A reverse splitter has a strong GPA but a lower LSAT for a target school. The GPA helps, but the LSAT may still limit admission and scholarship outcomes.
Why Reverse Splitters Face Pressure
Law schools value GPA, but LSAT medians are highly visible. A lower LSAT can make admission harder even with excellent grades.
Best Strategy
If practice tests suggest a higher score is realistic, retaking is often the highest-impact move. If not, build a school list where your GPA is a major strength and your LSAT is not far below median.
Related LSAT Planning Tools
- LSAT score calculator
- What LSAT score do I need?
- Law school admissions chances calculator
- LSAT scholarship guide
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.