LSAT Cost 2026: Exam Fees, Prep, and the Total Path to Law School
LSAT cost breakdown for 2026: exam fees, prep courses, score reports, application fees, and what you can do to reduce the total bill.

LSAT Cost 2026: Exam Fees, Prep, and the Total Path to Law School
The headline LSAT cost in 2026 is $238 for the exam itself. The realistic total cost from your decision to take the LSAT through your first day of law school is much higher: somewhere between $1,500 at the low end and $8,000 at the high end. Most prospective law students underestimate the full bill because the LSAT fee is the smallest line item in a stack of costs that includes prep materials, applications, score reports, transcripts, and travel. Knowing the full breakdown before you start lets you plan a realistic budget and identify exactly where to save money.
This guide walks through every cost a prospective law student faces, the realistic price ranges for each item in 2026, what you can legitimately skip, what is non-negotiable, and how the LSAC fee waiver program eliminates most fees for applicants who qualify. The total bill matters because law school itself can cost $150,000-$300,000, and pre-law spending of $5,000+ adds to a debt picture that defines your career for years afterward.
If you have not yet registered, our LSAT Registration Guide walks through the sign-up process. For test preparation, see the LSAT Exam Prep guide. The LSAT Practice Test hub has free practice questions for the actual exam sections.
The Short Answer
The LSAT exam itself costs $238 in 2026. Adding the Credential Assembly Service (CAS) at $207 brings the standard pre-application total to $445. Beyond that, prep courses range from $0 (Khan Academy free) to $2,000+ (Kaplan, Princeton Review). Application fees to law schools run $50-$100 per school, with most applicants applying to 8-15 schools. The realistic total cost from registration to first day of law school is $1,500 to $8,000 depending on prep level, number of applications, and whether you qualify for the LSAC fee waiver (which covers nearly everything).
LSAT Cost Breakdown

What the $238 LSAT Fee Actually Covers in 2026
Before tracing the full cost of becoming a law school applicant, it helps to be precise about what the LSAC actually charges for in that headline $238 registration fee. Most candidates assume the fee bundles more services than it does, and the gap between expectation and reality is where many surprise costs appear later.
The $238 LSAT registration fee covers one administration of the LSAT, including all four scored sections, an unscored experimental section, and a writing sample taken separately on your own schedule within the testing window. The fee also includes the score report sent automatically to your LSAC account and one free score report sent to each law school you specify when you register, up to your selected number.
What the $238 does not cover: prep materials, CAS subscription, additional score reports beyond the included ones, late registration if you miss the standard deadline, or test date changes. Each of these adds to the bill if you need them.
What Drives Up the Real LSAT Cost
The actual lived cost of the LSAT extends far past the $238 exam fee because most candidates need at least some prep, several application destinations, and inevitable administrative add-ons. The biggest single line item beyond the exam is prep, which ranges from completely free options to commercial courses approaching $2,500. The second biggest is the number of law schools you apply to, since each application has its own fee on top of the LSAC processing fee.
What the LSAC Fee Waiver Covers
The Law School Admission Council offers a robust fee waiver program for applicants with documented financial need. The waiver includes two free LSAT administrations, free CAS subscription, six free score reports to law schools, and free access to LSAC online prep materials. The total value exceeds $700 and turns the LSAT path into essentially zero cost for qualifying applicants.
Four Tiers of LSAT Total Cost
- Total cost: $0-$500
- Prep: Free LSAC materials
- Applications: Fee waiver covers
- Total cost: $1,200-$2,500
- Prep: Khan Academy + books
- Apps: 6-8 schools
- Total cost: $3,000-$5,000
- Prep: Online course $500-$1K
- Apps: 10-12 schools
- Total cost: $6,000-$8,000+
- Prep: Live course $2K+
- Apps: 15-20 schools
LSAT Prep Costs: What You Actually Need to Spend
Prep is the single most variable cost in the LSAT path. Some applicants score 170+ using only free Khan Academy lessons and a stack of public-library books. Others spend $2,500 on live courses and score lower. The relationship between prep cost and score is real but weaker than commercial providers would like you to believe.
