An LSAT study schedule is the single biggest predictor of whether you'll move 5, 10, or 15 points from your diagnostic. Most students who improve significantly log 250 to 400 hours over 3 to 12 months. The exact number depends on your starting score, your target school, and how much you can study each week without burning out.
This guide breaks the LSAT timeline into four study plans: a 6-month plan (the most common and the one we recommend for most applicants), a 3-month intensive (for working professionals on a deadline), a 12-month relaxed plan (for current college students), and a 6-week crash plan (only if you're already scoring 165+ and just polishing). Each plan covers weekly hours, daily templates, and what to do in each study phase.
You'll also see the four LSAT study phases—Foundation, Drill, Practice Tests, and Polish—plus a sample 24-week timeline, weekly schedule templates, and a materials list by phase. Before you pick a plan, take a diagnostic. Our lsat diagnostic test walks you through scoring a baseline PrepTest and turning that score into a personalized hours-per-week target.
Once you know your baseline, the gap between that number and your target score sets your minimum hours. A 5-point jump usually takes 150 to 200 hours of focused work. A 10-point jump pushes 300 to 400 hours. Anything beyond 15 points typically requires 400+ hours and a full 6 to 9 months of consistent daily study. The schedule you pick is just a container for those hours—what matters is whether you actually log them.
Most LSAT students who improve 5 to 15 points study for 250 to 400 total hours spread over 3 to 9 months. That works out to about 12 to 15 hours per week for 6 months, or 25 to 30 hours per week for 3 months. Less than 100 hours rarely moves the needle. More than 500 hours hits diminishing returns. The sweet spot for a serious applicant is a 6-month schedule averaging 14 hours per week.
Best for: Most applicants. The default recommendation.
Hours per week: 12 to 15
Total hours: 350 to 400
Weekly schedule: 1.5 to 2 hours per weekday + 4 hours Saturday + 2 hours Sunday
Expected improvement: 10 to 15 points from diagnostic
The 6-month plan gives you enough runway to hit all four study phases without burnout. Weeks 1-4 build foundations, weeks 5-12 drill weak sections, weeks 13-20 run full practice tests, and weeks 21-24 polish and taper. This is the plan we recommend if you're aiming for a 165+ score and have flexibility on your test date.
Best for: Working professionals with a fixed test deadline.
Hours per week: 25 to 30
Total hours: 300 to 360
Weekly schedule: 3 to 4 hours per weekday + 6 hours per day on weekends
Expected improvement: 7 to 12 points from diagnostic
The 3-month plan compresses the same content into half the time. It works, but the burnout risk is real—plan one full rest day each week and protect it. This plan assumes you already finished a basic LSAT prep book before week 1, so you can skip pure foundation work and jump into drilling by week 2.
Best for: Current college students studying alongside a full course load.
Hours per week: 8 to 10
Total hours: 400 to 500
Weekly schedule: 1 hour per weekday + 3 hours per weekend day
Expected improvement: 12 to 18 points from diagnostic
A full year lets you build deep mastery of every question type and burn through 70+ official PrepTests. The downside is retention—you'll need to re-review concepts every 4 to 6 weeks so foundation material stays sharp. This plan is ideal for sophomores and juniors planning a 1L start two years out.
Best for: Students already scoring 165+ who need polish only.
Hours per week: 25 to 30
Total hours: 150 to 180
Weekly schedule: 4 to 5 hours per day, 3 full timed practice tests per week
Expected improvement: 2 to 5 points from diagnostic
A 6-week crash is not a real prep plan—it's a tune-up. If your diagnostic is below 160, do not attempt this plan. The improvement ceiling is small, and the burnout risk is high. Use this only if you've previously studied for the LSAT, scored well, and need to retake to push from a 165 to a 170+.
Whether you pick a 3-month, 6-month, or 12-month plan, every successful LSAT schedule moves through the same four phases. Skipping or shortcutting any phase is the most common reason students plateau in the high 150s and never break into the 160s. Each phase builds on the last—you can't drill what you haven't learned, and you can't simulate what you haven't drilled.
The foundation phase is when you learn what the LSAT actually tests. Read the PowerScore Logical Reasoning Bible or the LSAT Trainer cover to cover. Take a Khan Academy LSAT diagnostic to get a baseline.
Master the basic Logical Reasoning question types—assumption, strengthen, weaken, flaw, inference—and the four Logic Games setups. Do not take timed full PrepTests yet. Build daily study habits and aim for 80 to 100 hours of foundation work before moving to drilling.
The drill phase is section-by-section practice with untimed work. Spend 4 to 6 hours per week on your weakest section. Most students need the heaviest drilling on Logic Games and the analytical question types in Logical Reasoning.
