LSAT Guides
In-depth guides on LSAT scoring, preparation, percentiles, and law school admissions.
Browse by LSAT topic
Use these focused paths to move through score interpretation, school targets, prep strategy, test logistics, and admissions guidance.
Score ranges, raw conversion, scaled scores, and percentile meaning.
90 guides Law School LSAT ScoresSchool medians, T14/T25/T50 lists, and target-score planning.
30 guides LSAT Prep & Study PlansStudy schedules, prep resources, timing, review, and score improvement.
17 guides LSAT Sections & Question TypesLogical Reasoning, Reading Comprehension, and question-type strategy.
28 guides Test Dates, Rules & LogisticsRegistration, retakes, score release, accommodations, and test day.
20 guides Law School AdmissionsApplications, GPA, scholarships, personal statements, and applicant strategy.
Latest resources
Each guide connects back to score interpretation, target schools, retake decisions, or concrete prep actions.
Law School Scholarship Calculator: Estimate LSAT Scholarship Leverage
A law school scholarship calculator should help you understand whether your LSAT score is likely to create merit-aid leverage at […]
Open guideNecessary Assumption LSAT Questions: Strategy and Examples
Necessary Assumption questions ask for something the argument must rely on. If the answer is false, the argument falls apart. […]
Open guideSufficient Assumption LSAT Questions: Strategy and Examples
Sufficient Assumption questions ask for an answer that fully guarantees the conclusion when added to the stimulus. Core Strategy Identify […]
Open guideStrengthen LSAT Questions: Strategy and Examples
Strengthen questions ask you to make the argument more likely to be true by supporting its assumption, evidence link, or […]
Open guideWeaken LSAT Questions: Strategy and Examples
Weaken questions ask you to damage the argument, usually by attacking the link between evidence and conclusion. Core Strategy Find […]
Open guideLSAT Score Plateau: Why You Are Stuck and How to Break Through
An LSAT plateau usually means your current study method is no longer producing new information. More tests alone will not […]
Open guideMust Be True LSAT Questions: Strategy and Examples
Must Be True questions ask you to choose the answer that is supported by the stimulus, not the answer that […]
Open guideHow Many LSAT Practice Tests Should You Take?
You need enough practice tests to build timing and stamina, but not so many that you burn through material without […]
Open guideBest LSAT Practice Tests: Which PrepTests to Use
The best LSAT practice tests are official LSAC PrepTests because they reflect the real exam. The question is how to […]
Open guideLSAT Wrong Answer Journal: How to Review Missed Questions
A wrong answer journal turns LSAT review into a repeatable system. Instead of simply noting that an answer was wrong, […]
Open guide