Kim Kardashian is stepping back from the California Bar exam, and by most accounts, the decision was not an easy one. The 45-year-old reality television personality and aspiring attorney reportedly skipped the February sitting and has no current plans to attempt the exam again in July, meaning the next realistic window would not come until 2027. For someone who has described her legal ambitions as an all-in commitment, the break carries real weight.
The California Bar exam is offered twice a year, giving candidates two opportunities annually to pass. Kardashian has taken the full exam once, following a longer road through the state’s preliminary law exam, which is required for those pursuing a legal apprenticeship outside of an accredited law school. She sat for that preliminary test three times before passing on her fourth attempt in 2021, a milestone she shared publicly at the time.
A failure that landed differently
The decision to step away follows a failed attempt last summer that Kardashian addressed with unusual candor. She shared the news on social media, describing herself as someone still fully committed to the process despite not yet reaching the finish line. She framed it as a continuation rather than a collapse, making clear she had no intention of walking away from the goal entirely.
What she said months later, however, revealed how much the failure had affected her internally. In a conversation with a major publication, Kardashian described how the results shook her sense of self in a way she had not fully anticipated. She spoke about the discomfort of knowing that her results would become public knowledge over a weekend and feeling compelled to get ahead of the story before it broke on its own.
That impulse, to control the narrative around a personal failure before others could define it for her, speaks to the particular pressure Kardashian faces in pursuing something as private as professional certification in an entirely public life.
The physical and emotional toll
Kardashian has not shied away from describing what the preparation process actually demands. In an episode of her family’s reality series The Kardashians, she spoke openly about reaching a breaking point during one of her study periods. She described the exhaustion as total, physical and emotional at once, and talked about a back injury that made even sitting to study painful. The combination of physical strain and the relentless mental demand of bar prep left her feeling like she had hit a wall she could not immediately see past.
That honesty resonated with viewers and legal professionals alike. The California Bar exam has one of the lowest pass rates in the country and is widely considered among the most rigorous state bar examinations in the United States. Many law school graduates fail it on their first attempt. Kardashian is pursuing licensure through a non-traditional path, without a law degree from an accredited institution, which adds a layer of difficulty that standard bar prep resources are not always designed to address.
Law on screen while she waits
While her real-world legal journey is on pause, Kardashian has continued engaging with the law in a different context. She appears as a lawyer in the Ryan Murphy drama All’s Fair, a role that drew both attention and some pointed commentary given the timing of her exam results. She acknowledged the irony herself, noting the gap between playing a polished attorney on television and the much harder work of becoming one in practice.
That self-awareness has defined much of how Kardashian has handled this chapter publicly. She has not pretended the setbacks were easy or reframed them as something other than what they are. Six years into a process that has tested her in ways her public life rarely does, she is taking a step back, not to walk away, but to find a path forward that does not break her before she gets there.

