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4 years college. 3 years law school. Then optional 1 year full time or 3 years law school at night to get your LLM in taxation. Then, optional get experience under your belt and take your state bar's tax specialization examination. Stay current by reading all the latest articles on new tax techniques and tax cases and rulings. It is a career long commitment.

Reading the other answers, it does not matter what you major in at college as long as you get good grades. A high GPA and solid LSAT scores is what you need. The law schools do not care if you took hard accounting courses or if you aced the History of Television with 20 varsity football players.

2007-10-17 11:55:27 · answer #1 · answered by mattapan26 7 · 1 0

Well, of course it depends on what school you go to, regardless you need an bachelors in accounting. It normally takes 4 years for that, but you'll also need a law degree. So if you pick your school wisely, you can get your bachelors in accounting if 3 years and start on your law degree before you even complete your bachelors. Good luck.

2007-10-17 10:55:11 · answer #2 · answered by Chrishawn T 1 · 0 0

It takes an undergraduate degree (4 years) a law degree (3 years) and, if you need to be a CPA, about another year's studying time.

2007-10-17 10:51:20 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

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