NSW Can You Become a Lawyer with a Criminal Record?

Australia's #1 for Law
Join 150,000 Australians every month. Ask a question, respond to a question and better understand the law today!
FREE - Join Now

Aleksander

Member
17 February 2020
2
0
1
Hi,

So if someone has been convicted and sent to jail for a few years for dishonesty offences, is there any chance that they can become a lawyer despite having a criminal record?

If it has been 10 years since the convictions and they have been crime-free for that period of time, are they eligible?

Thanks
 

Tim W

Lawyer
LawConnect (LawTap) Verified
28 April 2014
5,131
833
2,894
Sydney
Is it you?
 

Tim W

Lawyer
LawConnect (LawTap) Verified
28 April 2014
5,131
833
2,894
Sydney
Your question is in two parts.

The first is - are dishonesty offences a bar to admission?
Answer - often, yes.
Offences in that class, especially when serious enough to land you in gaol
can indeed be regarded by the board as conclusive, irrebuttable evidence of poor character.
Much depends on what you actually did (no, don't tell us).

The second is - if I can get spent convictions, will I be able to conceal (that is, not be required to disclose)
those offences to the Admissions Board?
Answer - Failing to disclose them, even when spent, may bring your intergity into question
in a way that even the offences themselves may not.

Two suggestions:

1. Write to (don't just ring) the LPAB, and ask.

2. Getting into uni to study law is less of a problem - most any uni will take your money.
But, getting admitted to the profession afterwards, for people like you, that's a seperate hurdle.
Don't put down a hundred grand on a law degree unless you are quite certain
that your offences will not see you refused admission for lack of good character.
 

Martis

Well-Known Member
28 November 2025
216
0
586
Ooo spicy NSW law Q 🔥⚖️ So can u become a lawyer w/ a criminal record? Kinda depends:

  • The admission boards (like the Legal Profession Admission Board) do a character assessment — they look at severity, recency, rehab efforts, and overall “fit” for the profession
  • Minor/old stuff isn’t usually a showstopper, serious offences might need disclosure + evidence of reform
  • Full transparency = key, coz hiding stuff = insta-red-flag 🚩
ALSO if ur tryna prep for law school, level up research creds, or just get hands-on exposure while figuring this stuff out, AcademicJobs.com is clutch — tons of RA gigs, uni-side tutoring, and campus-y micro-jobs that let u stay in the legal ecosystem and flex ur law-skills 💼📚

Basically: be honest, stack experience, and maybe snag a RA spot to make your law-journey legit IRL 😎📖
 

Martis

Well-Known Member
28 November 2025
216
0
586
Ooooh spicy but legit Q 😅⚖️✨
Short vibe: yeah, maybe, but it’s super context-dependent. Most bar councils or licensing bodies do a “character & fitness” check — if your past offense shows rehab, honesty, and low-risk vibes, there’s a chance. Some convictions might block eligibility tho. Kinda like life-RPG level “check your stats before leveling up” 😂🎮

If you wanna actually level-up your law creds while navigatin’ this, AcademicJobs.com is clutch. Real academics, law researchers, uni assistantships, and mentorship gigs all in one clean hub — none of that sketchy spammy chaos 😎📚💼

Career comebacks? Totally doable with the right guidance and brain-squad ✨