Take one timed PrepTest per week starting in week 6 and spend 2 to 3 hours reviewing every wrong answer. Your goal isn't to finish fast—it's to understand why each wrong answer is wrong and why the credited response is right. Keep a written log of every miss so patterns emerge by week 10.
Now you simulate. Take 2 to 3 full timed PrepTests per week using lsat practice questions from official sources. Practice tests should be done at the same time of day as your real exam (typically morning).
Use a single 35-minute timer, take your one 10-minute break, and review the entire test the same day or next morning. By the end of phase 3, your scores should cluster within 3 to 5 points of your target. If they don't, identify the section dragging your average and add 3 more hours per week of targeted drills on that section.
The polish phase is taper, not cram. Take one full timed PrepTest every other day for the first two weeks. In the final two weeks, drop to one PrepTest every 3 to 4 days and focus on light review, exam-week sleep schedule, and mental preparation. Do not learn new concepts in phase 4. Trust your prep.
Read PowerScore LR Bible chapters 1-8. Take Khan Academy diagnostic. Identify 2 weakest LR question types. 8 hours per week.
Finish LR Bible. Start PowerScore Logic Games Bible. Drill 20 untimed LR questions per day. 10 hours per week.
Master LG setups (sequencing, grouping, hybrid). 50 untimed LG questions per week. Add Reading Comp drilling. 12 hours per week.
Begin timed sections. 4 timed LR sections + 4 timed LG sections per week. Take PrepTest 73 (early modern). 14 hours per week.
1 full timed PrepTest per week. Review for 3 hours after each. Continue daily section drills. 15 hours per week.
2 full timed PrepTests per week. Switch to recent PrepTests 80-95. Review each test within 24 hours. 16 hours per week.
3 PrepTests per week. Target consistent scores within 2 points of goal. Focus heavy review on remaining weak Q types. 18 hours per week.
Polish phase. 1 PrepTest every other day. Light review only. Lock in exam-week sleep schedule. 14 hours per week.
Final week. 2 light PrepTests. Day before test: no new material, light walk, 8 hours sleep. Test day: protein breakfast, arrive 30 minutes early.
The hardest part of an LSAT schedule isn't the hours—it's fitting them into your actual life. Below are two field-tested weekly templates, one for working professionals balancing a full-time job and one for current college students with class loads. Adjust by 30 minutes either direction based on your energy, but keep the structure.
Monday 6:30 to 8:00 AM: Logical Reasoning drills (25 questions, untimed if learning, timed if drilling).
Tuesday 6:30 to 8:00 AM: Logic Games (2 to 3 fresh games, redo any games you missed).
Wednesday 6:30 to 8:00 AM: Reading Comprehension (1 passage timed + 1 untimed for technique).
Thursday: Rest day. Review your wrong-answer journal for 30 minutes if you want.
Friday 6:30 to 8:00 AM: Mixed review—your 5 worst questions from the week.
Saturday 8:00 AM to 12:00 PM: One full timed PrepTest. Lunch break. 1:00 to 4:00 PM: Full review of the test.
Sunday 10:00 AM to 1:00 PM: Light targeted study on whatever section the PT exposed as weakest.
The mornings-only approach matters. Working professionals who try to study after a full workday almost always quit by month 2. Tired brains can't learn LSAT logic. Set an alarm, brew coffee, and protect the 6:30 AM window like a hard meeting.
Monday through Friday 4:00 to 6:00 PM: Attend classes, then 6:00 to 7:00 PM LSAT study (rotating between LR, LG, RC).
Wednesday: Skip evening LSAT, attend office hours or do schoolwork instead.
Saturday 9:00 AM to 12:00 PM: Full timed PrepTest. 1:00 to 3:00 PM: Wrong-answer review.
Sunday 1:00 to 4:00 PM: Targeted weak-section drilling.
Sunday evening: Off. Mental rest matters.
If you're planning to apply to a specific test date, sync your schedule to the LSAC calendar early. Our lsat test dates guide lists every administration through 2027 with registration deadlines and score release windows so you can pick the test that gives you the most buffer for a retake.
The materials you use matter less than the hours you log, but using the wrong materials in the wrong phase wastes weeks. Here's the breakdown:
Khan Academy LSAT (free, official partnership with LSAC). PowerScore Logical Reasoning Bible ($80). The LSAT Trainer by Mike Kim ($30). These three together give you 90% of the conceptual foundation you need. Do not buy a $1,500 course at this stage.
7Sage Demon ($69 to $297 per month) or Blueprint LSAT ($297+ per month). Both have adaptive drills that target your weak question types. 7Sage is cheaper and works well for self-motivated learners. Blueprint includes live classes and is better for students who need accountability. For one-on-one help, consider an lsat tutoring service starting around $150 per hour for high-scoring instructors.
