CLAT 2027: Consortium of NLUs Announces Early Schedule and Syllabus Review
In addition to the dates, the Consortium has initiated a comprehensive syllabus review. A committee of legal experts and academicians has been formed to evaluate whether the current pattern of the Undergraduate (UG) and Postgraduate (PG) exams effectively measures the aptitude required for a legal career. While no drastic changes are expected, the committee is looking into increasing the weightage of 'Legal Reasoning' and 'Current Affairs' while potentially streamlining the 'Logical Reasoning' section. The goal is to move away from memory-based testing to a more comprehensive evaluation of a student's ability to read and analyze legal texts.
'We want to give students ample time to adapt to any minor changes we might introduce,' said the President of the Consortium. 'By announcing the dates early, we are also helping state-level law entrance bodies to schedule their exams without overlap, which has been a major issue for students in the past.' The Consortium also announced that the CLAT 2027 will see an increase in the number of test centers, particularly in the North-Eastern states and the Union Territories of Jammu & Kashmir and Ladakh.
For the CLAT PG 2027 aspirants, the Consortium is considering the introduction of elective-based questions in the latter half of the paper. This would allow LLM aspirants to showcase their expertise in specific fields like Corporate Law, Constitutional Law, or Intellectual Property Rights. However, this proposal is still in the deliberation stage and will be finalized after consultations with the various NLUs. The official brochure for CLAT 2027, containing the finalized syllabus and registration details, is expected to be released by July 2026.
Prospective students are encouraged to start their preparation by focusing on reading speed and comprehension, as the CLAT remains one of the most time-intensive entrance exams in India. The Consortium has also promised to release more 'official' mock tests this year to prevent students from being misled by substandard study materials available online. This move towards transparency and early planning has been widely welcomed by the legal education community and student unions alike.