Law School Admissions

How Law School Admissions Work

By / April 30, 2026

Law school admissions combines numbers, written materials, recommendations, timing, and institutional priorities. LSAT and GPA matter heavily, but they are […]

Law school admissions combines numbers, written materials, recommendations, timing, and institutional priorities. LSAT and GPA matter heavily, but they are not the whole application.

Core Factors

  • LSAT or GRE score.
  • CAS GPA.
  • Personal statement.
  • Letters of recommendation.
  • Resume and work experience.
  • Optional essays and addenda.

How to Build Strategy

Start with numbers, then use written materials to explain fit, maturity, goals, and judgment.

Related Guides

Application Support Guides

These guides cover the written materials, school selection, costs, and waitlist decisions that surround LSAT strategy.

Testing Options and LSAT Writing

These guides explain LSAT Writing, GRE comparisons, and alternative admissions-test paths.

Official Admissions and Disclosure Sources

Admissions-support advice should be checked against official application systems and school disclosures. LSAT and GPA are only part of the file; CAS processing, transcripts, recommendations, essays, school-specific instructions, scholarship policies, employment outcomes, and tuition disclosures all affect the final strategy. Use this page as a planning framework, then verify deadlines and requirements with each law school.

The sources below are useful for confirming application mechanics and school-level disclosure data.