Two Paths to Public Impact
Both lawyers and civil servants work within India's legal and governance framework, but their roles are fundamentally different. Lawyers advocate for individual clients within the legal system; civil servants administer policy and governance for entire districts and states. One works within rules; the other helps set them.
Entry Barrier
- Lawyer: CLAT/AILET → 5-year LLB → Bar Council enrollment. Moderate difficulty.
- Civil Servant: Any graduation → UPSC CSE (3 stages). Extremely competitive — 0.1% selection rate.
- Law has a more predictable path; civil services has a binary outcome (you either clear it or you don't)
Daily Work
- Lawyer: Research, drafting, court appearances, client meetings, negotiations. High autonomy.
- Civil Servant: Policy meetings, field inspections, public grievances, budget management, crisis response. High authority but also high bureaucratic constraints.
Personality Fit
- Choose Law if: you enjoy argumentation, client advocacy, intellectual independence, and building your own practice
- Choose Civil Services if: you want broad administrative power, are willing to accept postings anywhere, and want to shape policy at scale