1. Exam Overview

  • Official exam name: Exame de Ordem Unificado
  • Short name / abbreviation: Exame de Ordem, OAB Exam, often simply “OAB”
  • Country / region: Brazil
  • Exam type: Professional licensing / qualifying examination
  • Conducting body / authority: Ordem dos Advogados do Brasil (OAB), with exam administration contracted through official notices to an examining institution for each cycle
  • Status: Active, recurring

The Brazilian bar examination, called the Exame de Ordem, is the professional licensing exam required for most law graduates in Brazil who want to register as lawyers with the OAB and practice advocacy. Passing it does not replace a law degree; instead, it is an additional legal-professional requirement for admission to the bar. The exam matters because, in practice, it is the main gateway from Brazilian legal education into licensed legal practice.

Brazilian bar examination and Exame de Ordem

This guide covers the Brazilian national unified bar exam administered under the OAB system, not university entrance tests, judicial recruitment exams, or public prosecutor/civil service examinations.

2. Quick Facts Snapshot

Item Details
Who should take this exam Law graduates in Brazil, and eligible final-year law students, who want to become licensed lawyers
Main purpose Qualification for OAB registration and legal practice
Level Professional / licensing
Frequency Multiple cycles per year; exact number depends on OAB scheduling and official notices
Mode Traditionally in-person, paper-based at test centers; confirm each cycle in the official notice
Languages offered Portuguese
Duration Two-stage exam; duration is set separately for each stage in the official notice
Number of sections / papers 2 stages: objective first phase and practical-professional second phase
Negative marking No negative marking is typically used in the objective phase
Score validity period Passing generally allows progression to OAB registration under applicable rules; there is no “multi-year score validity” system like admission tests
Typical application window Depends on each published edital (official notice); usually several weeks
Typical exam window Multiple annual windows depending on cycle
Official website(s) OAB Federal Council: https://www.oab.org.br
Official information bulletin / brochure availability Yes, via the official edital and exam page for each cycle

Warning: Dates, fee, test center list, and even the contracted organizing institution can change by cycle. Always rely on the current edital.

3. Who Should Take This Exam

This exam is ideal for:

  • Brazilian law graduates who want to practice as advocates
  • Final-year law students, if permitted by the current rules and notice
  • Candidates seeking:
  • private legal practice
  • law firm work requiring lawyer registration
  • independent advocacy
  • many legal roles where OAB registration is advantageous or necessary

Suitable academic background

  • A recognized Bachelor of Laws degree in Brazil is the standard pathway
  • Students close to degree completion may be eligible depending on the current exam rules

Career goals supported by the exam

  • Becoming a licensed advogado/advogada
  • Joining law firms
  • Opening a solo legal practice
  • Working in legal consultancy where bar registration is required or strongly valued
  • Building credentials before pursuing specialist legal careers

Who should avoid it

  • Students who are not in law or not pursuing legal practice
  • Candidates looking for:
  • judicial magistracy exams
  • public defender recruitment
  • prosecutor recruitment
  • police/legal civil service exams
  • academic postgraduate admission

Best alternatives if this exam is not suitable

If your goal is not bar registration, consider instead:

  • Public legal careers through separate public recruitment exams
  • Judiciary-related concursos públicos
  • LL.M. / postgraduate law admissions
  • Corporate compliance / legal operations roles that may not require OAB registration
  • Mediation, arbitration, public policy, or academic law pathways

4. What This Exam Leads To

The Exame de Ordem leads to:

  • Professional qualification, not university admission
  • Eligibility to seek registration with the OAB, subject to all legal and documentary requirements
  • Legal authorization to practice law in Brazil after bar admission formalities are completed

Pathways opened by this exam

After passing, a candidate may pursue:

  • Private law practice
  • Law firm associate roles
  • In-house legal positions where bar registration is required
  • Litigation and advisory practice
  • Certain public-facing legal activities reserved to lawyers under Brazilian law

Is it mandatory?

  • For advocacy practice in Brazil, the exam is generally mandatory, together with the other legal requirements for OAB enrollment.
  • It is not required simply to hold a law degree.
  • It is not a substitute for civil service recruitment exams.

Recognition inside Brazil

  • Nationwide professional significance under the OAB system
  • Used across Brazil for entry into the legal profession as an advocate

International recognition

  • It is primarily a Brazil-specific professional licensing exam
  • It does not automatically authorize legal practice outside Brazil
  • Foreign recognition depends on the rules of the other jurisdiction

5. Conducting Body and Official Authority

  • Full name of organization: Ordem dos Advogados do Brasil (OAB) – Conselho Federal
  • Role and authority: National bar body responsible for regulation of the legal profession and bar admission rules in Brazil
  • Official website: https://www.oab.org.br
  • Governing regulator / board: OAB itself, under the legal framework governing the legal profession in Brazil
  • Rule source: The exam is governed by the applicable legal framework, OAB regulations, and the official notice (edital) published for each exam cycle

The OAB commonly contracts an examining institution to operationally conduct the exam. Because this may vary by cycle, students should verify the exact organizing body in the current edital.

6. Eligibility Criteria

Eligibility is based on the legal-professional rules and the current exam notice.

