every path, from full licensure to limited licences, under the rules in force in 2026, and flags which ones realistically work for someone trained in Argentina.
Quick disclaimer: this is general career information, not legal or immigration advice. Bar admission and visa rules change often and vary from state to state, so always confirm the current requirements directly with the relevant state board of law examiners and a licensed immigration attorney before you commit money or time.
This article is general information only and is not legal or immigration advice; rules vary by state and change, so verify everything with the relevant state board of law examiners and a licensed immigration attorney.
First, the big picture
The United States licenses lawyers state by state. There are more than 50 separate jurisdictions (the 50 states plus Washington, D.C. and several territories), and each one sets its own rules. There is no single national bar exam, and a lawyer admitted in New York is not automatically allowed to practise in California.
"Becoming a lawyer" in America can also mean different things. It can mean full admission as an attorney (you can represent clients and appear in court), or a limited licence (you can do certain legal work but not everything). A complete picture has eight routes:
- Full admission: (1) a full US JD, (2) a foreign degree plus an LLM and then the bar exam, (3) sitting a bar exam directly as an already-admitted foreign lawyer, and (4) admission "on motion" without an exam.
- Limited licence: (5) Foreign Legal Consultant, (6) registered in-house counsel, (7) the USPTO patent bar, and (8) pro hac vice (temporary).
We will go through all eight, then cover the steps every bar route shares, how to spread to more states later, the visa reality, and the cost.
Why an Argentine degree faces an extra hurdle
Argentina follows a civil-law tradition, and this single fact is the key hurdle for US admission. In Argentina a lawyer is an abogado (or abogada), and the qualifying credential is the Titulo de Abogado, earned through the undergraduate Abogacia program of roughly five years and around 3,000 hours at a recognised national or provincial university. At public universities such as the University of Buenos Aires, entry is often through the Ciclo Basico Comun. To practise you then complete matriculacion (registration) with a Colegio Publico de Abogados; each province runs its own bar, for example the Colegio Publico de Abogados de la Capital Federal (CPACF) in Buenos Aires, with national ethics norms coordinated by the Federacion Argentina de Colegios de Abogados (FACA).
The US uses the common-law system. When a state evaluates your education, it asks whether your degree is long enough (durational equivalence) and close enough in content to a US law degree (substantive equivalence). Because Argentine law is rooted in the civil-law tradition rather than English common law, a civil-law degree usually cannot stand on its own, and credential evaluations openly favour common-law backgrounds. There is a second, practical hurdle: legal training in Argentina is delivered in Spanish, so English is generally not the language of your legal education. That makes certified English translation of your documents, and an English-proficiency test (TOEFL or IELTS) for an LLM, very real obstacles. These facts shape which routes below are realistic for you, and one important consequence follows immediately: the no-exam "admission on motion" route is effectively closed to an Argentine abogado, because it requires a common-law jurisdiction. An already-admitted Argentine abogado, however, can use the California direct route described later.
Route 1: Earn a full US JD (works everywhere)
The most universal route is to enrol in a three-year Juris Doctor at an ABA-accredited US law school, exactly like a domestic student. Finish it and you can sit the bar in any state, with no equivalence problem to solve. It is the most flexible path and the strongest for the US job market, but it is also the longest and the most expensive option, roughly three times the cost of an LLM. Some Argentines with a strong file and reliable funding choose this when they want maximum freedom over where they ultimately practise, or when they intend to spend their whole career inside the United States.
Route 2: Foreign degree + LLM + bar exam (the classic path)
This is the route most foreign lawyers use. You keep your Argentine Titulo de Abogado, add a one-year US Master of Laws (LLM) to "cure" the equivalence gap, then sit a bar exam. More than fifteen states accept foreign-educated applicants, but nearly all of them require the LLM; Texas, Florida and Washington, D.C., for example, require it explicitly. New York is the flagship and the most popular choice in the world for foreign lawyers, so it is the worked example here. It uses three clear sub-steps.
Step A: Request an advance evaluation of eligibility (New York)
Before anything else, ask the New York State Board of Law Examiners to evaluate your eligibility under Rule 520.6. You create an account, obtain an NCBE number, and submit a Request for Foreign Evaluation with authenticated documents and certified English translations of your Titulo de Abogado and transcripts. For an applicant who will need an LLM, a decision can take up to six months, so begin early. The Board advises waiting for the result before paying the US$750 exam application fee, which is non-refundable if you turn out to be ineligible.
