Choosing a law school should involve employment outcomes, cost, geography, bar passage, scholarships, and personal fit. Rankings are only one input.
Decision Criteria
- Total cost after scholarships.
- Employment outcomes.
- Geographic placement.
- Practice-area strengths.
- Debt risk.
How LSAT Fits
Your LSAT score shapes admission and scholarship options, which directly affects the schools you can choose from.
Related Guides
- LSAT score calculator
- What LSAT score do I need?
- Top 100 law school LSAT scores
- Law school admissions chances calculator
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.
Practical Next Step
Turn this guide into an application checklist: confirm the school instructions, map the deadline, identify the document owner, and decide what evidence supports the claim you want the admissions committee to remember. Strong execution matters more than adding extra materials.