Free Trial
- Sample audio lessons for MBE subjects:
- 3 Civil Procedure lessons
- 3 Constitutional Law lessons
- 3 Evidence lessons
- Access Period:
- Unlimited
MBE Prep
- Audio lessons for all MBE subjects:
- 50+ Civil Procedure lessons
- 30+ Constitutional Law lessons
- 20+ Contracts lessons
- 40+ Criminal Law lessons
- 30+ Criminal Procedure lessons
- 30+ Evidence lessons
- 30+ Property lessons
- 30+ Torts lessons
- Access period:
- 1 year
MBE Prep + Question Bank
- Audio lessons for all MBE subjects:
- 50+ Civil Procedure lessons
- 30+ Constitutional Law lessons
- 20+ Contracts lessons
- 40+ Criminal Law lessons
- 30+ Criminal Procedure lessons
- 30+ Evidence lessons
- 30+ Property lessons
- 30+ Torts lessons
- MBE Question Bank:
- 1801 real MBE questions
- 410 official explanations
- 170+ unofficial explanations
- MBE Analytics to analyze your results
- Access period:
- 1 year
Learn from the Best
We’ve culled the ranks of respected law schools to find the world’s best legal thinkers and top teachers.

Adam Chilton
Torts
Adam Chilton is a professor of law and the Walter Mander Research Scholar at the University of Chicago Law School. Adam’s primary research interests lie at the intersection of international law, comparative law, and empirical legal studies.
Adam’s ongoing projects include documenting the development and enforcement of competition law regimes around the world, studying how bilateral labor agreements can be used to promote international labor migration, and researching how to improve the quality of life in India’s slums.
Adam received a BA and MA in political science from Yale University. After college, Adam worked as a management consultant for BCG. He then went to Harvard University, where he earned a JD and a PhD in political science. Before joining the faculty, Adam taught at the Law School as a Bigelow Fellow and Lecturer in Law.

Andrew Woods
Contracts
Andrew Keane Woods is a professor of law at the University of Arizona College of Law.
Professor Woods’s teaching and research interests include cybersecurity, the regulation of technology, and international law, both public and private. His scholarship has been selected for the Yale/Stanford/Harvard Junior Faculty Forum, and his articles have appeared or are forthcoming in: the Yale Law Journal, the Stanford Law Review, the Vanderbilt Law Review, the Harvard International Law Journal, the Virginia Journal of International Law, and the Chicago Journal of International Law. His work has been cited in The Economist, The Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post, Bloomberg, and NPR. Professor Woods is a contributing editor of the Lawfare blog, and has written for the New York Times, the International Herald Tribune, the Financial Times, and Slate.
In Spring 2017, Professor Woods was a visiting professor at the University of Texas School of Law, where he taught a class on law and policy in the technology sector. Before that, he was an assistant professor at the University of Kentucky, a postdoctoral fellow at Stanford University (at the Center for International Security and Cooperation and at the Center on Philanthropy and Civil Society) and a Climenko Fellow at Harvard Law School. He holds an A.B. from Brown University, magna cum laude; a J.D. from Harvard Law School, cum laude; and a Ph.D. in Politics from the University of Cambridge, where he was a Gates Scholar.

Anne Gordon
Con Law and Evidence
Anne Gordon is a Clinical Professor of Law and Director of Externships at Duke Law School. Before joining Duke, Gordon taught at the University of California, Berkeley School of Law, where she helped lead the Appellate Advocacy Program and served as a Senior Research Fellow at the California Constitution Center. Gordon was also a staff attorney with the Ninth Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals, and practiced criminal appellate and capital post-conviction law with the Habeas Corpus Resource Center and the Fifth and Sixth District Appellate Projects. Professor Gordon received her A.B. from the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs at Princeton, and graduated cum laude from the University of Michigan Law School. After law school, she clerked for Judge Boyce F. Martin, Jr. of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit.

Daniel Epps
Crim Law and Procedure
Prof. Daniel Epps is an Associate Professor of Law at Washington University in St. Louis, where he teaches Criminal Law and Criminal Procedure. Professor Epps received his A.B. summa cum laude with highest distinction in Philosophy from Duke University and his J.D. magna cum laude from Harvard Law School, where he was Articles Co-Chair of the Harvard Law Review and won the John M. Olin Law & Economics prize. After law school, he clerked for Judge J. Harvie Wilkinson III of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit and for Justice Anthony M. Kennedy of the Supreme Court of the United States.
His research concerns the intersection of criminal justice, constitutional law, and federal courts. His scholarship has been published in the nation’s leading law journals, including the Harvard Law Review, Yale Law Journal, Michigan Law Review, NYU Law Review, and University of Pennsylvania Law Review. He’s also a leading expert on the Supreme Court who is regularly quoted in the national media. His writing for popular audiences has appeared in the New York Times, the Washington Post, Vox, and The Atlantic. His proposal to reform the Supreme Court (developed with Ganesh Sitaraman) was endorsed by presidential candidate Pete Buttigieg and was widely discussed in the media.

