delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case concerns what has come to be known as the
Rooker-Feldman
doctrine, applied by this Court only twice, first in
Rooker
v.
Fidelity Trust Co.,
Rooker
was a suit commenced in Federal District Court to have a judgment of a state court, adverse to the federal court plaintiffs, "declared null and void.”
The Rooker-Feldman doctrine, we hold today, is confined to cases of the kind from which the doctrine acquired its name: cases brought by state-court losers complaining of injuries caused by state-court judgments rendered before the district court proceedings commenced and inviting district court review and rejection of those judgments. Rooker-Feldman does not otherwise override or supplant preclusion doctrine or augment the circumscribed doctrines that allow federal courts to stay or dismiss proceedings in deference to state-court actions.
In the case before us, the Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit misperceived the narrow ground occupied by Rooker-Feldman, and consequently erred in ordering the federal action dismissed for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction. We therefore reverse the Third Circuit’s judgment.
I—
In
Rooker
v.
Fidelity Trust Co.,
Sixty years later, the Court decided
District of Columbia Court of Appeals
v.
Feldman,
Recalling
Rooker,
this Court’s opinion in
Feldman
observed first that the District Court lacked authority to review a final judicial determination of the D. C. high court. “Review of such determinations,” the
Feldman
opinion reiterated, “can be obtained only in this Court.”
In applying the accreditation Rule to the Hickey and Feld-man waiver petitions, this Court determined, the D. C. court had acted judicially.
Id.,
at 479-482. As to that adjudication,
Feldman
held, this Court alone among federal courts had review authority. Hence, “to the extent that Hickey and Feldman sought review in the District Court of the District of Columbia Court of Appeals’ denial of their petitions for waiver, the District Court lacked subject-matter jurisdiction over their complaints.”
Id.,
at 482. But that determination did not dispose of the entire case, for in promulgating
*286
the bar admission rule, this Court said, the D. C. court had acted legislatively, not judicially.
Id.,
at 485-486. “Challenges to the constitutionality of state bar rules,” the Court elaborated, “do not necessarily require a United States district court to review a final state-court judgment in a judicial proceeding.”
Id.,
at 486. Thus, the Court reasoned, 28 U. S. C. § 1257 did not bar District Court proceedings addressed to the validity of the accreditation Rule itself.
Feldman,
The Court endeavored to separate elements of the Hickey and Feldman complaints that failed the jurisdictional threshold from those that survived jurisdictional inspection. Plaintiffs had urged that the District of Columbia Court of Appeals acted arbitrarily in denying the waiver petitions of Hickey and Feldman, given that court’s “former policy of granting waivers to graduates of unaccredited law schools.” Ibid. That charge, the Court held, could not be pursued, for it was “inextricably intertwined with the District of Columbia Court of Appeals’ decisions, in judicial proceedings, to deny [plaintiffs’] petitions.” Id., at 486-487. 1
On the other hand, the Court said, plaintiffs could maintain “claims that the [bar admission] rule is unconstitutional because it creates an irrebuttable presumption that only graduates of accredited law schools are fit to practice law, discriminates against those who have obtained equivalent legal training by other means, and impermissibly delegates the District of Columbia Court of Appeals’ power to regulate the *287 bar to the American Bar Association,” for those claims “dp not require review of a judicial decision in a particular case.” Id., at 487. The Court left open the question whether the doctrine of res judicata foreclosed litigation of the elements of the complaints spared from dismissal for want of subject-matter jurisdiction. Id., at 487-488.
Since
Feldman,
this Court has never applied
Rooker-Feldman
to dismiss an action for want of jurisdiction. The few decisions that have mentioned
Rooker
and
Feldman
have done so only in passing or to explain why those cases did not dictate dismissal. See
Verizon Md. Inc.
v.
Public Serv. Comm’n of Md.,
*289 II
In 1980, two subsidiaries of petitioner Exxon Mobil Corporation (then the separate companies Exxon Corp. and Mobil Corp.) formed joint ventures with respondent Saudi Basic Industries Corp. (SABIC) to produce polyethylene in Saudi Arabia.
SABIC preemptively sued the two ExxonMobil subsidiaries in Delaware Superior Court in July 2000 seeking a declaratory judgment that the royalty charges were proper under the joint venture agreements.
In January 2002, the ExxonMobil subsidiaries answered SABIC’s state-court complaint, asserting as counterclaims the same claims ExxonMobil had made in the federal suit in New Jersey.
Before the state-court trial, SABIC moved to dismiss the federal suit, alleging,
inter alia,
immunity under the Foreign
*290
Sovereign Immunities Act of 1976, 28 U. S. C. § 1602
et seq.
(2000 ed. and Supp. II). The Federal District Court denied SABIC’s motion to dismiss.
The Court of Appeals, on its own motion, raised the question whether “subject matter jurisdiction over this case falls under the
Rooker-Feldman
doctrine because ExxonMobil’s claims have already been litigated in state court.”
