Be ready for law school!
The Queen’s Certificate in Law is a great way to hit the ground running before law school. With eight courses, ranging from an Introduction to Canadian Law to specialized courses like Intellectual Property, Criminal Law, and Corporate Law, the Certificate program will meet your specific interests.
When you complete four courses, you receive the Certificate—an academic designation from Queen’s that becomes part of your transcript.
Stand out from the competition: graduates of Queen’s Certificate in Law are considered ahead of other applicants to the JD program.
Certificate in Law students will have their JD applications to Queen’s Law reviewed on a priority basis.
Queen’s Law Clinics: annual facts
With a consistent placement rate of over 95% after graduation, a dedicated Career Development Office, top-tier placements, alumni mentoring opportunities and more, Queen’s Law empowers you to achieve your professional goals. The career team has extensive experience in legal recruitment and professional development, with services including career counselling, workshops, online resources, professional networking, and more.
Queen’s Law is one of the country’s leading law schools, equidistant from major legal markets in Toronto and Ottawa. Firms from Canada’s largest cities recruit at Queen’s annually.
Maintaining a healthy work/life balance is an essential skill in legal practice—which is why Queen’s Law prioritizes it for our students as well. Students pursue activities that support their overall wellbeing.
Queen’s Law has more clubs per student than any other law school in Canada! Students gain life skills, make friends, and explore new interests in clubs ranging from financial investing to cultural communities to hobbies and games.
Clubs include:
- LEAF Canada—Queen's Branch
- Queen’s Health Law Club
- Queen’s Environmental Law Club
- Queen’s Tax Law Society
- QL Alternative Dispute Resolution Club
- International Criminal Law Association (ICLA)
- Queen's Cybersecurity and Privacy Club
- Queen’s Food Law & Policy Society
- Queen’s Labour & Employment Club
- Queen’s Sports and Entertainment Law Club
- Pro Bono Students Canada
- Student Academic Success Society (QLSASS)
- Med-Law Games Committee
- Pre-Law Mentorship Program
- Queen’s Law Journal (QLJ)
- Canadian Journal of Labour and Employment Law (CLELJ)
- Canadian Journal of Commercial Arbitration (CJCA)
- Queen's Conference on Indigenous Reconciliation (QCIR)
- Queen's Law Palestinian Advocacy Club (QLPA)
- Queen’s Jewish Law Student Association (JLSA)
- Queen's Asian Law Students' Association (QALSA)
- Queen's Women & Law Club
- Black Law Student Association
- Queen’s South Asian Law Students Association (SALSA)
- First Generation Network
- Queen's Venture Law Society
- Yearbook Committee
- Queen’s Law Ski and Snowboard Club
- Semi-Formal Committee
- Queen's Law Cancer Society
- Queens Law Chess Club
- Alumni Relations Committee
- Queen's Law Hockey Team
Our unique-in-Canada tutoring program invites high-performing upper-year students to mentor our incoming 1Ls—mentoring relationships that sometimes extend into students’ second years as well (and often, lifelong friendships). Every student who wants an upper-year tutor gets one: this is a community where giving back is a priority, and mutual support leads to mutual success.
Students can gain knowledge as well as valuable work experience via specialized research groups including the Conflict Analytics Lab AI/law hub, the labour-law-focused Centre for Law in the Contemporary Workplace, and Feminist Legal Studies Queen's. They also run one of Canada’s oldest law journals, the Queen’s Law Journal, and contribute to other Faculty academic journals including the PKI Global Justice Journal, the Canadian Journal of Commercial Arbitration, and the Canadian Labour and Employment Law Journal.

What is…Pro Bono Radio?
Queen’s chapter of Pro Bono Canada runs its own radio show and podcast—Pro Bono Radio, where students tackle relevant and offbeat issues facing society with a legal lens. It’s broadcast on local radio on CFRC 101.9FM, and available as a podcast wherever you listen. Find your voice, and a national audience, at Queen’s Law!
What is…Lawlapalooza?
“Lawla” is the annual Queen’s Law battle of the bands! Musical talent is found in abundance at the law school, and late every school year, students (and sometimes, staff and faculty) take over a downtown bar to put on an all-hands-on-deck music extravaganza of original songs and covers, featuring bands like Lord Denning’s Verdict, The Reasonable Men, Uncivil Procedure, and more (if you don’t know why these are great band names, don’t worry—you will!). And all for great charitable causes.
Admissions
Applications for admission should be made to the JD (Juris Doctor) program by a web-based application process through the Ontario Law School Application Service (OLSAS). Applications open each August and have a submission deadline of November 1 for studies commencing the following September.
Program requirements:
- You must have successfully completed a minimum of three full years (90 credits) of course work (or equivalent) in a degree program at a postsecondary institution.
- All undergraduate degree types are welcome! Queen’s Law is a community that thrives on diversity: whether you’ve studied the arts, business, engineering, or something else entirely, you’ll find a home here.
- LSAT testing: you are required to take the Law School Admission Test (LSAT).
- LSAT scores for the past five years may be used.
- The January LSAT is the last test we guarantee consideration for. Taking the test at earlier dates is strongly encouraged.
The Admissions Committee will rely primarily on the highest score achieved at the time of the admission decision.