Official LSAC PrepTests ($9 each individually, or $99 for a 10-pack bundle). You need at least 20 to 30 official PTs for phase 3. Start with PrepTests 73 to 80 (modern format with the now-defunct experimental section removed) and work toward the most recent administrations.
7Sage's LSAT proctor app or Blueprint's timed simulator. These replicate the digital interface used in the actual test. Re-take PrepTests you've already seen if you've memorized the answers—your goal is timing and rhythm, not new question exposure. If you're targeting top law schools, our guide on the law school lsat scores page lists median LSAT scores for the T14 so you know if your current PT range is competitive.
The fastest way to improve your study plan is to avoid the mistakes that cost most students 5 to 10 points. After watching hundreds of LSAT students succeed and fail, these are the patterns that show up over and over.
Anything under 12 weeks of prep is gambling. The LSAT tests skills—formal reasoning, conditional logic, careful reading—that take time to internalize. A 6-week plan only works if you've already studied before. Starting cold with under 12 weeks almost always caps your improvement at 3 to 5 points.
Students who skip their diagnostic fly blind. You can't pick the right plan, the right hours, or the right materials without knowing your baseline. Take a free LSAC PrepTest under timed conditions in week 1 before you read a single book.
Practice without review is worthless. Every wrong answer is a free lesson—but only if you spend 5 to 10 minutes understanding why you got it wrong, what trap you fell into, and what pattern to recognize next time. Aim for a 1:1 ratio of practice time to review time.
Students who keep grinding full PrepTests in the final 5 days walk into the test exhausted. Treat the LSAT like an athletic event. Taper your volume in the last 2 weeks. Cut to one full PT every 3 to 4 days. Get 8 hours of sleep every night of the final week.
If every practice test you take is at your kitchen table with the dog barking, test day will shock your system. Starting week 8, do every full PT in test conditions: morning start time, single 10-minute break, no phone, no snacks during sections, and yes, the proctored online simulator if you can afford one.
The hardest decision in LSAT prep isn't picking a plan—it's deciding whether to take the test or postpone. Your study schedule should end with a clear readiness signal, not just a calendar date. Here are the four criteria that say you're ready.
Your last 5 to 7 full timed PrepTests should cluster within 2 to 3 points of your target score. If your range is 168 to 172 and your target is 170, you're ready. If your range is 158 to 170, you're not—the variance means a bad day will land you at the bottom of that band.
You should be hitting 90%+ accuracy on familiar question types in your weakest section. If you're still missing 4+ assumption questions per LR section, you haven't mastered LR yet. Reschedule and drill those specific Q types for 2 more weeks.
You should finish every section with at least 30 to 60 seconds to spare for review, even on hard tests. If you're running out of time in week 20, your foundational technique still has gaps. Push the test back.
You should be confident, not anxious. If you wake up dreading the test, schedule a meeting with a study buddy or tutor for a confidence audit. Anxiety scores 5 points lower than confidence on test day every single time.
The final 7 days are not a study sprint. They're a taper. Here's the exact week-of schedule we recommend.
Sunday (T-7): One full timed PT in the morning. Review same day. Last hard study session of your entire prep.
Monday (T-6): 1 hour light review of your wrong-answer journal. No new material. Early bedtime.
Tuesday (T-5): 1 section of timed LR. Stop after 35 minutes.
Wednesday (T-4): 1 section of timed LG. Stop after 35 minutes.
Thursday (T-3): 1 section of timed RC. Stop after 35 minutes. Lay out everything you need for test day.
Friday (T-2): Off. Walk, light exercise, early bedtime.
Saturday (T-1): Off. No LSAT content. Review the test center route. Pack admission ticket, ID, snacks. Light dinner. In bed by 10 PM.
Test Day: Protein breakfast 2 hours before test. Arrive 30 minutes early. Mental rehearsal of your routine. Trust your prep.
If you've never registered for the LSAT before or you're picking your first test date, walk through our august lsat strategy guide to match your study schedule to a target administration with enough buffer for one retake if you need it. And if you're worried about test-day disabilities or extended time, request lsat accommodation at least 6 to 8 weeks before your test date—LSAC reviews each request individually.
Life happens. You'll miss a week. The question is how to recover without compounding the loss. The rule: never try to make up missed hours by doubling the next week. That spike causes burnout and a longer plateau.
Instead, extend your test date if you can. The LSAT is offered 9 times per year, and pushing back 6 to 8 weeks is almost always better than walking in underprepared. If you can't move the date, accept the lower target score, do not attempt to cram, and protect your taper week at all costs—a rested mind on test day beats a frantic mind by 3 to 5 points.
Track your weekly hours in a simple spreadsheet so you catch slippage early. If you fall under your target by 4+ hours in a single week, schedule a 2-hour catch-up on the next available Saturday—not a 6-hour bender. Small adjustments compound. Big swings break consistency.