Core eligibility

  • Candidates are generally expected to be:
  • Law graduates from a recognized Brazilian institution, or
  • Eligible final-year law students, if allowed by the current rules

Nationality / domicile / residency

  • Brazilian bar admission concerns professional registration in Brazil
  • The exam itself is mainly designed for candidates with qualifying legal education under Brazilian rules
  • Foreign-trained candidates may face qualification recognition/equivalency issues and should verify OAB and education recognition rules carefully

Age limit

  • No general age limit is typically associated with taking the Exame de Ordem
  • Confirm in the current edital

Educational qualification

  • A law degree is the standard educational basis
  • The degree must be from an institution recognized under Brazilian higher-education rules

Minimum marks / GPA / class requirement

  • No standard national minimum GPA requirement is typically highlighted for the exam itself
  • What matters is legal-course eligibility and later OAB registration compliance

Subject prerequisites

  • The exam assumes completion or near-completion of the full undergraduate law curriculum

Final-year eligibility rules

  • Final-year eligibility exists under OAB practice, but the exact threshold should be checked in the current notice and applicable regulation
  • Some notices specify how far into the law course the candidate must be

Work experience requirement

  • None typically required just to take the exam

Internship / practical training requirement

  • No separate pre-exam work-experience requirement is generally stated as a condition to sit the exam
  • However, degree completion and later bar registration documentation remain important

Reservation / category rules

  • Accessibility and special accommodations may be available according to the edital
  • Fee reduction or exemption rules, if any, depend on the specific cycle notice

Medical / physical standards

  • No general medical fitness standard is usually associated with this licensing exam

Language requirements

  • The exam is in Portuguese
  • Strong legal Portuguese reading and writing ability is essential

Number of attempts

  • No fixed low attempt cap is commonly associated with the OAB exam
  • Candidates often retake in future cycles if unsuccessful
  • Always confirm current rules

Gap year rules

  • Gap years usually do not create a separate issue for exam eligibility as long as the educational/legal criteria are met

Special eligibility for foreign candidates / international students / disabled candidates

  • Disabled candidates: accommodations may be available through the official application process
  • Foreign or foreign-trained candidates: eligibility depends on diploma recognition and applicable Brazilian/OAB rules; this area may be case-specific
  • International students in Brazil: must verify whether their legal degree status meets OAB requirements

Important exclusions or disqualifications

A candidate may face problems if:

  • The law degree is not properly recognized
  • Documentation is incomplete or inconsistent
  • They pass the exam but do not satisfy later OAB registration requirements
  • There are legal/professional impediments under OAB admission rules

Brazilian bar examination and Exame de Ordem

For the Brazilian bar examination / Exame de Ordem, the most important practical eligibility question is usually: “Am I already legally eligible to sit the exam, and if I pass, can I complete OAB enrollment?” Check both before applying.

7. Important Dates and Timeline

Current cycle dates

Current-cycle dates were not provided in your prompt, and they can change. Students should check the latest official edital on the OAB website.

Typical / historical timeline

Historically, the Exame de Ordem runs in multiple cycles across the year, and each cycle usually includes:

  • publication of edital
  • registration window
  • fee payment deadline
  • first-phase exam
  • first-phase result / appeal period
  • second-phase exam for qualified candidates
  • final result
  • later OAB registration steps at the relevant sectional body

Key stages to track

  • Registration start and end
  • Special accommodation request deadline
  • Payment deadline
  • Data correction / rectification window, if provided
  • Exam location release
  • First-phase date
  • Official preliminary answer key
  • Objection/appeal window
  • First-phase final result
  • Second-phase date
  • Final result publication

Month-by-month student planning timeline

6 to 9 months before target cycle

  • Confirm eligibility
  • Download the latest edital
  • Gather law-course and identity documents
  • Start full-syllabus study
  • Choose your second-phase subject early if rules require advance choice

4 to 6 months before

  • Build a subject plan
  • Begin objective mock practice
  • Start second-phase written practice
  • Review procedural law and statute reading

2 to 3 months before

  • Take regular first-phase mocks
  • Practice practical-professional writing for second phase
  • Review weak subjects repeatedly
  • Track official updates

1 month before

  • Finalize registration status
  • Confirm exam center logistics
  • Focus on revision and timed practice
  • Memorize core legal provisions and structure

Exam week

  • Recheck official instructions
  • Print required documents if needed
  • Visit the exam center area if practical
  • Sleep and timing discipline matter more than new study

After first phase

  • Do not wait for the final result to begin second-phase preparation if you expect to qualify
  • Track answer key and appeal notices carefully

8. Application Process

The exact platform and steps depend on the cycle’s official notice, but the process generally works like this.

Step 1: Go to the official application portal

  • Start from the official OAB website: https://www.oab.org.br
  • Open the current exam notice and the linked application page

Step 2: Create or access your candidate account

  • Provide personal details
  • Use an active email and phone number
  • Save login credentials securely

Step 3: Fill the form carefully

Typical fields include:

  • full name
  • CPF or other identification details
  • date of birth
  • address
  • educational status
  • law school information
  • requested special accommodation, if any
  • preferred second-phase area, if the current exam requires this at application stage

Step 4: Upload documents

Requirements vary by cycle, but usually involve:

  • identity document
  • photograph
  • possibly proof related to accommodation requests or special category claims

Step 5: Choose declarations correctly

  • Confirm legal-course status honestly
  • Do not select categories or accommodations without supporting documentation
  • Review all declarations before submission

