The LSAT scaled score chart runs from 120 to 180. Each score reflects your performance after raw correct answers are converted through LSAC equating.
Score Bands
| Score Band | General Meaning |
|---|---|
| 170+ | Elite / T14 competitive |
| 165-169 | Strong / T25 and lower T14 range |
| 160-164 | Competitive at many strong schools |
| 155-159 | Above-average regional range |
| 150-154 | Average to above-average range |
| Below 150 | Retake usually worth considering for selective schools |
Why Scale Matters
Law schools compare scaled scores, not raw correct answers. That makes the 120-180 scale the number that matters for admissions.
How to Set a Target
Set your target score by comparing medians at your actual target schools, not by chasing a generic good score.
Related Tools and Guides
- LSAT score calculator
- Raw score calculator
- LSAT percentile chart
- What LSAT score do I need?
- Should I retake the LSAT?
Scaled Score Benchmarks
These pages explain scaled scores, percentiles, and law school median benchmarks.
- LSAT glossary
- Raw LSAT score
- Scaled LSAT score
- LSAT percentile meaning
- Median LSAT score
- 25th percentile LSAT score
- 75th percentile LSAT score
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.