LSAT Score Preview lets eligible test takers see a score before deciding whether to keep or cancel it, but it does not change how you should prepare.
What Score Preview Does
Score Preview gives you the option to cancel after viewing your score. If you do nothing by the deadline, the score is released according to LSAC rules.
Who Should Consider It
It is most useful for anxious first-time testers or applicants who have a very specific score floor.
What It Does Not Do
It does not hide the fact that a cancellation occurred, and it does not replace a smart retake strategy.
Next Step
Use the free LSAT score calculator to see your percentile and school-tier fit, then compare your result against law school LSAT medians.
Official Sources to Check
Use this guide for planning, then verify current test rules, score reporting, application requirements, and school disclosures with primary sources before making final decisions.
How to Use This Guide
Start by identifying the decision this page supports: setting a target score, interpreting a practice test, choosing schools, planning a retake, or preparing application materials. Then compare the advice here with your target schools, deadlines, budget, and current official requirements. The strongest plan is specific to your score range and school list.