Step B: The LLM "cure" (exact rules)
To count toward the New York bar, your LLM must meet strict conditions:
- at least 24 semester credit hours, all in live, in-person classroom courses on a US campus (no distance, online or correspondence credit);
- completed over at least two non-summer semesters of 13 or more weeks each, within 24 months, with no more than four summer credits;
- at least 2 credits in professional responsibility (ethics);
- at least 2 credits in legal research, writing and analysis;
- at least 2 credits introducing the American legal system;
- at least 6 credits in subjects tested on the New York bar exam.
Bar-review courses, independent study and research papers do not count toward the 24 credits, so choose your classes with the bar in mind from day one rather than picking electives that look interesting but earn you nothing toward eligibility.
Step C: Sit the bar exam
New York currently uses the Uniform Bar Examination (UBE), a two-day computer-based test whose score can transfer to other UBE states. Note a major change ahead: New York switches to the new "NextGen" bar exam in July 2028, so anyone sitting in 2026 or 2027 takes the current UBE. Plan your preparation around the exact format on your scheduled exam date.
Route 3: Sit a bar exam directly as an admitted abogado (California)
California is the standout option for one group: Argentines who are already admitted to practise law in Argentina. If you are a licensed abogado or abogada in good standing (matriculated with your Colegio Publico de Abogados), California lets a lawyer admitted in any foreign or US jurisdiction sit the California Bar Examination without additional US legal education. You still need a credential evaluation confirming your foreign admission, but you can skip the LLM entirely. That is the single biggest advantage California offers an Argentine lawyer.
- Hold only an Argentine law degree (not yet admitted)? You must show your degree is equivalent to a US JD (or that it qualifies you to practise in Argentina) and complete one year of US law study at an ABA-approved or California-accredited school, which an LLM can satisfy.
- No first degree in law? You must prove the equivalent of two years of undergraduate study, pass the First-Year Law Students’ Examination (the "Baby Bar"), then complete the required US study.
California runs its own bar exam: it is not a UBE state and is not adopting NextGen, and it is one of the hardest exams in the country. So "no LLM required" does not mean "easy", and you should budget serious preparation time.
Route 4: Admission "on motion", without an exam (mostly closed to civil-law Argentina)
A handful of jurisdictions, including the District of Columbia, Massachusetts, New York and Rhode Island, let some foreign lawyers be admitted "on motion" without sitting a bar exam. The catch is decisive for Argentines: this is reserved for lawyers from common-law jurisdictions who have practised roughly five of the past seven years. Because Argentina is a civil-law country, an Argentine abogado generally cannot use this route directly. It becomes relevant only if you first qualify in a common-law jurisdiction (or in the US) and then build up the required years of practice. It is included here for completeness, but treat it as a later possibility, not a starting point.
Route 5: Foreign Legal Consultant (advise on Argentine law)
If your goal is to advise on Argentine law from within the United States rather than to practise US law, many states license Foreign Legal Consultants (FLCs). You typically must have been admitted and actively practising in Argentina for five of the past seven years, and you register without sitting a bar exam. The limits matter: an FLC may advise only on the law of their home jurisdiction, not on US law, and cannot, for example, prepare US wills or handle US real-estate matters. For a cross-border practice serving Argentine companies expanding into the US and US clients with interests in Argentina, it is an efficient and underused option.
Route 6: Registered in-house counsel (one employer)
Most states let a foreign or out-of-state lawyer register as in-house counsel to work solely for a single employer (a company, not outside clients). You advise that one employer only and generally cannot appear in court or take on other clients, but you do not have to pass the bar to do it. This is the natural route if a multinational with an Argentine presence wants to move you into a US office, and it pairs well with the L-1 intracompany transfer visa described below.
Route 7: The USPTO patent bar (a niche technical route)
Separate from any state bar, the US Patent and Trademark Office runs its own "patent bar". Pass it and you can prepare and prosecute patent applications before the USPTO as a patent agent (or as a patent attorney, if you are also state-admitted), even without a US law degree. Two big caveats for Argentines: you generally need a science or engineering degree to qualify, and as a foreign national you must be residing in the US with work authorisation. Lawful permanent residents may register fully; others who are residing and authorised to work may obtain limited recognition. It is niche, but a genuine path for STEM-trained Argentine lawyers.
Route 8: Pro hac vice (temporary, single case)
For completeness: courts can admit an out-of-jurisdiction lawyer pro hac vice to appear in one specific case, usually alongside locally admitted counsel. This is temporary and case-by-case, not a real licence to set up practice, but it is worth knowing about for one-off matters where you are brought in for your Argentine-law expertise.
Rarely-used routes, for true completeness
Two further paths exist but are impractical for most people abroad. First, four states (California, Vermont, Virginia and Washington) still let you qualify to sit the bar through supervised law office study or an apprenticeship instead of attending law school, but this needs years of supervised work inside the United States (in California you must also pass the First-Year Law Students’ Examination), and pass rates are very low. Second, roles such as military JAG service or US government legal posts are not separate admission routes: they require you to be a licensed US attorney first. They are listed only so you can see the full landscape and not waste time chasing a shortcut that does not exist.