Id.,
at 104.
6
The court did not question the District Court’s possession of subject-matter jurisdiction at the outset of the suit, but held that federal jurisdiction terminated when the Delaware Superior Court entered judgment on the jury verdict.
Id.,
at 104-105. The court rejected ExxonMobil’s argument that
Rooker-Feldman
could not apply because ExxonMobil filed its federal complaint well before the state-court judgment. The only relevant consideration, the court stated, “is whether the state judgment precedes a federal judgment on the same claims.”
ExxonMobil, at that point prevailing in Delaware, was not seeking to overturn the state-court judgment. Nevertheless, the Court of Appeals hypothesized that, if SABIC won on appeal in Delaware, ExxonMobil would be endeavoring in the federal action to “invalidate” the state-court judgment, “the very situation,” the court concluded, “contemplated by Rooker-Feldman’s ‘inextricably intertwined’ bar.” Id., at 106.
We granted certiorari,
III
Rooker
and
Feldman
exhibit the limited circumstances m which this Court’s appellate jurisdiction over state-court judgments, 28 U. S. C. § 1257, precludes a United States district court from exercising subject-matter jurisdiction in an action it would otherwise be empowered to adjudicate under a congressional grant of authority,
e. g.,
§ 1330 (suits against foreign states), §1331 (federal question), and §1332 (diversity). In both cases, the losing party in state court filed suit in federal court after the state proceedings ended, complaining of an injury caused by the state-court judgment and seeking review and rejection of that judgment. Plaintiffs in both cases, alleging federal-question jurisdiction, called upon
*292
the District Court to overturn an injurious state-court judgment. Because § 1257, as long interpreted, vests authority to review a state court’s judgment solely in this Court,
e. g., Feldman,
When there is parallel state and federal litigation,
Rooker-Feldman
is not triggered simply by the entry of judgment in state court. This Court has repeatedly held that “the pendency of an action in the state court is no bar to proceedings concerning the same matter in the Federal court having jurisdiction.”
McClellan
v.
Carland,
*293
Disposition of the federal action, once the state-court adjudication is complete, would be governed by preclusion law. The Full Faith and Credit Act, 28 U. S. C. § 1738, originally enacted in 1790, ch. 11,1 Stat. 122, requires the federal court to “give the same preclusive effect to a state-court judgment as another court of that State would give.”
Parsons Steel, Inc.
v.
First Alabama Bank,
Nor does §1257 stop a district court from exercising subject-matter jurisdiction simply because a party attempts to litigate in federal court a matter previously litigated in state court. If a federal plaintiff “presents] some independent claim, albeit one that denies a legal conclusion that a state court has reached in a case to which he was a party..., then there is jurisdiction and state law determines whether the defendant prevails under principles of preclusion.”
GASH Assocs.
v.
Rosemont,
This case surely is not the “paradigm situation in which
Rooker-Feldman
precludes a federal district court from proceeding.”
^ ‡ ‡
For the reasons stated, the judgment of the Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit is reversed, and the case is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
It is so ordered.
Notes
Earlier in the opinion the Court had used the same expression. In a footnote, the Court explained that a district court could not entertain constitutional claims attacking a state-court judgment, even if the state court had not passed directly on those claims, when the constitutional attack was “inextricably intertwined” with the state court’s judgment.
Feldman,
Respondent Saudi Basic Industries Corp. urges that
ASARCO Inc.
v.
Kadish,
Between 1923, when the Court decided
Rooker,
and 1983, when it decided
Feldman,
the Court cited
Rooker
in one opinion,
Fishgold
v.
Sullivan Drydock & Repair Corp.,
SABIC is a Saudi Arabian corporation, 70% owned by the Saudi Government and 30% owned by private investors.
At ExxonMobil’s request, the Court of Appeals initially stayed its consideration of the appeal to await resolution of the proceedings in Delaware. App. 9-10. In November 2003, shortly after SABIC filed its appeal in the Delaware Supreme Court, the Court of Appeals, on SABIC’s motion, lifted the stay and set the appeal for argument. Id., at 11-13.
One day before argument, the Court of Appeals directed the parties to be prepared to address whether the Rooker-Feldman doctrine deprived the District Court of jurisdiction over the case. App. 17.
SABIC contends that this case is moot because the Delaware Supreme Court has affirmed the trial-court judgment in favor of ExxonMobil,
Saudi Basic Industries Corp.
v.
Mobil Yanbu Petrochemical Co.,
Congress, if so minded, may explicitly empower district courts to oversee certain state-court judgments and has done so, most notably, in authorizing federal habeas review of state prisoners’ petitions. 28 U. S. C. § 2254(a).
The Court of Appeals criticized ExxonMobil for pursuing its federal suit as an “insurance policy” against an adverse result in state court.
