Summer Internships
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Summer Internships

A full guide to landing your 1L and 2L summer jobs, across the three paths that matter: biglaw, courts and government, and public interest. Each one runs on its own timeline, so the trick is knowing when to apply and how each process really works.

Your summer job is where law school turns into a career. The hard part is that the three big paths run on completely different clocks. Biglaw recruits painfully early, courts and government agencies have their own fixed deadlines, and public interest hiring is mostly rolling. The goal of this guide is to help you pick a lane, hit the deadlines, and not get left behind because no one told you when to apply.

Private

Biglaw and firms

Paid summer associate jobs at large firms. The money is the draw, and the timeline is brutal. Applications now open in the fall, and the process is mostly direct now, not on-campus interviews.

Public

Courts and government

Judicial internships and agency work like the Department of Justice. Often unpaid or modestly paid, but they teach you more about how law actually works than almost anything else, and they build references.

Mission

Public interest

Legal aid, nonprofits, and advocacy groups. Hiring is mostly rolling, the work is hands-on, and the main challenge is usually funding, which is where summer grants come in.

The big picture

How the three timelines compare

PathWhen to applyHow you applyPay
Biglaw (2L summer)Fall of 1L through early spring; some portals open as early as late SeptemberMostly direct applications now; some on-campus interviewsPaid, and paid well
Biglaw (1L summer)Applications generally open December 1; decisions in February and MarchDirect applications and diversity programsPaid
Judicial internshipFederal judges often look starting December and January; state judges run later, into springApply directly to chambers, usually by mail or emailUsually unpaid; use a school grant
Government (e.g. DOJ SLIP)Early, with the main DOJ deadline in early SeptemberOnline application through the agencySLIP is paid; many agency roles are volunteer
Public interestRolling, often from October through spring; career fairs in the winterDirect applications and public interest job fairsOften unpaid; funded by grants

The one rule that saves people

The biggest mistake students make is assuming every job runs on their school's calendar. It does not. Biglaw moves first and fast, government has hard cutoffs in the early fall, and public interest will quietly fill its spots while you wait. Make a single list of every deadline that matters to you, sort it by date, and work backward from the earliest one. The students who get good jobs are usually the ones who started early, not the ones with the best grades.

Before you apply anywhere

Get your materials ready first

Almost every application asks for the same things. Build them once, polish them, and have them ready so a deadline never catches you off guard.

  • A clean, one-page resume. See the resume guide for the format firms and judges expect.
  • A cover letter you can tailor quickly to each employer. The cover letter guide walks through the structure.
  • A writing sample, usually five to ten pages. A legal memo or brief from your legal writing class works well, and you can trim a longer piece down.
  • Your law school transcript, official or unofficial depending on what they ask for.
  • A short reference list of professors or employers who would speak well of you. Ask them before you list them.

© 2026 Surviving Law School · Timelines move every year and vary by school and market. Always confirm dates with your career office and the employer.