LSAT Score Estimator
Track your progress. Convert your practice test raw scores into the standard 120–180 LSAT scale used by law schools for admissions.
Very competitive score for many law schools.
Demystifying LSAT Math
I genuinely believe that the LSAT is more about strategy than knowledge. Your "Raw Score" is simply the number of questions you answered correctly across all scored sections. This raw score is then "scaled" to a number between 120 and 180 to account for slight differences in difficulty between different versions of the test.
The Scaling Process: Because every LSAT is unique, the LSAC uses a statistical process to ensure that a 160 on one test means the same thing as a 160 on another. This means missing 25 questions might give you a 160 on a hard test, but only a 158 on an easier one.
General Score Ranges:
- 170 - 180: Elite. Top 3% of all test takers. Aiming for Ivy League or T14 law schools.
- 160 - 169: Strong. Top 15% of test takers. Competitive for many high-ranking programs.
- 150 - 159: Average. Solid score for many regional law schools.
- Below 150: May limit admission options to less competitive schools.