Step 6: Pay the fee

  • Follow the official payment method in the edital
  • Keep proof of payment
  • Check whether payment confirmation appears in your portal status

Step 7: Monitor for corrections

  • Some cycles allow limited correction windows for certain fields
  • Major errors may not be fixable later

Step 8: Download exam confirmation materials

  • Candidate card / local test information / admit card equivalent, if issued in that cycle

Common application mistakes

  • Using a wrong or expired ID
  • Misspelling the candidate name
  • Not checking whether the fee was actually processed
  • Ignoring second-phase subject selection rules
  • Missing accommodation deadlines
  • Assuming the exam center city can be changed later

Final submission checklist

  • Eligibility checked
  • Current edital downloaded
  • Personal details correct
  • Law-course details correct
  • Required documents uploaded
  • Fee paid and confirmed
  • Special accommodation request submitted, if needed
  • Exam city confirmed
  • Second-phase option confirmed, if applicable

9. Application Fee and Other Costs

Official application fee

  • The official fee is set in each exam’s edital
  • Because fees change by cycle, do not rely on old figures without checking the current notice

Category-wise fee differences

  • Any fee exemptions or reductions depend on the specific cycle’s official rules
  • They are not guaranteed every cycle

Late fee / correction fee

  • Late applications are generally not accepted unless the edital explicitly allows it
  • Correction fee, if any, depends on the notice

Objection / appeal fee

  • If there is a fee for certain challenges or procedural requests, it will be listed in the edital
  • Many result/answer-key objections follow formal rules rather than open-ended revaluation

Hidden practical costs to budget for

  • Travel to test center
  • Accommodation if the center is far
  • Food on exam day
  • Printing and document preparation
  • Coaching, if chosen
  • Books and statute compilations
  • Mock tests
  • Reliable internet/device access for registration and study
  • OAB registration-related costs after passing, which are separate from exam application

Pro Tip: Build a full budget, not just an application-fee budget. For many students, travel and preparation material cost more than the form fee.

10. Exam Pattern

The Exame de Ordem is widely known as a two-stage licensing exam.

Core structure

First phase

  • Objective / multiple-choice format
  • Covers a broad spread of undergraduate law subjects
  • Used as a qualifying stage for the second phase

Second phase

  • Practical-professional / written exam
  • Usually involves:
  • drafting a legal piece/petition or equivalent practical document
  • answering discursive questions in the chosen legal area

Mode

  • Traditionally in-person
  • Confirm exact mode in the current official notice

Question types

  • First phase: objective multiple-choice questions
  • Second phase: written practical and discursive responses

Total marks

  • The score structure is defined in the official rules for each stage
  • Historically, the first phase has a fixed number of objective questions and the second phase a practical-professional scoring distribution
  • Check the current edital for exact marks

Sectional timing and overall duration

  • Each stage has a separately defined exam duration
  • Time limits are strict and should be verified in the current cycle notice

Language options

  • Portuguese

Marking scheme

  • First phase typically uses one-mark multiple-choice scoring without negative marking
  • Second phase uses rubric-based evaluation of legal reasoning, structure, and correctness

Negative marking

  • Typically none in the objective phase

Partial marking

  • Usually relevant in the written second phase, where partially correct legal analysis may receive partial credit under the rubric

Interview / viva / practical / physical test

  • No interview, group discussion, physical test, or medical stage is part of the standard Exame de Ordem itself

Normalization or scaling

  • This is not generally presented as a rank-based normalized exam like some entrance tests
  • It is a qualifying licensing exam with pass/fail thresholds
  • Confirm if any scoring adjustment rule appears in the current edital

Stream variation

  • The second phase varies by the chosen legal subject area
  • This is one of the most important structural differences within the exam

Brazilian bar examination and Exame de Ordem

For the Brazilian bar examination / Exame de Ordem, your preparation must be split in two: broad objective-law mastery for Stage 1, and deep practical writing in one subject area for Stage 2.

11. Detailed Syllabus

The syllabus is law-heavy and tied to the official notice. The exact wording can evolve, but the exam generally reflects the core Brazilian undergraduate law curriculum and legal practice competencies.

First phase: broad law subjects

Commonly tested areas include:

  • Constitutional Law
  • Administrative Law
  • Civil Law
  • Civil Procedure
  • Criminal Law
  • Criminal Procedure
  • Labor Law
  • Labor Procedure
  • Commercial / Business Law
  • Tax Law
  • Human Rights
  • Consumer Law
  • International Law
  • Environmental Law
  • Philosophy of Law
  • Ethics and professional statute of the OAB
  • Child and Adolescent law-related topics
  • Procedural and statutory interpretation themes

Second phase: practical-professional area

Candidates usually choose one area such as:

  • Civil Law / Civil Procedure
  • Criminal Law / Criminal Procedure
  • Labor Law / Labor Procedure
  • Constitutional Law
  • Administrative Law
  • Tax Law
  • Business Law

The exact list must be confirmed in the current edital.

Important topics

Ethics and professional regulation

This is consistently important because it is directly tied to legal practice.

Focus on:

  • Estatuto da Advocacia
  • OAB rules and ethics
  • Lawyer duties, rights, incompatibilities, impediments, discipline

Procedural law

High practical relevance in both stages:

  • deadlines
  • competence/jurisdiction
  • petitions
  • appeals
  • procedural incidents
  • remedies

Constitutional foundations

Frequently important due to broad applicability:

  • fundamental rights
  • constitutional remedies
  • separation of powers
  • constitutional control mechanisms

Civil and criminal core doctrines

Often essential because they feed both objective questions and practical scenarios.