Free Prep Options
The most surprising free option is Khan Academy's Official LSAT Prep, developed in partnership with LSAC. The course covers every LSAT section with thousands of practice questions, video lessons, and full-length practice tests. Many students who score 170+ used Khan Academy as their primary or only prep resource. The downside is the program requires self-discipline to follow without a structured study calendar.
Other free resources include the LSAC's own free PrepTest samples, the 7Sage free starter pack, and Reddit's r/LSAT community where users post practice questions, study schedules, and detailed analysis of difficult problems. Public libraries often carry LSAT prep books that you can borrow at no cost.
Budget Prep ($100-$500)
Budget-tier prep typically combines used or new LSAT prep books, a low-cost online platform subscription, and a stack of past PrepTests purchased through LSAC at $8-$15 each. The most popular budget combination is The PowerScore Logic Games Bible ($65), The PowerScore Logical Reasoning Bible ($65), and a 7Sage Core Curriculum subscription ($249). Total is well under $500 and produces score improvements as significant as $2,000 courses for self-motivated students.
Mid-Range Prep ($500-$1,500)
Mid-range prep adds structured curricula, more practice tests, and limited tutor access. The dominant option is 7Sage's Advanced curriculum subscription ($699 for 12 months), Blueprint's online curriculum ($799-$1,499), or The LSAT Trainer course with the related materials package. These curricula provide a step-by-step path through the exam material with built-in scheduling.
Premium Prep ($1,500-$3,000+)
Premium prep adds live instruction, smaller class sizes, and tutoring components. The major providers (Kaplan, Princeton Review, Manhattan Prep) all charge in the $1,500-$3,000 range for their flagship courses. Private tutoring runs $150-$500 per hour for top instructors. A premium course plus 20 hours of private tutoring can total $5,000-$8,000 and is the option that delivers the most personalized support.
What Actually Moves the Score
Research consistently shows that hours of study time is the strongest predictor of LSAT score improvement, not which course or which prep materials you use. A student who spends 300+ hours over 4-6 months with any decent prep curriculum will typically improve more than a student who spends 100 hours with the most expensive course. The expensive courses help with motivation and accountability, but the actual learning happens through practice questions and analysis of your mistakes.
LSAT-Adjacent Costs
Free reports: Several included with LSAC registration. Number varies by year — typically 4-6 are bundled.
Additional reports: $45 per school beyond the included number. Apply to 15 schools, expect 10-11 additional reports at roughly $450 added cost.
Save money: Use the included reports strategically by applying to your top schools first, then adding others as you decide.

Law School Application Costs Beyond the LSAT
The LSAT is the gateway but not the destination. The full cost of becoming a law school applicant extends across LSAC fees, application fees, and travel costs that most candidates underestimate.
Per-School Application Fees
Each law school charges its own application fee on top of the LSAC CAS subscription. Fees range from $50 at smaller state schools to $100+ at top private schools. The most popular law schools (Harvard, Yale, Stanford, Columbia, NYU, Penn, University of Chicago, Northwestern, Berkeley) all charge $85-$100 per application. A candidate applying to 10 schools typically pays $700-$900 in application fees alone.
The Law School Application Strategy
Most pre-law advisors recommend applying to 10-15 schools spread across reach, target, and safety categories. A 175-LSAT scorer might apply to 15 top schools because admissions at the top is highly uncertain. A 155-LSAT scorer might apply to 10 schools focused on the next tier. Either way, the total application fee bill ranges from $500-$1,500.
Fee Waivers from Individual Schools
Beyond LSAC's fee waiver, individual law schools offer their own fee waivers. These are usually granted automatically to applicants who scored above the school's median LSAT, or to applicants who attended on-campus information sessions, or to applicants from underrepresented backgrounds. Always check each school's application portal for fee waiver options before paying.
Travel Costs
Law school applications increasingly involve campus visits, especially for the top schools. A campus visit to one school typically costs $200-$600 depending on geography (flight, hotel, ground transportation). Most applicants visit 2-4 schools before deciding where to enroll. Budget $500-$2,000 in travel costs depending on your geographic spread.
