Blind review compares your timed score with your untimed review score so you can see whether your biggest problem is speed, understanding, or both.
This guide explains how to use the calculation, what inputs matter, and how to turn the result into a better LSAT or law school admissions decision.
How to Use This LSAT Blind Review Score Calculator: Measure Your Real Potential
- Take a timed section or full test.
- Circle uncertain questions before checking answers.
- Review those questions untimed.
- Compare timed score against blind-review score to identify the gap.
What the Result Actually Tells You
The output should not be treated as a guarantee. LSAT scoring, admissions outcomes, and scholarship decisions all depend on ranges and context. The value is in identifying whether your current position is below target, on track, or strong enough to use as leverage.
What to Do Next
Once you know your position, connect the result to a concrete action: retake, revise your school list, change your prep plan, or start building applications.
Common Mistakes
- Using one practice test as your entire score forecast.
- Comparing yourself only to national averages instead of target-school medians.
- Ignoring scholarship leverage when your score is above a school’s median.
- Retaking without diagnosing the specific section or question type causing the score gap.
The Bottom Line
A calculator is useful only when it changes your next decision. Use the result to choose a target score, build a realistic school list, and decide whether more LSAT prep is likely to pay off.
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.