LSAT guides that turn scores into decisions.
Score benchmarks, school medians, retake strategy, prep plans, and admissions guidance built around the calculator.
All LSAT guides
Use these pages with the calculator: check your percentile, compare schools, then decide whether to apply, retake, or adjust your target list.
Notre Dame Law LSAT Score: Requirements, Medians, and Admissions
Notre Dame Law LSAT Score: Requirements, Medians, and Admissions Notre Dame Law School is consistently ranked among the top 20–25 […]
Open guideVanderbilt Law LSAT Score: Requirements, Medians, and Admissions
Vanderbilt Law LSAT Score: Requirements, Medians, and Admissions Vanderbilt Law School is ranked in the top 15–18 law schools nationally […]
Open guideUCLA Law LSAT Score: Requirements, Medians, and Admissions
UCLA Law LSAT Score: Requirements, Medians, and Admissions UCLA School of Law is consistently ranked among the top 15–18 law […]
Open guideGeorgetown Law LSAT Score: What You Need to Get In
Georgetown Law LSAT Score: What You Need to Get In Georgetown University Law Center is the largest law school in […]
Open guideAverage LSAT Score: What It Is and What It Means for You
Average LSAT Score: What It Is and What It Means for You The national average LSAT score is approximately 152, […]
Open guideLSAT Score 170+: What It Means and Where You Can Get In
LSAT Score 170+: What It Means and Where You Can Get In A 170 LSAT score is exceptional. It places […]
Open guideLSAT Score 150: What It Means and What to Do Next
LSAT Score 150: What It Means and What to Do Next A 150 LSAT score sits right at the 44th […]
Open guideLSAT Score 155: What Law Schools Are Realistic?
LSAT Score 155: What Law Schools Are Realistic? A 155 LSAT score puts you in roughly the 66th percentile — […]
Open guideLSAT Score 160: What It Means and Where You Can Apply
A 160 LSAT score puts you in the 72nd percentile. See exactly which law schools are realistic, which are reaches, and whether a retake…
Open guideLSAT Score Range Explained: What Every Score from 120 to 180 Means
What does the LSAT score range of 120 to 180 actually mean? This guide explains every score band, how percentiles work, what scores law…
Open guideShould I Retake the LSAT? A Data-Driven Decision Framework
Should you retake the LSAT? Use this data-driven framework to decide — based on your target schools, score gap, prep history, and timing. No…
Open guideLSAT PrepTest Scores: How Accurate Are They and How to Use Them
How accurate are LSAT PrepTest scores? Learn how practice test scores predict your real LSAT, why gaps happen, and how to use PrepTests strategically…
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