The LSAT score range is 120 to 180. The national average LSAT score is approximately 152, representing the 50th percentile. The LSAT consists of 4 scored sections (Logical Reasoning, Analytical Reasoning, Reading Comprehension, and one unscored experimental section) plus an unscored Writing sample. Your scaled score of 120–180 is derived from your raw score (number correct), which is then placed on the scale through a process called equating that accounts for minor difficulty variations across test dates. This guide covers the complete LSAT score range, what each score means in terms of percentile and law school competitiveness, and when it makes sense to retake the exam.
The LSAT is scored on a scale of 120 to 180. A score of 120 is the minimum possible (answering everything wrong still produces 120, not 0), and 180 is a perfect score. The midpoint of the scale is approximately 150–152, which corresponds to the 50th percentile.
Your LSAT score is derived through a 2-step process:
How many questions can you miss and still score 170+? On most LSAT administrations, missing approximately 4–5 questions out of ~100 produces a scaled score of 170. Missing 10–12 typically yields around 165. Missing 20–25 typically yields around 158. Missing 40+ brings scores below 150. The exact conversion varies by test date.
LSAT-Flex and Digital LSAT: LSAC transitioned to the digital LSAT format. The scoring scale (120–180) remains identical to the paper format. One section of Logical Reasoning was removed from the graded exam, but the scale was recalibrated accordingly — your digital LSAT score is directly comparable to historic paper scores.
LSAC publishes LSAT percentile rankings annually based on all test-takers over a 3-year period. Percentile tells you what percentage of test-takers scored at or below your score. Here are the key benchmarks:
Why percentile matters more than the raw number: Law schools — especially the T14 (top 14 programs) — track their 25th and 75th percentile LSAT scores carefully because these numbers appear in rankings (US News and World Report). Moving a school's 25th percentile from 168 to 169 is worth scholarship offers and waitlist decisions. Your score's position relative to a school's published 25th–75th percentile range is the most useful benchmark for competitiveness.
T14 law schools (Yale, Harvard, Stanford, Columbia, Chicago, NYU, Penn, Virginia, Michigan, Duke, Northwestern, Cornell, Georgetown, UCLA): These 14 programs account for the majority of federal clerkship and large law firm placements. Median LSAT scores range from 169 (Georgetown) to 174 (Yale). Being below the school's 25th percentile (typically 167–170 for T14) makes admission unlikely without exceptionally strong other factors. A 170+ is the realistic minimum for T14 competitiveness.
Top 15–50 law schools: Include strong regional programs like Emory, Minnesota, Texas, Washington University, and Boston College. Median LSATs typically 162–168. A score of 160–165 is competitive; 167+ is strong for most programs in this range.
Regional and tier 3–4 programs: Many accredited law schools have median LSATs between 148 and 158. A 152 (50th percentile) is competitive for many of these programs. State schools in less competitive markets often have lower medians and strong local employment outcomes.
Practice with our LSAT practice test 2026 to establish your baseline score range. Also review our LSAT analytical reasoning guide for targeted section prep, and our LSAT prep resources for full study planning.
The LSAT rewards logical reasoning skills, not memorized content. Unlike the MCAT or bar exam, there is no content to master — only reasoning patterns. This makes preparation approach especially important.
Logical Reasoning (2 sections on the scored exam): Accounts for approximately 50% of your score. The 14 question types (assumption, strengthen, weaken, flaw, inference, etc.) are consistent across all administrations. Recognizing question types and applying systematic approaches improves accuracy significantly. This is the most improvable section.
Analytical Reasoning (Logic Games): One section, approximately 23 questions. Logic games are initially intimidating but have the highest ceiling for improvement through practice — students who master diagramming techniques often score 20–23 correct out of 23 on games. Dedicate significant early prep time here.
Reading Comprehension: One section, approximately 27 questions. This section is harder to improve quickly because it relies on sustained reading ability. Focus on passage structure identification and using process of elimination on answer choices rather than trying to read faster.
Realistic improvement expectations: With 300–400 hours of deliberate practice, most students improve 8–12 points from their baseline diagnostic score. Improvements of 15+ points are possible with intensive preparation. A student starting at 145 can realistically reach 158–162 with 4–6 months of focused prep.
LSAC policy allows up to 3 LSAT attempts per testing year, 5 attempts in any 5-year period, and a lifetime maximum of 7 attempts. All scores are reported to every law school you apply to through LSAC's Credential Assembly Service — there is no score choice.
When retaking makes sense:
When retaking may not help:
Law school admissions evaluate multiple retakes differently: schools that average all scores penalize retakes more than those that take the highest. Research each school's policy. Some schools (Yale, Harvard) explicitly state they take the highest score. Others state they consider all scores in context.