How to Crack the Advocate-on-Record (AoR) Exam and Build a Supreme Court Practice
Registration in this workshop is closed, but you can join the wait list. We will let you know when we take more registrations.
Meet the Hosts

Ramanuj Mukherjee CEO & CO-Founder, LawSikho

Abhyuday Agarwal COO & CO-Founder, LawSikho
- Are you a trial or high court lawyer? Do you sometimes wonder what it would take for you to become a Supreme court lawyer?
- Do the stories of how hard it is to establish a Supreme Court practice stop you from taking the first step?
- Are you practicing outside Delhi and envy Delhi lawyers because of their proximity to the Supreme Court?
- Do you find it hard to differentiate yourself with scores of other lawyers in a competitive market?
- Do you want to eradicate this and become a Supreme Court lawyer while you continue to practice in your hometown?
Almost every lawyer dreams of establishing a Supreme Court practice, and yet most of them never even get to attempt it.
- Who does not want to work on high-profile matters which get covered in legal and mainstream media?
- Who does not want to engage the best senior advocates of the country to argue matters for their clients?
- If you are struggling to figure this out, let’s help you become an Advocate-on-Record (AoR) at the Supreme Court.
- Only an Advocate-on-Record (AoR) can file petitions at the Supreme Court in his/her own name.
- An Advocate-on-Record (AoR) tag adds tremendous credibility to your name in any part of the country - there are only 2777 AoRs all over India. They are all members of a Supreme Court Advocates-on-Record Association. Most of them are in Delhi.
- As you can see, this is an exclusive club. What if you could be a part of it?
- When you are an Advocate-on-Record (AoR), clients can trust you more easily. They know that they have one person in their corner who is a recognised lawyer at the highest judicial forum in the country.
- Your credibility is higher, you get more important matters and you can charge more as well.
- The difficult part is however, cracking the Advocate-on-Record (AoR) exam.
- How difficult is it?
- How do you prepare for it?
- What do you have to do to qualify to write this exam?
- What do you have to study?
- What kind of questions came in the past?
- What is the style of answer-writing that is appreciated?
- Do you want to have all your questions answers about the Advocate-on-Record (AoR) exam answered?
- Do you want to know how to start building your Supreme Court practice?
If you are a lawyer who is interested in becoming an Advocate-on-Record (AoR), we have a bootcamp for you where you can begin your journey and figure out an actionable plan.
Register right now, it is online and free, you can attend from anywhere.
What will we cover in the bootcamp
- What are the advantages of being a Supreme Court lawyer? What are the benefits for trial court lawyers, High Court lawyers and lawyers outside Delhi who do not practice at the Supreme Court?
- What are the myths about Supreme Court practice that prevent young lawyers from attempting the Advocate-on-Record (AoR) exam or succeeding at Supreme Court practice?
- How can cracking the Advocate-on-Record (AoR) exam improve your credibility and reputation before clients, bar and the bench? How does it remove uncertainty of getting work?
- How much do Supreme Court lawyers charge for various kinds of drafting and arguments-related work?
- What is the syllabus for Advocate-on-Record (AoR) Exam? What are the eligibility requirements?
- Why do aspirants fail to crack the Advocate-on-Record (AoR) exam? What challenges do they face?
- When should you start preparation to maximize your chances of cracking the exam?
- How should you prepare? How many hours should you study? What should your daily study plan look like?
- How should you manage your practice alongside study for the Advocate-on-Record (AoR) exam
- What are the types of questions that are asked?
- What happens after you clear the Advocate-on-Record (AoR) exam? What are the next steps?
- How should you satisfy technical criteria such as finding an Advocate-on-Record (AoR) with 10 years’ standing for training or for having a chamber within 16 km of the Supreme Court if you do not live in Delhi?