You're six months in and you hate the work. Here are your actual options.
BigLaw Bear · 3 min read

You joined a BigLaw firm, got assigned to a practice group, and realized within a few months that you do not like the work. This is more common than firms or law schools admit, and it is not a career-ending problem.
Several factors contribute:
All of these are valid. The important thing is to figure out whether the problem is the practice area itself or just the junior associate experience.
Most BigLaw firms allow internal practice group transfers, especially in the first two years. The process typically involves:
The key is to be diplomatic. Frame it as wanting to explore your interests, not as fleeing something you hate. Partners take it personally when associates openly criticize their group.
Timing matters. Transferring in your first year is generally easier than in your third or fourth year, when you have become specialized.
Before committing to a formal transfer, try picking up work from other groups. Many firms have open assignment systems or allow associates to take on work outside their group. This lets you test a new practice area without the political cost of a formal transfer request.
If your firm does not have a strong practice in the area you want, or if the firm culture is part of the problem, a lateral move might make more sense. This is more disruptive but can be the right call if the fit is genuinely wrong. Browse the firm directory to see which firms are strong in the area you are interested in.
Junior associate work is not representative of what a practice area looks like at the mid-level or senior level. If you like the concept of your practice area but hate the grunt work, it may be worth staying until you get more substantive assignments. Talk to mid-level associates about how the work changes.
Do not suffer in silence for years. Do not complain openly without taking action. And do not assume that hating your first six months means you chose the wrong career. Most dissatisfaction at this stage is fixable.
Read our guide on how to choose a practice area for a framework that can help you figure out what you actually want.
Keep this guide handy.
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