Skills being tested

  • Legal reading precision
  • Statutory interpretation
  • Application of doctrine to cases
  • Procedural choice
  • Practical drafting
  • Time-controlled legal reasoning
  • Professional ethics awareness

Static or changing syllabus?

  • The broad subject base is relatively stable
  • The detailed emphasis and legal updates can change
  • Students must track:
  • statutory amendments
  • procedural changes
  • official syllabus wording in the current notice

Link between syllabus and real exam difficulty

The exam is not only about memorizing concepts. Many candidates struggle because they:

  • know doctrine but cannot apply it quickly
  • know the law broadly but not the exact article
  • fail in practical drafting under time pressure
  • ignore ethics and procedural details

Commonly ignored but important topics

  • Professional ethics
  • Procedural deadlines and appeal routes
  • Practical drafting format
  • Formal structure of petitions
  • Recently updated statutes and procedural amendments

12. Difficulty Level and Competition Analysis

Relative difficulty

  • Moderate to high for many law graduates
  • The second phase often feels harder because it tests practical execution, not just recognition

Conceptual vs memory-based nature

  • Mixed
  • Requires both:
  • conceptual understanding
  • memory of statutes, procedures, and legal structure

Speed vs accuracy demands

  • First phase: speed and elimination skill matter
  • Second phase: accuracy, legal structure, and time-controlled writing matter more

Typical competition level

This is a qualifying exam, not a fixed-seat admission exam. So the real issue is not seat scarcity, but whether you meet the pass threshold.

Number of test-takers / pass rates

  • These figures vary by cycle
  • If not taken from an official current report, they should not be assumed
  • Historically, public discussion often treats the exam as selective, but students should avoid relying on unverified pass-rate claims

What makes the exam difficult

  • Very broad law coverage in Stage 1
  • Need to shift from objective solving to practical writing
  • Importance of legal ethics and procedure
  • Stress and timing
  • Law-school graduates may have uneven doctrinal grounding
  • Candidates often underestimate the second phase

Who usually performs well

  • Students with disciplined revision
  • Candidates who solve many objective papers
  • Candidates who practice full written pieces under time limits
  • Those who study statutes directly, not only summaries

13. Scoring, Ranking, and Results

Raw score calculation

  • First phase: based on the number of correct objective answers
  • Second phase: based on the score awarded to the practical-professional piece and discursive answers according to the official rubric

Percentile / rank / scaled score

  • This exam is generally not centered on percentile-based ranking for seat allocation
  • It is a qualifying professional exam

Passing marks / qualifying marks

  • The exam uses a pass threshold defined in the official rules
  • Historically, the first phase requires a minimum number of correct answers to qualify for the second phase, and the second phase also has its own minimum passing score
  • Confirm the exact threshold in the current edital

Sectional cutoffs

  • The main cutoff structure is typically by phase, not by every subject area
  • Verify whether any additional rule appears in the current cycle

Merit list rules

  • Usually not a rank-based “top list” exam in the admission sense
  • Results are primarily pass/fail qualification outcomes

Tie-breaking rules

  • Usually not central in the same way as rank-based entrance tests
  • If any tie-related procedural rule exists, it will be in the official notice

Result validity

  • Passing the exam enables the candidate to proceed with OAB registration, subject to legal requirements
  • Students should not assume indefinite postponement is harmless; check OAB registration procedures and timelines

Rechecking / revaluation / objections

  • Preliminary answer keys and appeal windows are typically provided
  • The second phase may also permit formal appeals under the rules
  • Full “revaluation on demand” is usually limited and rule-bound

Scorecard interpretation

Students should understand:

  • Whether they crossed the first-phase threshold
  • Which subjects caused major losses
  • In second phase, whether losses came from:
  • wrong procedural piece
  • poor legal foundation
  • weak argument structure
  • missing formal elements
  • poor time management

14. Selection Process After the Exam

For this exam, “selection” really means professional admission progression, not seat allotment.

After passing the exam

You typically move to:

  • document gathering
  • application for registration with the relevant OAB sectional body
  • verification of degree and supporting records
  • payment of registration-related fees
  • fulfillment of any local bar enrollment formalities

Counselling / choice filling / seat allotment

  • Not applicable in the normal university-admission sense

Interview / group discussion / skill test

  • Not part of the standard post-exam flow

Document verification

This is important. You may need documents such as:

  • law degree or completion proof
  • identity documents
  • CPF and civil records as required
  • photographs
  • any documents required by the sectional OAB for registration

Background / legal suitability review

Because this is entry to a regulated profession, legal-professional suitability requirements can matter.

Final licensing

Passing the exam alone is not the end. The real final step is:

  • OAB enrollment/registration
  • only then can you legally practice as a lawyer under the relevant rules

15. Seats, Vacancies, Intake, or Opportunity Size

  • Seats/vacancies: Not applicable in the usual sense
  • The Exame de Ordem is a qualifying licensing exam, not a limited-seat college admission or fixed-vacancy recruitment exam
  • Opportunity size is effectively national, because passing can support entry into legal practice across Brazil, subject to registration rules

16. Colleges, Universities, Employers, or Pathways That Accept This Exam

Who “accepts” this exam?