Danielle D’Onfro
Property
Danielle D’Onfro is an Associate Professor of Law at Washington University School of Law where she teaches Property, Advanced Private Law, Corporations, and Corporate Compliance. Her research applies private law theory to business associations and their capital structure. Her writing about debt contracts covers both consumer and commercial debt. Her article, Limited Liability Property, analyzes the property claims inherent to secured debt and the obligations that come with those claims. In Corporate Stewardship, she proposes a decentralized individual liability regime to improve the efficiency of corporate compliance. In Corporations as Commodities, she uses property theory to study the controversy about the purpose of the corporation. Her more recent research explores formalities in consumer finance and the application of the law of bailment to digital storage. Her popular writing has appeared in theWashington Post, SCOTUSBlog, and Take Care.
Professor D’Onfro earned her B.A. in classics from Columbia College and her J.D. from Harvard Law School. After law school, she clerked for Judge Allyson K. Duncan on the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit. Before joining the faculty, she was a senior associate in the Debt Finance and Bankruptcy & Financial Restructuring Groups at WilmerHale in Washington, DC and Boston, Massachusetts.

Jennifer Fisher
Civil Procedure
Jennifer Fisher brings a practitioner’s eye to the Civil Procedure course. After earning a B.A. in English, summa cum laude, from Washington & Lee University, she completed her J.D. at Yale Law School, where she served as Notes Editor and Articles Editor for the Yale Journal of Law and Humanities. Her legal career has included stints in private practice and in public service, and she has represented a wide range of clients through every stage of the litigation process. Jennifer has fought slumlords before county magistrates on behalf of indigent tenants, defended 30(b)(6) depositions for a multinational corporation in an antitrust suit, and briefed race and national-origin discrimination claims before the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals. While she has always loved arguing her clients’ positions in the courtroom, her most rewarding experience has been mentoring law students and young associates in civil procedure and legal writing, helping them translate their legal educations to real-world disputes.
Targeted at the Test
Too many bar prep courses teach a blizzard of rules that are almost never tested. You can’t possibly memorize all of them—and you don’t need to.
We created our curriculum by analyzing the exam and figuring out what you really need to know. After we identified the most tested and testable principles, we asked our amazing professors to break it down, always focusing on how the rules are actually applied on the MBE.
It’s less than everything and more than enough, so you can make the most of your study time.
Bar Prep for the Digital Age
Traditional bar prep courses are full of talking heads. They take a series of classroom lectures, plop them on a webpage, and hope for the best.
We took a different approach. Our audio lessons are short and easily absorbed, so you can brush up on contract law while you walk the dog.
Sign up for a free trial to preview the lessons.
FAQ
What if I change my mind about the course?
Our bar prep courses come with a 14-day money-back guarantee. If you change your mind within 14 days of purchase, just email us and we will happily refund you.
How does your bar pass guarantee work?
It’s pretty simple. If you don’t pass the bar, just send us your official results and we’ll give you a full refund.
Does the course come with real study questions?
MBE Prep + Question Bank includes all of the 1801 real MBE questions published by the NCBE along with 410 official explanations and over 170 explanations from our team.
Are there videos?
Our course is audio-only by design.
Is there any visual content?
Of course! We have full transcripts, outlines, and the entire MBE Question Bank for you to practice on.
How do I listen to the course?
Either on our site from your mobile device or through your favorite podcasting app.
What about the MEE or the MPT?
As of now, we are offering an MBE course only. Our MEE and MPT courses are under development.
Free Trial
- Sample audio lessons for MBE subjects:
- 3 Civil Procedure lessons
- 3 Constitutional Law lessons
- 3 Evidence lessons
- Access Period:
- Unlimited
MBE Prep
- Audio lessons for all MBE subjects:
- 50+ Civil Procedure lessons
- 30+ Constitutional Law lessons
- 20+ Contracts lessons
- 40+ Criminal Law lessons
- 30+ Criminal Procedure lessons
- 30+ Evidence lessons
- 30+ Property lessons
- 30+ Torts lessons
- Access period:
- 1 year
MBE Prep + Question Bank
- Audio lessons for all MBE subjects:
- 50+ Civil Procedure lessons
- 30+ Constitutional Law lessons
- 20+ Contracts lessons
- 40+ Criminal Law lessons
- 30+ Criminal Procedure lessons
- 30+ Evidence lessons
- 30+ Property lessons
- 30+ Torts lessons
- MBE Question Bank:
- 1801 real MBE questions
- 410 official explanations
- 170+ unofficial explanations
- MBE Analytics to analyze your results
- Access period:
- 1 year