What is the LSAT?
Law School Admission Test (LSAT) is a 2.5 hour standardized test that applicants may take in order to apply to law school. The other option is the GRE. Unlike the GRE, the LSAT is accepted by all law schools in the US to fulfill their standardized testing requirement. The vast majority of applicants choose to take the LSAT over the GRE.
LSAT Tests are now offered in January, February, March, April, June, August, September, October, and November.
The LSAT does not test your skills of memorization, and it does not require any pre-existing knowledge of the law. Further, it is not an IQ test. Instead, the LSAT is a skills-based test, testing your logical reasoning, analytical reasoning (also known as Logic Games), reading comprehension, and writing skills. The skills tested on the LSAT track the types of skills that admissions officers feel can be most useful in law school and the practice of law. They are skills that can be learned with sufficient preparation. As with learning a language or a musical instrument, learning the skills tested on the LSAT requires significant study and practice over an extended period of time.
Format of the LSAT & Accommodations
The online take-at-home version of the LSAT is now a permanent option in addition to an in person version of the exam at a Prometric Testing Center. There is no longer an option to take a written test, unless you are granted a specific disability accommodation. The website will list a couple of dates for each test administration (for example, for June 2023 it lists June 9th and 10th). These are dates that you will pick from later. Sometime after the registration deadline, you will schedule your individual test date and time since it will be conducted 1:1 with a Prometric proctor.
For information on the Test Day process and equipment you will need, check out the LSAC’s Getting Ready for Test Day instructions. If you do not have access to the right equipment or a quiet space to take the exam, contact the LSAC before the “Assistance Request Deadline” for your chosen test date and they can assist. If you need an accommodation such as extra time, breaks, permission to sit/stand or read aloud, follow the instructions to put in an accommodation request. We suggest you do this well before the deadline.
About the current format:
- Through June 2024, the test will consist of one Reading Comprehension section, one Logical Reasoning section, one Logic Games(Analytical Reasoning) section, and one experimental section that will mimic one of the other 3 sections.
- The test will have four sections instead of the three section format that began in 2020. Three sections of the four will be scored, and the experimental section will be unscored.
- Test-takers will be given a ten minute break between sections 2 and 3.
- There is also an LSAT Writing section, which is taken completely separately than the rest of the test, is unscored, but that will be shared with law schools so they can read it and assess your writing ability. We recommend waiting until after you take the rest of the LSAT to take LSAT writing, which can be taken before or after the scored & proctored part of the LSAT. You can schedule a time to take the LSAT writing on Demand, and you must take it from home. For more info on the LSAT writing section, see here.
- See the Testmaker’s answers to Frequently Asked LSAT questions here: https://www.lsac.org/lsat/taking-lsat/lsat-faqs
Future of the LSAT: Logic Games to retire in 2024
The change to the logic games stems from a lawsuit filed by Angelo Binno. Binno was a legally blind test taker who took the LSAT in May 2017. Binno claimed he was unable to draw the diagrams necessary to complete this section of the exam successfully due to his disability. He asked LSAC to waive this section of the exam as part of his testing accommodation. This request was denied by LSAC. This, Binno claimed in his lawsuit against the Law School Admissions Council and the American Bar Association, was a violation of the Americans with Disabilities Act and the Michigan Person with Disabilities Civil Right Act.
In October 2019, all parties settled. The result is that they will work together to identify additional accommodations for people with disabilities and also replace the logic games section.
About the future test format (AFTER June 2024):
- After June 2024, the test will consist of one Reading Comprehension (RC) section, TWO Logical Reasoning (LR) sections, and one experimental section that will mimic one of the other 2 sections. So on test day, if the experimental section looks like RC, it will look as if you have 2 RC sections and 2 LR sections, and if the experimental section looks like LR it will look like you have 3 LR sections and 1 RC section.
- Three of the four sections will be scored: 1 RC and 2LR. The experimental section will be unscored.
- Test-takers will be given a ten minute break between sections 2 and 3.
- The first chance to take this new test format will be in August 2024.
- Free Practice tests and other free prep resources for the new test are now available on the LSAC LawHub website.
- Comprehensive information on the LSAT test change can be found here: https://www.lsac.org/lsat/lsat-changes-coming-august-2024
- Information about the prep resources available for the new LSAT on the LSAC LawHub Webpage are available here:https://www.lsac.org/blog/practice-tests-august-2024-and-beyond-now-available-lsacs-lawhub
What This Means For You
If you take the LSAT by June 2024, you can be sure that logic games will be on the exam so this change will not affect you.
If you plan to take the LSAT AFTER the June 2024 test administration, you will want to skip preparing for the Logic Games section of the test and spend your time preparing for the Logical Reasoning and Reading Comprehension sections.
