An LSAT score calculator by section helps you estimate your scaled score by looking at performance across Logical Reasoning and Reading Comprehension. It is most useful for practice tests, diagnostics, and targeted review.
How Section-Based Estimation Works
The modern LSAT has scored Logical Reasoning and Reading Comprehension sections. Your raw number of correct answers is converted to a 120-180 scaled score through test-specific equating.
What to Track by Section
- Logical Reasoning correct answers.
- Reading Comprehension correct answers.
- Question types missed.
- Timing pressure by section.
- Blind review score compared with timed score.
How to Use the Result
If one section is consistently weaker, your prep plan should focus there before taking more full tests. A section calculator is a diagnostic tool, not an official score report.
Related Tools and Guides
- LSAT score calculator
- Raw score calculator
- LSAT percentile chart
- What LSAT score do I need?
- Should I retake the LSAT?
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.