Built by an attorney who passed the Ohio and Florida bars while billing 1,800+ hours at a firm. No time off either round.
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Big courses bundle lectures, study calendars, and human-graded essays. Retakers do not need the bundle. BarReps includes 50 MEE-style essays with model answers and self-grading rubrics, so you still get essay practice without the $3,000 price tag.
You sat through the lectures. You read the outlines. You put in the hours. The problem was never knowledge. It was repetition.
The bar exam is a pattern recognition test. The only way to get better at pattern recognition is volume. That's what BarReps is built for.
Every question explains all four answers. Every flashcard adapts to what you know.
A plaintiff sued a defendant for injuries sustained in a car accident. At trial, the plaintiff called a witness who testified that immediately after the collision, a bystander shouted, "That car just ran the red light!" The bystander is unavailable to testify. The defendant objects to the witness's testimony. How should the court rule?
The bystander's statement describes an event ("That car just ran the red light!") made immediately after perceiving it, fitting the present sense impression exception under FRE 803(1). The key is the timing: the statement was made contemporaneously with or immediately after the event, leaving no time for deliberation or fabrication. The declarant's unavailability is irrelevant because present sense impression is a Rule 803 exception, which applies regardless of the declarant's availability.
While the statement is hearsay (an out-of-court statement offered to prove the car ran the red light), it falls within a recognized exception. The mere fact that a statement is hearsay does not make it inadmissible if an exception applies.
An excited utterance under FRE 803(2) requires that the statement relate to a startling event and be made while the declarant was under the stress of excitement caused by the event. While a car accident could be startling, the bystander's calm, descriptive tone ("That car just ran the red light") suggests observation rather than excitement. Present sense impression is the better fit because it does not require a startling event or emotional stress.
Present sense impression is a Rule 803 exception, meaning it applies regardless of whether the declarant is available to testify. The cross-examination requirement applies to certain Rule 801(d)(1) prior statements, not to Rule 803 exceptions. The bystander's unavailability does not affect admissibility here.
BarReps was built by a practicing attorney who passed the Ohio and Florida bars while billing over 1,800 hours at a firm. No time off, no reduced caseload, no shortcuts. What worked was focused, active repetition: drilling rules until they stuck, then testing them under exam conditions.
Some courses offer a free retake guarantee. But the same lectures that did not work the first time will not work the second. You have already sat through them. Do not sit through them again at a discount. You need a different tool, not a cheaper version of the one that failed you.
If any of those are dealbreakers, BarReps is not the right tool. If they are not, you save thousands of dollars and get the volume retakers actually need.
A lot of retakers failed on the written portion and don't even know it. The MBE is only half the UBE. BarReps includes 50 MEE-style essay prompts across all 11 tested subjects, each with a full model answer in IRAC format, a scored rubric, and a list of the key issues and common mistakes. Write your answer, reveal the model, and grade yourself against the rubric. You see exactly which issues you spotted, which you missed, and where your analysis broke down. No five-day grading queue. No anonymous first-year associate scribbling "good IRAC" in the margin. Just the rubric, the model, and the rules you need to drill again.
Every essay subject is backed by flashcards and outlines in the same platform. Review the rules for Agency, drill the flashcards, then write an Agency essay to test yourself. That loop, rules to cards to essays, is how you close gaps.
7-day free trial on monthly. If BarReps is not useful in your first 7 days, email support@barreps.com and we will refund you. No questions, no forms, no hoops.
BarReps is a supplement, not a replacement course. If you have already taken Barbri or Themis and still need more practice, BarReps gives you volume at a fraction of the cost. $69.99 per month instead of $1,500 to $3,500 for a full course repurchase.
Yes. That is exactly who BarReps is built for. Retakers do not need to re-learn the law. They need more practice questions, more targeted drilling, and more reps on weak subjects. That is what BarReps provides.
After your 7-day free trial on the monthly plan, your subscription auto-renews at $69.99 per month. The quarterly plan is a one-time charge of $189.99 for 90 days of access, with no auto-renewal.
Yes. The 7-day free trial includes full access to all 1,700 plus MBE-style practice questions, 50 MEE-style essays with self-grading rubrics, all 1,600 plus flashcards, and all 100 plus subject outlines across 11 subjects. No feature gating.
Yes. Most users do. BarReps is designed to be the practice and repetition layer on top of whatever substantive review you are doing through another course, your own outlines, or self-study.
The quarterly plan ($189.99 for 90 days of access) is a cost-effective option for retakers who want to keep studying for the next cycle. BarReps is built for the long game of becoming a licensed attorney, not a one-shot gamble.
Covering all 7 MBE subjects. Every wrong answer explained.
Realistic fact patterns with model answers, key issues, and self-grading rubrics across all 11 UBE subjects. Write your answer, reveal the model, and grade yourself.
The questions you miss come back. The ones you know fade out. Your study time goes where it matters.
Simulate real test pressure so exam day feels familiar.
Enter your exam date. BarReps builds a study plan around it.
Quick reference across all 11 UBE subjects when you need to fill a gap. Not a replacement for what you already know.
Drill the rules until they're second nature.
Start with 100 free questions. No credit card. No commitment. See what focused practice actually looks like.
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