For more information on what this means for you, when to take the LSAT, and how to prepare, you can view a recording of our February 2024 LSAT 101 session here: https://mediaspace.wisc.edu/media/LSAT%20Session%201%20on%202_29_24/1_qxiuygvb
CPLA LSAT Resources
The UW-Madison Center for Pre-Law Advising (CPLA) provides a number of free services to students to help them prepare for and take the LSAT. Pre-Law advisors are ready to help you with the following, including, but not limited to:
- deciding when to take the LSAT
- putting together or evaluating a study plan
- finding the right study materials or program, including free options
- deciding if you are ready to take the test or if you should postpone
- deciding whether and when to retest
Click here to view profiles of our advisors or to schedule an appointment.
Substantive questions about specific LSAT practice questions or practice sections can be directed to Pre-Law Advisors through the collaborative email (information@prelaw.wisc.edu)
Please see answers to frequently asked questions about the LSAT below, including more information about CPLA’s LSAT Workshop.
CPLA LSAT FAQs
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Free LSAT Prep Resources
GRE
Using the GRE to apply to Law School
A growing number of law schools (over 50 schools as of 2021) have begun accepting the Graduate Record Exam (GRE) in lieu of LSAT scores. This option can be particularly helpful for applicants who have previously taken the GRE to apply to other graduate programs. These select law schools will accept your GRE score for the purpose of admissions ONLY IF you have NOT taken an LSAT test in the last 5 years. Schools will be able to see all LSAT tests you have taken during that timeframe, and if you have an LSAT score on file, then the LSAT score will be the only one used for consideration of your application. Therefore, planning to submit GRE scores for law school admission is only advisable for applicants who (1) Only wish to apply to law schools that accept the GRE and (2) Have not already taken the LSAT and do not plan to take the LSAT. You cannot use the GRE to apply to some schools, and the LSAT to apply to others. You are either an all GRE candidate or an all LSAT candidate. If you have already taken the GRE and wish to take the LSAT for law school admissions, law schools that accept the GRE can and often will request to see all of your past GRE scores when you apply, even though they will only use the LSAT score for use in their class averages. For example, Harvard Law School instructs applicants “Applicants who elect to take the GRE (instead of or in addition to the LSAT) must instruct the Educational Testing Service (ETS) to send HLS all GRE test scores from the preceding five-year period.”
The GRE General Test measures your verbal reasoning, quantitative reasoning, critical thinking and analytical writing skills. Unlike the LSAT there is a significant amount of math content on the test, which will require memorizing math formulas. The verbal section of the test includes some reading, similar to the LSAT, but also heavily tests your vocabulary, with many multiple choice vocabulary-in-context questions. For more information on what is on the GRE, check out the Test Content page from the GRE testmaker, ETS. The GRE General test is all you would need for law school. You would NOT need to take any additional GRE Subject tests for admission to law school.
The GRE is offered as a take at home test year round, or on selected dates at Prometric testing centers. This makes it more convenient to schedule than the LSAT. You also have more opportunities to retake the GRE if needed, though you should only plan to test once. You can take the GRE General Test once every 21 days, up to five times within any continuous rolling 12-month period (365 days). Just like the LSAT, GRE scores are good for 5 years. After 5 years has elapsed, you would have to retake the exam.
Note that most law schools that accept GRE scores also consider GRE scores when offering scholarships to admitted students. For more information on scholarships and financing law school, visit our Financing Law School page.
GRE Scoring
You are unlikely to find an average GRE score published for the law schools that accept the GRE, so you may be wondering how to tell what a competitive GRE score would be to apply to a particular program. The best way to compare LSAT to GRE scores would be to look at percentiles. For example, let’s say the school you are applying to has a median LSAT score around a 160-161, which is at about the 80th percentile of all LSAT test takers. A comparable GRE score would be scores on the Verbal and Quantitative sections that are around the 80th percentile for the GRE (approximately 158 Verbal 161 Quant). ETS also has a calculator that allow you to input GRE scores and get a prediction of what the LSAT equivalent would be.
GRE Test Prep
If you need to brush up on your math skills, Khan Academy has a lot of free math instructional videos that may be helpful. You’ll want to review any math content that you haven’t used in awhile. You’ll also want to brush up on your vocabulary. Many test prep companies suggest studying word roots, prefixes and suffixes to help you recognize parts of words you don’t know, in addition to studying the most commonly used GRE vocabulary words. You can also use a GRE vocabulary word a day app or service. You can purchase GRE flash cards, GRE books, or GRE prep courses. Students can be successful self studying for the GRE just as they can be successful self studying for the LSAT. Which prep option you might prefer depends on how you learn best. The GRE testmaker offers some additional resources for GRE preparation, as well as GRE practice tests.