Because this is a licensing exam, the more accurate question is: Who recognizes the outcome?

Main recognition pathway

  • OAB sectional bodies for professional registration

Employers and professional pathways that value or require it

  • Law firms across Brazil
  • Litigation practices
  • Independent legal practice
  • In-house legal departments where attorney registration is required
  • Consultancy and advisory roles tied to legal representation

Nationwide or limited?

  • Nationwide significance within Brazil for legal practice

Notable exceptions

  • A law degree alone may still support some careers that do not require advocacy registration
  • Some legal-adjacent roles do not require OAB enrollment

Alternative pathways if a candidate does not qualify

  • Non-advocacy legal roles
  • Public examinations for certain legal careers
  • Compliance, contracts, legal research, policy, academia
  • Retake the Exame de Ordem

17. Eligibility-to-Outcome Map

If you are a final-year Brazilian law student

This exam can lead to: – earlier transition planning into bar admission – faster move into legal practice after graduation, if you pass and later meet registration requirements

If you are a recent law graduate

This exam can lead to: – OAB registration eligibility – law-firm practice – independent advocacy

If you are a working legal assistant with a law degree

This exam can lead to: – formal attorney status – better legal career mobility – higher-responsibility legal work

If you are aiming for litigation practice

This exam is usually essential because: – licensed advocacy is central to courtroom-oriented practice

If you want only non-advocacy legal or corporate support roles

This exam may still help, but: – it may not be strictly necessary for every role

If you are a foreign-trained law candidate

This exam can lead to: – possible Brazilian legal-practice progression only if your qualification status is recognized under applicable rules – you must verify recognition/equivalency first

18. Preparation Strategy

Brazilian bar examination and Exame de Ordem

The best strategy for the Brazilian bar examination / Exame de Ordem is to prepare for both stages from the beginning: broad MCQ law coverage plus practical written drafting in your chosen area.

12-month plan

Best for: – weak fundamentals – working professionals – repeaters with major gaps

Months 1 to 4

  • Build subject foundation
  • Read core statutes
  • Study one major subject at a time
  • Start ethics early
  • Solve small topic-wise MCQ sets

Months 5 to 8

  • Begin mixed-subject mocks
  • Choose second-phase area
  • Start weekly practical writing
  • Create an error log by subject and article

Months 9 to 10

  • Full first-phase mocks
  • Timed second-phase simulations
  • Memorize high-value procedural structures
  • Revise ethics repeatedly

Months 11 to 12

  • Intensive revision cycles
  • Weak-area rescue
  • Full exam-condition tests
  • Reduce passive reading

6-month plan

Best for: – reasonably strong law graduates – candidates with prior structured legal study

Months 1 to 2

  • Cover all first-phase subjects once
  • Start second-phase area in parallel
  • Practice 20–30 objective questions daily

Months 3 to 4

  • Full mixed mocks every week
  • One practical-professional writing drill weekly
  • Strong revision of procedure and ethics

Months 5 to 6

  • Increase to multiple mocks
  • Focus on recurring mistakes
  • Practice complete written papers under time pressure

3-month plan

Best for: – candidates with solid law-school base – recent repeaters

Month 1

  • Diagnostic mock
  • Prioritize:
  • ethics
  • constitutional
  • civil/civil procedure
  • criminal/criminal procedure
  • labor/labor procedure
  • Start second-phase writing immediately

Month 2

  • Two revision cycles
  • Timed MCQ practice
  • Frequent statute reading
  • Practical drafting every 3–4 days

Month 3

  • Full simulations
  • No new resources
  • Fix piece-identification errors
  • Tight revision notes only

Last 30-day strategy

  • Revise only from trusted notes/statutes
  • Take at least a few full-length mocks
  • Review all previous errors
  • Memorize procedural flowcharts
  • Practice opening and structuring legal pieces quickly
  • Keep ethics and OAB rules in the rotation

Last 7-day strategy

  • Sleep discipline
  • Light but sharp revision
  • Review:
  • ethics
  • procedural basics
  • constitutional remedies
  • appeal structures
  • common practical-piece formats
  • Avoid panic resource switching

Exam-day strategy

First phase

  • Start with strongest areas or easiest scanable questions
  • Do not spend too long on one item
  • Mark doubtful questions and return
  • Use elimination intelligently
  • Keep final bubbling/checking time

Second phase

  • Identify the procedural piece first
  • Read the fact pattern twice
  • Outline before writing
  • Include required formal elements
  • Manage time so discursive answers are not rushed
  • Do not leave issues unaddressed if partial credit is possible

Beginner strategy

  • First learn the structure of Brazilian legal subjects
  • Read bare acts/statutes regularly
  • Do not begin with random question banks only
  • Get one clean source per subject

Repeater strategy

  • Diagnose failure honestly:
  • Was Stage 1 the problem?
  • Or Stage 2?
  • Or timing?
  • Keep an error notebook
  • Do not repeat the same passive reading pattern
  • If second-phase failure occurred, write full answers, not just read model answers

Working-professional strategy

  • Study in fixed weekday blocks
  • Reserve long weekend sessions for mocks
  • Prioritize ethics, procedure, and your second-phase subject
  • Use commuting time for revision flashcards/audio review if useful

Weak-student recovery strategy

  • Stop trying to master everything equally at once
  • Focus first on:
  • ethics
  • major procedural subjects
  • constitutional basics
  • Build score through high-return topics
  • Practice fewer resources, more repetitions

