TX Bar Exam · Family Law

Family Law for the Texas Bar Exam

Marriage, divorce, and child custody

57+ Cards16 Topics68% Pass Rate
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What You'll Study in Family Law

Community Property
Divorce
Property Division
Child Custody
Child Support
Spousal Support
Paternity
Protective Orders
Premarital Agreements
Adoption
Termination of Parental Rights
Marriage
Annulment
Child Protection
Minors
Child Custody Jurisdiction

Sample Family Law Questions

1What is Texas community property?
2What are the grounds for divorce in Texas?
3How is property divided in a Texas divorce?

What You'll Master

Master marriage requirements, validity, and common-law marriage rules
Learn divorce grounds, property division, and spousal support standards
Memorize child custody factors and the best interests of the child standard
Understand child support calculation guidelines and modification rules
Nail adoption procedures, termination of parental rights, and paternity actions
57+
Flashcards
16
Topics
68%
Pass Rate
910+
Students

Family Law for Texas Bar Exam FAQ

What Family Law topics are covered?
Our flashcards cover marriage formation and validity, premarital agreements, divorce and annulment, property division (equitable distribution), spousal support, child custody and visitation, child support, adoption, paternity, and domestic violence protections.
How do flashcards help with Family Law analysis?
Family Law questions require applying multi-factor tests such as the best interests of the child standard. Our flashcards drill each factor and standard so you can systematically analyze custody, support, and property division issues.
Are premarital agreement rules covered?
Yes. We cover the enforceability requirements for premarital agreements including voluntariness, full disclosure, and unconscionability, as well as the modern trend toward the Uniform Premarital Agreement Act.
Do you cover both fault and no-fault divorce?
Yes. Our flashcards explain both fault-based grounds (adultery, cruelty, abandonment) and no-fault divorce provisions, including how fault may affect property division and spousal support in some jurisdictions.

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