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What Is the Partnership Track in BigLaw?

BigLaw Bear · 3 min read

What Is the Partnership Track in BigLaw?

"Making partner" is the career milestone that drives BigLaw culture. But the path is longer, more complex, and less certain than most law students realize.

The Timeline

At most BigLaw firms, the partnership track runs 8-10 years from your start date as a first-year associate. Some firms have moved to 9 or 10-year tracks. A few still promote at 7-8 years.

During that time, you'll progress from junior associate to mid-level to senior associate. At many firms, there's an informal "up or out" evaluation around years 6-8 where the firm starts making decisions about who's partnership material.

Income Partner vs. Equity Partner

Here's something that confuses a lot of people: "partner" isn't one thing anymore.

Income partners (also called "non-equity partners," "service partners," or "counsel" at some firms) get the partner title and a salary increase, but they don't share in the firm's profits. Typical income partner compensation: $400,000-$800,000.

Equity partners own a share of the firm and split the profits. This is the real prize. Equity partner compensation varies wildly, from $1 million to $5 million+ at the most profitable firms. At places like Wachtell or Kirkland, top equity partners earn $10M+.

Many firms have a two-tier system: you make income partner first, then equity partner a few years later. Some firms have eliminated income partnership entirely and only promote straight to equity.

What Are the Realistic Odds?

This varies by firm, but the honest numbers: roughly 5-15% of any entering associate class will eventually make equity partner at the same firm.

That doesn't mean 85-95% "fail." Most people leave voluntarily for excellent opportunities well before the partnership decision. But if your plan is "I will make equity partner," you should know the odds going in.

What Gets You There

Making partner isn't just about being a good lawyer. You need:

  • Consistent high-quality work over nearly a decade
  • Business development, bringing in clients or inheriting them
  • Internal champions, senior partners who advocate for you
  • Institutional support, being in the right practice group at the right time
  • Endurance, simply being willing and able to stay

The business development piece is increasingly what separates those who make equity partner from those who don't. You can be a brilliant lawyer, but if you can't generate revenue, many firms won't promote you to equity.

Is It Worth Pursuing?

If you genuinely love the work, thrive under pressure, and can build client relationships, partnership can be an extraordinary career, intellectually stimulating, financially rewarding, and professionally prestigious.

But it's a 10-year bet. Make sure you're betting on something you actually want, not just something that sounds impressive.

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