Time management

  • Use 50–90 minute focused blocks
  • Mix theory, statute, and MCQs
  • Weekly review day is mandatory

Note-making

Keep notes compact:

  • one-page chapter summaries
  • procedural steps
  • appeal maps
  • ethics rules
  • common articles and exceptions

Revision cycles

A strong pattern is:

  • first revision within 48 hours
  • second revision in 1 week
  • third revision in 3 to 4 weeks
  • final revision before exam

Mock test strategy

  • Start topic-wise, then mixed, then full-length
  • Analyze every mock
  • Track:
  • subject accuracy
  • careless mistakes
  • guessed questions
  • time sink areas

Error log method

Create columns for:

  • date
  • subject
  • topic
  • type of error
  • correct legal basis
  • why you missed it
  • revision date

Subject prioritization

Highest practical priority for many candidates:

  • ethics
  • constitutional law
  • civil and civil procedure
  • criminal and criminal procedure
  • labor and labor procedure
  • second-phase chosen subject

Accuracy improvement

  • Read all options carefully
  • Avoid overthinking simple statutory questions
  • Review exception rules and procedural details
  • Practice under timed conditions

Stress management and burnout prevention

  • Use weekly rest blocks
  • Avoid 12-hour panic study near the exam
  • Maintain sleep and hydration
  • Focus on consistency over intensity spikes

19. Best Study Materials

Official syllabus and notice

  • Current edital from OAB
  • Why useful: This is the authoritative source for eligibility, pattern, and tested areas

Official site: – https://www.oab.org.br

Official laws and regulations

  • Estatuto da Advocacia and OAB ethics rules
  • Brazilian codes and core statutes
  • Why useful: The exam heavily rewards direct familiarity with the legal text

Use official Brazilian legislation portals where available, such as: – https://www.planalto.gov.br

Previous exam papers

  • Prior Exame de Ordem papers from official/authorized publication channels
  • Why useful: Best indicator of style, breadth, and question framing

Standard doctrine / undergraduate law texts

Use widely adopted Brazilian law-school texts in:

  • Constitutional Law
  • Civil Law
  • Civil Procedure
  • Criminal Law
  • Criminal Procedure
  • Labor Law
  • Tax Law
  • Administrative Law

Why useful: Builds conceptual clarity beyond memorization.

Bare acts / statute compilations

  • Why useful: Essential for both phases, especially ethics and procedure
  • Use updated versions only

Practical second-phase materials

  • Subject-specific writing guides
  • Collections of practical pieces and discursive answers
  • Why useful: Second-phase success depends on output practice, not only reading

Mock test sources

  • Officially released past papers
  • Reputed exam-specific coaching platforms
  • Why useful: They help with time control and error diagnosis

Video / online resources

Use only providers with clear relevance to OAB preparation and current-law updates.

Common Mistake: Watching many lectures without solving papers creates false confidence.

20. Top 5 Institutes for Preparation

Below are widely known or commonly chosen options for OAB preparation in Brazil. This is not a ranking.

1. Fundação Getulio Vargas (FGV) materials/exam ecosystem relevance

  • Country / city / online: Brazil / national relevance
  • Mode: Exam-related institutional relevance; not primarily a coaching institute in the usual sense
  • Why students choose it: FGV has been prominently associated with administration of OAB exam cycles in recent years
  • Strengths: Strong exam-format relevance where officially involved
  • Weaknesses / caution points: Not a standard coaching provider for all students in the same way as prep courses
  • Who it suits best: Students seeking official exam documents, past-style understanding, and source-based familiarity
  • Official site: Access through OAB exam notices and FGV official pages when applicable
  • Exam-specific or general: Exam administration relevance, not conventional general coaching

2. Estratégia OAB

  • Country / city / online: Brazil / online
  • Mode: Online
  • Why students choose it: Widely known in Brazil for exam preparation, including OAB-focused programs
  • Strengths: Structured courses, question practice, exam-oriented plans
  • Weaknesses / caution points: Can be overwhelming if students buy too many packages
  • Who it suits best: Students who want a highly structured online prep system
  • Official site: https://www.estrategiaconcursos.com.br
  • Exam-specific or general: Has exam-specific OAB preparation within a broader test-prep ecosystem

3. Damásio Educacional

  • Country / city / online: Brazil / multiple locations and online presence
  • Mode: Hybrid / online depending on offering
  • Why students choose it: Longstanding visibility in Brazilian legal education and OAB preparation
  • Strengths: Strong legal-prep brand recognition, practical focus
  • Weaknesses / caution points: Course quality may vary by format and instructor
  • Who it suits best: Students who want law-focused coaching from a known legal-prep provider
  • Official site: https://www.damasio.com.br
  • Exam-specific or general: Strong legal-exam focus, including OAB-related prep

4. CEISC

  • Country / city / online: Brazil / online with broad national reach
  • Mode: Online
  • Why students choose it: Well known among Brazilian law students for OAB and legal exam support
  • Strengths: Exam-focused materials, practical-phase support
  • Weaknesses / caution points: Students should verify whether the teaching style suits them before committing
  • Who it suits best: Candidates who need direct OAB-oriented study and second-phase practice
  • Official site: https://www.ceisc.com.br
  • Exam-specific or general: Strong relevance to OAB/legal-exam preparation

