Dear Student, Most of the Universities and College medium is English, There are three ways to taking up an LL. M. course. [1] Without any entrance exam - There are many tier-3 and some tier-2 Law Colleges across India, where admission is done on a first-come-first-admitted basis. No entrance exam. Just meet the minimum criteria in terms of your previous academics and pay the fees. The basic eligibility will be 50% in your LL.B. (45% for reserved categories)
Some even have a Distance education LL. M. programs. [2] With entrance exam - there are tier 2 & tier 1 colleges that have their own entrance exam and in some states there is a common entrance exam for Law Courses across many participating colleges - tier 2 & 3. For example, the Andhra Pradesh - Andhra Pradesh PGLCET, Telangana TS PGLCET Kerala CEE, DU LL. M. entrance exam etc. Bulk of the seats are filled through the exams, but there will usually be a Management quota of seats with higher fees in private colleges that participate in these common entrance process. Basic eligibility here is usually LL.B. With at least 50% or 55% (depending on the institute rules), with some relaxation for reserved categories. [3] Through CLAT is the common entrance exam for the National Law Schools / National Law Universities across India. Basic eligibility is 55% in LL.B. (50% for reserved categories. )
There are multiple universities from where you can do 5-year LL.B. IILM University Gurugram offers BBA LL.B. With Moot Court Internship, Seminar, Workshops, Experiential Learning along with Inter-Disciplinary Curriculum. For more details, you can check their website:
https://iilm.edu.in/law-admissions. Note : NLU Delhi does not participate in the CLAT as they have their own separate exam AILET and basic eligibility is similar to CLAT.