The steps every bar route shares
Whichever exam route you choose, expect these common requirements:
- Credential evaluation: a course-by-course evaluation of your foreign degree, which can take many months and openly favours common-law backgrounds. Start it early.
- The MPRE: the Multistate Professional Responsibility Examination, a separate two-hour, 60-question ethics test, offered three times a year, about US$185 in 2026. It is required in almost every state, including New York and California, and is not replaced by the NextGen exam.
- English and documents: every foreign document needs a certified, authenticated English translation, and LLM programs almost always require proof of English through TOEFL or IELTS. Strong legal English is the quiet factor that decides who actually passes.
- Character and fitness: a background and good-character review before admission.
Spreading to more states once you are admitted
After you pass, your licence can travel. A qualifying UBE score can be transferred to other UBE states, although each sets its own minimum (for example, 270 in Ohio and 260 in Washington), so a score that clears one state may fall short in another. After enough years of US practice you may also qualify for admission on motion in additional states. The sensible play is to get admitted in one strong state first, then expand from there.
The visa reality in 2026
Passing the bar and being allowed to work in the US are two separate problems. Common options:
- F-1 student visa for the LLM or JD years;
- Optional Practical Training (OPT), about 12 months of work after graduation (law is not a STEM field, so the STEM extension does not apply);
- H-1B work visa, capped at 85,000 per year, awarded by lottery, and harder to obtain in the current US climate;
- O-1 visa for individuals with extraordinary ability, with no annual cap but a high evidentiary bar;
- L-1 intracompany transfer, if a multinational employer moves you to a US office (a strong fit with the in-house counsel route).
Many employers are reluctant to sponsor visas, so a strong CV, active networking, and a clear specialism (Latin America practice, international arbitration, energy, agribusiness) make a real difference. If you choose the Foreign Legal Consultant or cross-border path, you may also serve US-linked clients from Argentina without a US visa at all.
Time and money: what to budget
For the LLM route, a realistic timeline from decision to admission is roughly two years: several months for evaluation and applications, a one-year LLM, then bar preparation and the exam. The full JD route adds about two more years. On cost, an LLM typically runs about US$50,000 to US$95,000 in tuition at well-known schools before living expenses; a JD is roughly three times that. Add the New York US$750 application fee, the MPRE fee, a commercial bar-prep course (often US$3,000 to US$4,000), evaluation and translation fees, and visa costs. Arrange your funding before you apply, not after.
Which route fits you?
- Already a matriculated abogado or abogada and want speed: California (sit the bar directly with no LLM), or the Foreign Legal Consultant route if you only need to advise on Argentine law.
- Recent holder of the Titulo de Abogado: the LLM plus the New York bar is the well-trodden path.
- Want maximum freedom over where you practise: a full US JD.
- Moving in-house with a multinational: registered in-house counsel plus an L-1 visa.
- Science or engineering background: consider the USPTO patent bar as an addition.
Your step-by-step roadmap (LLM route)
- Define your goal: full licence, limited licence, or just a credential.
- Choose your state: New York for the LLM path; California if you are already an admitted abogado or abogada.
- Start your credential evaluation early (and, for New York, the advance evaluation of eligibility under Rule 520.6).
- Build your English and sit TOEFL or IELTS.
- Apply to an ABA-approved LLM and choose courses that satisfy the bar rules (ethics, legal writing, introduction to US law, and six bar-subject credits).
- Register for and pass the MPRE.
- Sit the bar exam (the UBE in New York, or the California Bar Examination).
- Complete the skills, pro bono and character-and-fitness requirements.
- Get admitted and sworn in.
- Sort out work authorisation (OPT, then H-1B, O-1 or L-1), or build a cross-border practice based in Argentina.
The bottom line
Becoming a US lawyer from Argentina is entirely possible, and there is no single way to do it. If you are already an abogado or abogada, California can let you sit the bar without an LLM; if you have just earned your Titulo de Abogado, the LLM plus New York route is the classic path; if you want to practise anywhere, the full JD is the most flexible; and if you only need to advise on Argentine law, the Foreign Legal Consultant or in-house routes may be enough. Your civil-law background means the no-exam "on motion" route is usually closed at the start, so plan around an exam. Pick the route that fits your profile, start the slow steps (evaluation, English, funding) early, and build from there.
This article is for general information only and does not constitute legal or immigration advice. Rules vary by state and change over time, so always verify the current requirements with the relevant state board of law examiners and a licensed immigration attorney.
