The Journal3 min read

How to Verify Any California Attorney's License in Two Minutes

Every California attorney's license status, discipline history, and bar number are public record. A step-by-step walkthrough of the State Bar's attorney search — and the red flags to check before you hire.


Before you trust anyone with your case, your money, or your signature, you can confirm — in about two minutes, for free — that they are actually licensed to practice law in California. The State Bar of California maintains a public record for every licensee in the state: license status, bar number, admission date, and any public discipline. This brief walks through exactly how to read it.

Why this matters

Under Business and Professions Code § 6125, no one may practice law in California unless they are an active licensee of the State Bar. There is no such thing as a "mostly licensed" attorney: on any given day, a person either holds an active California license or they cannot lawfully give you legal advice, negotiate on your behalf, or appear for you in a California court.

The records are public by design. Business and Professions Code § 6086.1 makes State Bar disciplinary proceedings and their outcomes matters of public record — which is why the profile you are about to look up will show suspensions and disbarments, not just the flattering parts.

The two-minute walkthrough

  1. Go to the State Bar of California's website, calbar.ca.gov, and select "Look Up an Attorney." (The tool itself lives at apps.calbar.ca.gov — always reach it through the official calbar.ca.gov domain.)
  2. Search by name or bar number. A bar number is better: names repeat, bar numbers never do. Any legitimate California attorney will give you their bar number without hesitation — it appears on court filings, letterhead, and every profile on this registry.
  3. Open the profile and read the status line first. It tells you, as of today, whether this person may practice law in California.
  4. Scroll to the history section. The profile lists every status change — admissions, periods of inactive status, suspensions, and reinstatements — with dates.
  5. Check the discipline section. Public discipline appears with links to the underlying records. "No public record of discipline" is the line you want to see.
  6. Cross-check the details. Confirm the address, firm name, and admission date match what the attorney told you. A mismatch is worth a direct question.

Reading the status line

The status values you are most likely to see:

  • Active — licensed and permitted to practice law in California today.
  • Inactive — still a licensee, but not permitted to practice. Attorneys go inactive for many innocent reasons (retirement, out-of-state work), but an inactive attorney cannot take your case.
  • Suspended / Not Eligible to Practice Law — barred from practicing, whether for discipline, unpaid fees, or other administrative reasons. The profile will say which.
  • Disbarred — the license has been revoked.
  • Resigned — the attorney gave up the license, sometimes with disciplinary charges pending; the profile will note it.

Treat anything other than Active as a full stop until you understand why.

Red flags the lookup catches

  • No bar number offered. Hesitation to provide a bar number is itself an answer.
  • "Consultants" who are not attorneys. California regulates immigration consultants separately under the Immigration Consultant Act (Bus. & Prof. Code § 22440) — they may fill in forms you select, but they may not give legal advice or represent you. A "notario" is not a lawyer in California.
  • A name-only match. Two attorneys can share a name; only the bar number confirms you found the right person.
  • Practicing through a suspension. The history section shows dates. If someone handled legal matters during a period the record says they were ineligible, that is a serious problem.
  • Discipline that was never mentioned. Past discipline is not automatically disqualifying — but discovering it yourself, after being told there was none, tells you something more important than the discipline does.

What the lookup does not tell you

The State Bar record verifies licensure and discipline. It does not measure how responsive an attorney is, how their practice is regarded, or whether they handle matters like yours. That gap is exactly why this registry exists: every profile on CalegalLaw starts from the official State Bar record — bar number displayed, status shown — and adds a published, formula-driven Growth Score computed the same way for every attorney in the state. Verification is the floor. Make it the first two minutes of every attorney search, whether the lawyer is in Los Angeles or Eureka.

The habit to build is simple: no bar number, no engagement; no Active status, no engagement. Everything else about choosing counsel is judgment — this part is just arithmetic.

Reviewed for accuracy against the cited statutes and the State Bar's published search tool.

Legal information, not legal advice. This brief explains California law in general terms; it is not a substitute for counsel on your specific situation, and reading it creates no attorney–client relationship.

Further Reading

The Registry

Every California attorney, on the record.

Browse the full roster — indexed from official State Bar records and ranked by the published Growth Score. The choice is always yours.

Browse the Roster