5. Gran Cursos Online

  • Country / city / online: Brazil / online
  • Mode: Online
  • Why students choose it: Broad Brazilian prep platform with legal and exam offerings
  • Strengths: Large digital platform, flexible access, question-oriented prep
  • Weaknesses / caution points: Because it covers many exams, students must choose OAB-specific tracks carefully
  • Who it suits best: Self-directed online learners who want platform convenience
  • Official site: https://www.grancursosonline.com.br
  • Exam-specific or general: General test-prep platform with OAB-related offerings

How to choose the right institute for this exam

Pick based on:

  • whether you need Stage 1 only or both stages
  • whether you struggle more with:
  • objective questions
  • legal theory
  • practical writing
  • whether you need:
  • live classes
  • recorded lectures
  • mentorship
  • answer-writing correction
  • budget
  • availability of updated law content
  • quality of second-phase correction and feedback

Warning: For the Exame de Ordem, a coaching institute is optional. Good students often pass with disciplined self-study plus official material and practice.

21. Common Mistakes Students Make

Application mistakes

  • Missing deadlines
  • Entering wrong identity or law-course details
  • Not checking payment confirmation
  • Ignoring accommodation procedures

Eligibility misunderstandings

  • Assuming any law-related study is enough
  • Ignoring degree recognition issues
  • Misreading final-year eligibility rules

Weak preparation habits

  • Reading notes passively without practicing
  • Ignoring statutes
  • Delaying second-phase preparation until after first-phase results

Poor mock strategy

  • Taking mocks but not analyzing them
  • Practicing only untimed
  • Avoiding full-length papers

Bad time allocation

  • Spending too much time on minor subjects
  • Ignoring ethics and procedure
  • Overinvesting in lectures, underinvesting in questions

Overreliance on coaching

  • Assuming attendance equals preparation
  • Not building personal notes or error logs

Ignoring official notices

  • Using social media summaries instead of the edital
  • Missing appeals or result deadlines

Misunderstanding pass thresholds

  • Studying “to feel prepared” rather than to reach the actual qualifying mark

Last-minute errors

  • Switching books in the last week
  • Studying new topics the night before
  • Reaching the center late
  • Forgetting required documents

22. Success Factors and Winning Traits

The students who usually do well tend to show:

  • Conceptual clarity: understand why a rule applies
  • Consistency: steady study beats bursts
  • Speed: especially in objective phase
  • Reasoning: selecting the right legal path from facts
  • Writing quality: crucial in second phase
  • Domain knowledge: especially procedure and ethics
  • Stamina: both mental and physical exam endurance
  • Discipline: regular revision and honest performance review

For this exam, the strongest combination is:

  • statute familiarity
  • practical procedural knowledge
  • calm timed execution

23. Failure Recovery and Backup Options

If you miss the deadline

  • Wait for the next cycle
  • Use the gap to prepare seriously
  • Gather documents in advance for the next notice

If you are not eligible

  • Confirm whether the issue is:
  • degree completion
  • final-year status
  • recognition/equivalency
  • documentation
  • Fix the eligibility issue before reapplying

If you score low in first phase

  • Diagnose by subject
  • Focus on high-yield areas first
  • Increase objective-paper volume
  • Revise statutes directly

If you fail second phase

  • This is common enough to be a real planning issue
  • Focus on:
  • practical piece identification
  • writing structure
  • legal basis citation
  • time allocation
  • Write full papers, not fragments

Alternative paths while preparing again

  • Legal assistant roles
  • Compliance and contracts support
  • Academic or postgraduate law study
  • Public exam preparation for other legal careers

Retry strategy

  • Do not restart from zero blindly
  • Keep prior notes
  • Make a failure report
  • Rebuild around your exact weakness

Does a gap year make sense?

  • It can, if your fundamentals are weak and legal practice is your clear goal
  • But many candidates can prepare while working or studying
  • A gap year is justified only if used with strict structure

24. Career, Salary, and Long-Term Value

Immediate outcome

  • Eligibility to pursue OAB registration and become a licensed lawyer

Study or job options after qualifying

  • Law firms
  • Independent legal practice
  • Corporate legal departments
  • Specialized legal advisory work

Career trajectory

A typical long-term path may include:

  • junior associate / early-career advocate
  • independent client handling
  • specialization
  • partnership or solo office growth
  • legal consultancy, arbitration, academic specialization, or niche practice

Salary / earning potential

  • There is no single official national salary attached to passing the exam
  • Income varies sharply by:
  • city
  • employer type
  • practice area
  • seniority
  • private practice success
  • Students should be cautious about generic salary claims

Long-term value

  • High value for anyone intending to practice law in Brazil
  • Professionally important credential
  • Expands legal employability and formal advocacy rights

Risks or limitations

  • Passing the exam does not guarantee employment
  • New lawyers may face competitive markets
  • Income can be unstable in independent practice
  • Practical skills and networking still matter

25. Special Notes for This Country

Brazil-specific realities

OAB registration is profession-critical

In Brazil, the law degree alone does not generally authorize advocacy. The Exame de Ordem is a central professional gatekeeper.

Portuguese legal language matters

Even strong students struggle if their legal Portuguese writing is weak.

