Browse live legal jobs across United States. Recently hiring teams include DLA Piper, Cooley LLP, Hogan Lovells. Use the same clean LegalAlphabet filters to compare routes, switch tracks, and move faster.
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The United States has the world's largest legal market, employing over 1.3 million lawyers across BigLaw firms, boutique practices, corporate legal departments, and government agencies. Major legal hubs include New York, Washington D.C., Chicago, Los Angeles, and San Francisco, each with distinct specializations. The market is increasingly shaped by legal technology adoption, alternative fee arrangements, and growing demand for compliance and data privacy expertise.
BigLaw starting salaries have reached record highs, while in-house and compliance roles are the fastest-growing segments.
LegalAlphabet currently lists 7164 active legal jobs and 124 legal internships in United States. New roles are added daily from law firms, in-house teams, the public sector, and international organizations.
Yes. LegalAlphabet currently lists 124 legal internships in United States, updated daily, ranging from law-firm placements to in-house and public-sector internships.
To become a lawyer in the United States, you typically complete a bachelor's degree, then earn a Juris Doctor (JD) from a law school that is ABA-approved in most states. You then sit the bar exam of the specific state where you intend to practice, since admission is governed state-by-state rather than nationally. Most states use the Uniform Bar Examination administered by the NCBE (with the NextGen exam being adopted in coming years), and you must also pass the MPRE ethics exam and clear a character-and-fitness review. Once admitted by the state's highest court, you are licensed to practice in that jurisdiction; a few states also allow a law-office apprenticeship instead of law school.
There is no single national regulator; admission and discipline are governed jurisdiction-by-jurisdiction by each state's highest court and its bar (e.g. the State Bar of California, and in New York the Appellate Division departments with the New York State Bar Association as the voluntary professional body). The National Conference of Bar Examiners (NCBE) develops national exam components including the Uniform Bar Examination (UBE) and the new NextGen bar exam, and the American Bar Association (ABA) accredits law schools.
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Daily. LegalAlphabet continuously aggregates legal roles from thousands of sources and gives equal coverage to every country, so United States is updated as often as the largest markets.
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