Cumulative LSAT Cost Timeline
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How the LSAC Fee Waiver Reduces Total Cost to Zero
The single most generous benefit available to prospective law students with financial need is the LSAC Fee Waiver. Approved waivers cover essentially every line item in the LSAT path, turning a $3,000-$5,000 endeavor into a $0-$500 endeavor.
What the Fee Waiver Covers
Two free LSAT administrations within two years. Free CAS subscription with the standard 5-year validity. Six free score reports to law schools (worth $270). Free access to LSAC's online prep materials. Many law schools also offer their own application fee waivers automatically to LSAC fee waiver recipients, which can eliminate the $50-$100 per-school application fees on top of the LSAC benefits.
Eligibility
Eligibility is means-tested. LSAC evaluates household income, assets, and dependents against a federal poverty threshold. Applicants whose adjusted income falls below 200 percent of the federal poverty line typically qualify. The 2026 threshold is approximately $30,000 for a single applicant and higher for applicants with dependents.
Documentation Required
You need to upload last year's federal tax return (1040), all W-2s and 1099s, and documentation of any other income sources. International applicants submit equivalent documentation from their home country. The application takes about 20 minutes once you have the documents ready.
Approval Timeline
LSAC processes fee waiver applications in 2-3 weeks during off-peak months and 4-6 weeks during peak season (May through September). Submit early so the waiver is approved before your target registration deadline.
Strategic Use of the Fee Waiver
The fee waiver is valid for two years from approval. Some applicants use it across two different application cycles, which is allowed under the rules. The strategy is to use one of the two LSAT administrations in your first cycle, retake if needed in the second cycle, and apply across both cycles with the same waiver coverage.
Self-Study Free Prep vs Paid Course
- +Self-Study: Lowest cost — Khan Academy plus 2-3 prep books costs under $200 total.
- +Self-Study: Flexible schedule — Study when and how you want. No fixed class times.
- +Paid Course: Structured curriculum — Built-in study calendar, progress tracking, and accountability.
- +Paid Course: Live instructor access — Ask questions in real time. Get explanations beyond what books cover.
- −Self-Study: Requires discipline — Many self-studiers fall behind without external accountability.
- −Self-Study: No personalized feedback — Hard to identify your specific weak areas without expert review.
- −Paid Course: High cost — $1,500-$3,000 for live courses. Out of reach for many candidates.
- −Paid Course: Quality varies — Not all premium courses are equally effective. Test-prep marketing can mislead.

Budget LSAT Path Checklist
- ✓Sign up for Khan Academy Official LSAT Prep — free, partner with LSAC
- ✓Apply for LSAC Fee Waiver if household income is below 200% of poverty line
- ✓Buy 2-3 used prep books (PowerScore Bibles, The LSAT Trainer) for $80-$150 total
- ✓Subscribe to 7Sage Core Curriculum ($249) for structured study path
- ✓Buy 10-15 past PrepTests from LSAC at $8-$15 each for practice
- ✓Use free Reddit community (r/LSAT) for study group accountability
- ✓Apply to 8-10 law schools rather than 15-20 to control application fees
- ✓Check each school's fee waiver program before paying application fees
- ✓Use included LSAC score reports strategically — apply to top schools first
- ✓Skip campus visits initially. Visit only after acceptance to top choices.
Where Your LSAT Budget Goes
Hidden Costs Most Applicants Forget When Planning Their LSAT Budget
Even applicants who carefully research the headline LSAT fee and prep course pricing routinely miss several supplementary costs that quietly inflate the final total bill by hundreds or even thousands of dollars over the course of the application cycle.
Beyond the obvious line items, several costs catch applicants by surprise. Knowing them in advance prevents budget shortfalls in the final stretch of the application cycle.
Retest Costs
Roughly half of LSAT takers test more than once. Each retake costs another $238 (or is covered by the LSAC fee waiver for qualifying applicants). The decision to retake usually comes 2-4 weeks after the original score, and the retest typically happens 2-3 months later. Budget for at least one retake if your goal score is more than 5 points above your first practice test scores.