Regional access issues

  • Test-center access may be harder for candidates outside large urban areas
  • Travel and accommodation planning can be significant

Public vs private law school background

The exam does not formally become a different exam by institution type, but candidate preparation quality may vary widely depending on law-school training

Documentation issues

Candidates should keep ready:

  • ID documents
  • CPF
  • educational records
  • degree/completion evidence
  • any accommodation-related documents

Foreign qualification/equivalency issues

This is one of the most sensitive areas. Foreign law graduates should verify:

  • diploma recognition in Brazil
  • whether their qualification satisfies OAB requirements
  • any additional administrative/legal steps

26. FAQs

1. Is the Exame de Ordem mandatory to become a lawyer in Brazil?

Yes, for legal practice as an advocate, passing the exam is generally a key requirement together with OAB registration and other legal conditions.

2. Is this the same as a law school entrance exam?

No. It is a professional licensing exam taken after or near the end of law studies.

3. Can I take the exam in my final year of law school?

Often yes, under specific rules, but you must verify the current edital and applicable OAB regulation.

4. How many attempts are allowed?

A low fixed cap is not typically associated with this exam, but always confirm in the current rules.

5. Is the exam held only once a year?

No, it is usually conducted in multiple cycles per year, depending on OAB scheduling.

6. Is there negative marking?

Typically, no negative marking is used in the objective stage.

7. What happens after I pass?

You still need to complete OAB registration formalities with the relevant sectional body.

8. Is passing the first phase enough to become a lawyer?

No. You must also pass the second phase and complete OAB enrollment requirements.

9. Which subjects matter most?

Ethics, procedure-heavy subjects, and your second-phase chosen area are especially important.

10. Is coaching necessary?

No. Many students pass through self-study, but coaching can help with structure and second-phase writing.

11. Can foreign candidates apply?

Possibly, but qualification recognition and eligibility can be complex. Verify directly with official rules.

12. Is the exam online?

Traditionally it is in-person, but always confirm the mode in the current edital.

13. Does the score remain valid for years?

This is not usually treated like an entrance score valid for future admissions. Passing supports progression to professional registration.

14. Can I prepare in 3 months?

Yes, if your law fundamentals are already strong. If they are weak, 3 months may be risky.

15. What is the hardest part for most students?

Many struggle with the second phase because of practical drafting and time pressure.

16. Should I start second-phase preparation only after passing the first phase?

No. Start early, especially if writing is a weakness.

17. Can I choose the second-phase subject freely?

Usually there is a selection process for the practical area, but check the current notice for exact options and timing.

18. Are old materials enough?

No. Law updates matter. Use updated statutes and current-cycle exam rules.

27. Final Student Action Plan

Use this checklist.

Eligibility and documents

  • Confirm you are eligible as a law graduate or eligible final-year student
  • Check whether your institution/degree status is recognized
  • Gather ID, CPF, academic records, and any accommodation documents

Official notice and deadlines

  • Download the current edital from the official OAB website
  • Note:
  • registration dates
  • payment deadline
  • exam dates
  • appeal windows
  • result dates

Application

  • Fill the form carefully
  • Confirm second-phase subject selection rules
  • Pay the fee and verify payment confirmation
  • Save all receipts and confirmations

Preparation

  • Build a schedule for both stages
  • Prioritize ethics, procedure, and core subjects
  • Read statutes regularly
  • Practice objective questions weekly
  • Practice second-phase writing consistently

Performance tracking

  • Keep an error log
  • Review weak topics every week
  • Take full mocks under exam conditions
  • Analyze every mock honestly

Exam logistics

  • Confirm test center
  • Plan travel and accommodation early if needed
  • Check what documents and materials are allowed
  • Sleep properly before the exam

Post-exam steps

  • Track answer keys and appeal deadlines
  • Begin or continue second-phase prep immediately after first phase
  • If you pass both phases, prepare for OAB registration documents

Avoid last-minute mistakes

  • Do not rely on social media summaries over official notices
  • Do not switch resources in the final week
  • Do not ignore procedural details
  • Do not leave registration formalities for later

28. Source Transparency

Official sources used

  • Ordem dos Advogados do Brasil (OAB) official website: https://www.oab.org.br
  • Official federal legislation portal for Brazilian laws and legal texts: https://www.planalto.gov.br

Supplementary sources used

  • No non-official source links included in this guide
  • General references to well-known prep institutes were included cautiously for student decision-making, but students should verify current offerings directly on each institute’s official site

Which facts are confirmed for the current cycle

Confirmed at a stable structural level:

  • The exam is the Exame de Ordem Unificado
  • It is a professional licensing exam for legal practice in Brazil
  • It is conducted under the authority of the OAB
  • It has a two-stage structure: objective first phase and practical-professional second phase
  • OAB registration is the relevant professional outcome after passing

Which facts are based on recent historical patterns

These should be rechecked in the latest edital:

  • exact dates
  • exact application fee
  • exact duration of each phase
  • exact list of second-phase subject options
  • exact organizing institution for the current cycle
  • accommodations, exemptions, and correction windows
  • exact passing-threshold wording for the current edition

Any unresolved ambiguity or missing public information

  • Current-cycle dates and fee were not supplied in your prompt and were not stated here to avoid inventing data
  • The exact organizing body can vary by cycle and must be verified in the current official notice
  • Some eligibility nuances for final-year and foreign-qualified candidates are rule-specific and should be checked directly in the current edital and OAB regulations

Last reviewed on: 2026-03-19

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