Florida Bar Exam Essay Trends (2015–2025): High Tested Areas

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In this article

The Florida Bar Examiners follow patterns. When you look at enough years back-to-back, the essays stop feeling unpredictable and start revealing a clear rhythm—certain subjects cycle in and out, certain hybrids repeat almost verbatim, and some issues show up every single year. 

Below, you’ll find a complete ten-year dataset of every Florida Bar Exam essay question from 2015 – 2025. This raw table lets you see real patterns — which subjects repeat, how often ethics appears, and which topics cluster together. It’s the same data we use when building predictions, guides, and study plans, and now you can review it directly and decide where to focus your time.

After that, we highlight the recurring themes and high-frequency issues that appear again and again. Together, these sections give you both the raw data and the insight you need to understand what the Florida Bar actually tests.

 

Florida Bar Exam Essay Data (2015–2025): Full 10-Year Essay Question Dataset

How to Use This Dataset
Use the search bar to filter by subject or issue (“Miranda,” “Homestead,” “Equal Protection”).
Sort by year or topic to spot patterns.
Focus on rule clusters that repeat — those are the ones most likely to appear again.

Recurring Themes and High-Frequency Issues

IMPORTANT NOTES (Read Before Interpreting the Data)

Dependency Removed From the Exam

Dependency (juvenile dependency, abuse/neglect, GAL issues, shelter petitions, and DCF-initiated TPR cases) used to be a standalone essay subject, but it was removed from the Florida Bar Exam subject outline starting in July 2020.

Older essays include Dependency fact patterns — current exams do not.

(Note: Family Law still includes TPR as a family-law statutory ground for terminating parental rights, so it can appear inside a Family Law essay. It is no longer a separate “Dependency” subject.)

Trusts Shifted to Multiple-Choice

Historically, Trusts appeared in essay questions.
But beginning in July 2023, the Florida Board of Bar Examiners announced that:

  • Trusts
  • UCC Article 3 
  • UCC Article 9

are primarily tested through the Florida multiple-choice section, not essays.

You may still see Trusts issues folded into a multi-subject fact pattern (usually involving homestead), but standalone Trusts essays are now rare.

UCC Articles 3 & 9 Are No Longer Regular Essay Subjects

The FBBE explicitly shifted UCC Articles 3 and 9 to MCQs.
Older exams contain full-length secured transactions or negotiability essays, but now candidates should expect:

  • negotiability
  • holder-in-due-course
  • attachment/perfection
  • PMSIs
  • priority
  • commercial reasonableness
  • deficiency judgments

on the MCQs not full essay questions.

Access the official Florida Board of Bar Examiners’ released essay questions and selected answers here.

What Is Tested the Most on the Florida Bar Exam?

Across the last 10 years (2015–2025), essay frequency breaks down roughly as:

  • Con Law (FL + Fed): ~25%
  • Criminal Law/Crim Pro: ~17%
  • Real Property: ~14%
  • Family Law (not Dependency): ~12%
  • Contracts / UCC Article 2: ~12%
  • Torts: ~11%
  • Trusts + Wills/Estates: ~8–10% combined
  • UCC Articles 3 & 9: ~5%

These numbers are helpful — but remember:
Trusts and UCC Articles 3 & 9 are now MC-heavy subjects. 

Past frequency ≠ future likelihood.

What This Really Means for Your Study Plan (The Actual Priorities)

Even if the subjects look evenly spread, they aren’t.

Once you factor in frequency and the predictability of rule clusters, the priorities are clear.

🔥 Tier 1 — Master Completely (Highest ROI)

Your “Big Four”:

  • Constitutional Law (Florida and Federal) 
  • Criminal Law & Criminal Procedure
  • Real Property
  • Contracts / UCC Article 2

Why these four?

They show up consistently, test the same clusters year after year, anchor mixed essays, and cause the biggest point losses when students are underprepared.

📌 Tier 2 — Strong Preparation Required

These still appear frequently and produce long, dense, rule-heavy essays:

  • Family Law
  • Torts

Why?

They have a lot of moving parts, they rely heavily on knowing the rule structures, and they reward clear, accurate rule statements.

Tier 3 — MC-Driven but Still Essay-Relevant

These subjects show up mostly in Florida MCQs now, but you must still know the rules:

  • Trusts
  • Wills (can still appear on essays) 
  • UCC Articles 3 & 9

Highly testable topics include:

  • Trust creation/modification
  • Duties of loyalty & accounting
  • Spendthrift + creditor access
  • Elective share / pretermitted issues
  • Negotiability / HDC
  • Attachment / perfection
  • PMSI / priority

Old essays are still gold for learning examiner phrasing.

Tier 4 — The Overlay (Appears Everywhere)

Professional Responsibility / Ethics

Ethics shows up in nearly every subject:

  • Con Law
  • Property
  • Contracts
  • Family
  • Torts
  • Crim Pro
  • Trusts/Wills

Often buried in the final sub-question of an essay.
It’s one of the fastest ways to pick up points.