Late Registration Surcharge
If you miss the standard registration deadline (about 5 weeks before each test), late registration costs an additional $135. Avoid this by registering as soon as you commit to a test date. The late surcharge is fully avoidable with timely planning.
Date Change Fees
If you register and then need to change to a later test date, the change fee is $135. Many applicants change at least once, especially first-time test takers who underestimated their prep timeline. Budget for one date change if you are not certain about your readiness.
Subscription Renewals
Many online prep platforms charge monthly or quarterly subscriptions that can total more than the headline price if you study for 6 months instead of 3. A $99/month subscription costs $594 over 6 months. Pick prep options with one-time pricing if your study timeline is uncertain.
Mandatory Documentation
The CAS requires official transcripts from every post-secondary school you attended, including community college and study-abroad institutions. Transcript fees vary by institution ($5-$25 each). International transcripts may require authentication and translation, which can add $100-$300 per transcript.
Pre-Law Advising
Some applicants hire pre-law advisors or admissions consultants to help with school selection, application strategy, and personal statement editing. Consultants charge $1,000-$10,000+ for full-service packages. The market for this is dominated by Ivy-League-targeting candidates with non-traditional backgrounds. Skip unless your application has a specific unusual element (career change, lower GPA, etc.) that benefits from expert framing.
Hidden LSAT Costs to Budget For
- ✓At least one retake: $238 plus another 60-90 days of prep time
- ✓Late registration surcharge: $135 if you miss the 5-week-before deadline
- ✓Date change fee: $135 each time you push your test back
- ✓Additional score reports: $45 each beyond included free reports
- ✓Transcript fees: $5-$25 per undergrad institution attended
- ✓International transcript authentication: $100-$300 per transcript if applicable
- ✓Prep subscription overruns: $99/month adds up if you study longer than planned
- ✓Optional pre-law advisor: $1,000-$10,000+ for high-stakes application support
How LSAT Cost Compares to Other Graduate Admissions Tests
Comparing the LSAT to other professional graduate admissions tests gives useful context for budgeting and pathway selection. Each test has its own cost structure, and the gap between sticker price and total prep cost varies meaningfully.
The LSAT is more expensive than most graduate admissions tests. Understanding the comparison helps applicants budget realistically and choose between professional degree pathways.
LSAT vs GRE
The GRE costs $220 in 2026, slightly less than the $238 LSAT. Both tests require similar prep investment if you target competitive scores. Many law schools now accept the GRE in place of the LSAT, which means applicants with both options can pick the cheaper or easier test. However, top-25 law schools still consider LSAT scores more favorably than GRE scores even when both are accepted.
LSAT vs MCAT
The MCAT costs $345 in 2026, significantly more than the LSAT. Total medical school applicant costs run $3,500-$7,000, comparable to LSAT total costs. Both pathways have generous fee waiver programs for low-income applicants.
LSAT vs GMAT
The GMAT costs $275 in 2026, between the LSAT and MCAT. The total cost for business school applicants is typically lower than law school applicants because business schools accept GRE more readily and fewer applicants need extensive in-person prep courses.
LSAT vs Bar Exam Eventually
The eventual bar exam costs $500-$1,500 per state for the exam alone, plus another $2,000-$5,000 for bar prep. The total law-school-plus-bar pathway in 2026 ranges from $150,000 (low-cost state school plus self-study) to $400,000+ (private school with full bar prep). The LSAT cost is a tiny fraction of the eventual total.
LSAT Cost Questions and Answers
Related LSAT Resources
About the Author
Attorney & Bar Exam Preparation Specialist
Yale Law SchoolJames R. Hargrove is a practicing attorney and legal educator with a Juris Doctor from Yale Law School and an LLM in Constitutional Law. With over a decade of experience coaching bar exam candidates across multiple jurisdictions, he specializes in MBE strategy, state-specific essay preparation, and multistate performance test techniques.