An LSAT practice test score calculator converts your raw correct answers into an estimated scaled score. It is useful for PrepTests, diagnostics, and progress tracking, but official scoring depends on the specific test form.
Raw Score vs Scaled Score
Your raw score is the number of scored questions you answered correctly. Your scaled score is the 120-180 score after LSAC equating.
Why Practice Test Scores Vary
Different tests have slightly different curves. Missing the same number of questions can produce slightly different scaled scores depending on the test.
How to Track Progress
Track scaled score, section accuracy, and missed question types. The scaled score shows the result; the missed question types show what to fix.
Related Tools and Guides
- LSAT score calculator
- Raw score calculator
- LSAT percentile chart
- What LSAT score do I need?
- Should I retake the LSAT?
Practice-Test Score Resources
Use these resources to translate practice-test performance into official-score strategy.
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.