SMU Yong Pung How School of Law
The law school building at the corner of Armenian Street and Stamford Road with the city skyline in the background. Between 2007 and 2016, the law school shared its premises with the School of Accountancy and School of Business at Stamford Road. | |
| Type | Law school |
|---|---|
| Established | 2007 |
Parent institution | Singapore Management University |
| Dean | Lee Pey Woan |
| Location | 55 Armenian Street , 1°17′43″N 103°50′56″E / 1.295367°N 103.848868°E |
| Campus | Urban |
| Colours | Purple |
| Website | law |
The SMU Yong Pung How School of Law, previously SMU School of Law, is one of the six schools within the Singapore Management University. It was set up as Singapore's second law school in 2007, 50 years after the NUS Faculty of Law and 10 years before SUSS School of Law.
The school offers a four-year undergraduate single Bachelor of Laws (LLB) degree programme and a double degree programme combining the law degree programme with one of SMU's existing non-law programmes. The school also offers a graduate Juris Doctor (JD) programme as well as a Master of Laws (LLM) programme. The Dual LLM in Commercial Law, which confers LLM degrees from Queen Mary University of London and SMU, was launched in 2015. A PhD in Law, Commerce, and Technology was launched in 2021.
Prior to its establishment as a law school, the school was a department within the School of Business between 2000 and 2007. The school was known as the SMU School of Law until 2021, when it was renamed after former Chief Justice Yong Pung How.
Admission to the law programme is competitive: in the 2015 University Admissions Exercise, both the 10th and 90th percentile had an Indicative Grade Profile (of Singapore-Cambridge GCE A-Level qualifications) of AAA/A; approximately 1,300 applicants were shortlisted for an interview and a written test.
Since the launch of its international moots programme in 2011, the school has regularly featured in the championship final of the largest and most established international moot court competitions, such as the Jessup (2025 world champions), Vis East (3-time world champions), and International Criminal Court Moot (5-time world champions). The school also holds the world records for most international moot championship finals in a season and most international moot championships in a season.