Here is how these subjects actually show up in the exam, based on the last decade of essay patterns.

Subject-By-Subject Breakdown 

Constitutional Law 

The most persistent theme. Expect issues involving:

  • First Amendment speech
  • Equal protection
  • Due process
  • Standing & justiciability
  • Conditional spending & commerce
  • Florida privacy right
  • Access to courts (Kluger)
  • Sunshine/open-government

Often paired with Crim Pro or Family Law.

Criminal Law & Criminal Procedure

Recurring clusters:

  • homicide (including felony murder, vehicular homicide)
  • inchoate crimes
  • traffic stops, home entries, auto exception
  • Miranda, voluntariness, right to counsel
  • fruit of the poisonous tree
  • juvenile transfer/direct file

Expect at least one Fourth/Fifth/Sixth Amendment issue.

Real Property

The grader favorites:

  • homestead (descent, devise, creditor rights)
  • future interests and life estates
  • mortgages & foreclosure
  • easements & covenants
  • landlord–tenant law
  • TBE, recording/notice, deed formalities

Always Florida-heavy and rule-dependent.

Contracts & UCC Article 2

Highly predictable clusters:

  • formation
  • statute of frauds
  • parol evidence
  • conditions vs breach
  • remedies (expectation, cover, consequential, LD vs penalties)
  • non-competes
  • anticipatory repudiation
  • merchant confirmations / battle of the forms

Contracts regularly blends with business torts + ethics.

Family Law 

Frequent issues:

  • equitable distribution
  • alimony types
  • modification standards
  • child support guidelines
  • TPR & adoption
  • UCCJEA jurisdiction

Always emotional fact patterns — always rule-based scoring.

Torts

Recurring themes:

  • negligence & premises liability
  • wrongful death
  • comparative fault
  • products liability
  • defamation
  • dangerous instrumentality
  • punitive damages

Often includes ethics or business issues.

Trusts and Wills

Even with fewer essays recently, still essential for MC:

  • trust creation / modification
  • duties of loyalty & accounting
  • spendthrift & creditor access
  • homestead intersections
  • will execution formalities
  • elective share / pretermitted issues

UCC Articles 3 and 9

Dense and rule-heavy:

  • negotiability requirements
  • holder-in-due-course
  • attachment & perfection
  • PMSIs
  • priority fights
  • commercial reasonableness
  • deficiency judgments

Professional Responsibility / Ethics

Embedded everywhere:

  • conflicts of interest
  • fee agreements
  • solicitation
  • former-client duties
  • minors & vulnerable clients
  • settlement restrictions
  • competence

Fast points, high yield.

Most Common Florida-Specific Distinctions You MUST Know

Now here’s your “distinctions” section — the exact ones that repeat across the essays:

Florida Con Law Distinctions

  • Explicit right of privacy
  • Access to courts (Kluger)
  • Sunshine / open meetings
  • Home rule powers
  • Strict scrutiny for abortion → shifted over time
  • Heightened scrutiny for FL free speech in some contexts

For more info on FL Con Law Distinctions, click here

Crim & Crim Pro Distinctions

  • Florida Stop and Frisk Act
  • Constructive vs actual possession nuances
  • Florida’s approach to juvenile transfer/direct file
  • Stand-Your-Ground immunity layers

Real Property Distinctions

  • Homestead descent and devise restrictions
  • Tenancy by the Entirety presumption
  • Special homestead creditor exceptions
  • Florida recording statute nuances

Contracts / UCC Distinctions

  • Liquidated damages vs penalties — Florida applies reasonableness strictly
  • Florida non-compete statute (legitimate business interest)
  • Merchant confirmations and battle of the forms patterns

Check out our Most Tested FL Contracts series. 

Family Distinctions

  • Best-interest factors uniquely emphasized
  • Alimony categories and requirements
  • UCCJEA home-state jurisdiction rules
  • TPR statutory grounds

Torts Distinctions

  • Dangerous instrumentality doctrine
  • Pure comparative fault
  • Punitive damages caps & findings
  • Slip-and-fall constructive notice statute

Trusts / Wills Distinctions

  • Trust modification / termination
  • Spendthrift exceptions
  • Witness presence requirements (Wills)
  • Elective share + homestead interactions
  • Pretermitted spouse/child themes
  • Revocation by act vs inconsistent writing

These are the items that reappear dozens of times across the ten-year dataset.

Conclusion

The Florida Bar Exam rewards pattern recognition.
It doesn’t test all subjects equally — it tests the same clusters every single year.
If you focus on Florida Con Law, Criminal Procedure, homestead, equitable distribution, UCC formation, negligence, and ethics, you’ll be prepared for the essays no matter what scenario they throw at you.

If you want a structured way to memorize these clusters, check out the Ameribrights Florida Bar Exam guides.

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