Knowing when to take the LSAT is one of the most important decisions in your entire law school journey. The score sits at the center of your application, and the test date you pick controls when that score reaches admissions committees. Pick the date well and you submit early in rolling admissions with room to retake if something goes sideways. Pick poorly and you are submitting late, competing for shrinking seat counts, and scrambling for scholarship money that has already been promised to earlier applicants.
The good news: with eight LSAT administrations now offered each cycle (January, February, April, June, August, September, October, November), there is no single "right" date. The right date is the one that lines up your peak preparation with your application strategy.
This guide walks through the full timing puzzle, including how to coordinate the test with law school deadlines, how long to study before sitting, and how to plan a retake without blowing up your application. If you have not already, bookmark the official LSAT date calendar and our full LSAT exam study guide โ both pair naturally with what you'll learn below.
One more note before we dive in. Throughout this guide, every recommendation assumes you are aiming to start law school in the fall semester, since 99% of accredited US programs follow that calendar. Spring admits exist at a handful of schools, but the timing math changes very little.
The core rule still holds: a tested, scored, and verified LSAT in your file makes your application complete, and an incomplete file does not get read. Treat your test date pick as the single most important calendar decision of your entire pre-law journey, because every other deadline downstream depends on it landing exactly when you planned.
The textbook answer is simple: take the LSAT when you have prepared enough to score within (or above) your target school's middle 50% range, with enough cushion in the calendar to retake if needed. The realistic answer is more nuanced.
For a fall-start law school class, the strongest applicants test in June or August of the prior year โ roughly 12 to 15 months before they actually start law school. That gives them a finalized score before September, lets them submit applications the moment portals open, and preserves October and November as retake dates if the first score lands below target.
If you cannot test that early, the September and October administrations are the next best windows. Scores release inside the first half of the rolling admissions cycle, which is when seats and scholarship dollars are still plentiful. The November LSAT works for non-binding regular-decision applications, but it pushes your file deep into the admissions pipeline at top schools, where the bulk of admits are made between November and February. The January, February, and April dates are best treated as retake opportunities or as the test cycle for someone applying the following year.
Why does this matter so much? Law school admissions run on rolling cycles. Adcoms read files in the order they are completed, and seats are awarded as they read. A 165 LSAT submitted in October competes against an emptier seat chart than a 165 submitted in February. The same score yields different outcomes depending on when it lands. For the granular calendar, see our LSAT date reference, which lists every 2026 and 2027 sitting plus deadline cutoffs.
Target: June or August prior year.
Early Decision and Early Action deadlines fall between October 15 and November 15 at most top-25 law schools. To submit a complete ED application on day one, your LSAT must be banked and scored by mid-September at the absolute latest. Testing in June gives you score release by mid-July with August and October as retake insurance. Testing in August gives you score release by mid-September with the October sitting as your only retake before ED deadlines close.
Target: June, August, September, or October.
Regular-decision deadlines run from December to March, but rolling admissions means you should still aim for an October submission or earlier. A September or October LSAT is fine โ scores land in time for a November-December app push, which is still inside the high-admit window. November LSAT works but you'll submit in December, missing the heaviest admit weeks at competitive schools.
Target: June or August during your gap year.
Gap-year applicants have the cleanest timing in the entire law school pipeline. You finish undergrad, study seriously for 3-6 months, and sit for the LSAT in June or August of the gap year. Score releases by August or September; applications go out in September or October; you matriculate the following August. This is the model that produces the highest median scores at top schools.
Target: any date that fits your work calendar โ but plan 9-12 months ahead.
Career changers and older applicants face the same deadlines as 22-year-olds but with full-time work obligations. The right LSAT date is whichever sitting gives you 6+ months of weekend and evening study, plus a 2-week light review just before. Many non-trads test in August or October after a long spring/summer prep cycle, then apply that same fall.
LSAC now offers the LSAT eight times per cycle, with most administrations available in both at-home (Live Online with remote proctoring) and in-person test center formats. For the 2026-2027 testing cycle, the eight sitting months are January, February, April, June, August, September, October, and November. Each administration spans roughly a 3-day window so LSAC can spread proctor capacity across time zones. Registration opens 3-4 months before each sitting; standard registration deadlines are roughly 5 weeks before test day, with late registration available for an extra fee until about 3 weeks out.
Score release follows a predictable 3-4 week timeline. A June LSAT released around the third week of July. An August LSAT released around the third week of September. The pattern holds for every sitting.
Plan backward from your application deadline using that 3-4 week buffer plus your CAS report processing time (another 1-2 weeks for transcripts to compile). For most students, that means the latest "safe" LSAT for a competitive Regular Decision push is the September or early October sitting; anything later cuts into the front half of the rolling admit window. Our full LSAT date page has each individual date, registration deadline, and score-release window mapped out.
A 6-month runway is the sweet spot for most college-aged applicants โ long enough to absorb the question types, build consistent timing, and complete 20+ full-length practice tests, but short enough that motivation does not fade. Students with weaker baseline scores or fewer study hours per week should plan 9-12 months. Students retaking the LSAT or with quantitative-reasoning backgrounds may comfortably prep in 3-4 months. Whatever your window, the structure below scales: just compress or expand each phase proportionally. For a deeper breakdown of section-specific drills, see our LSAT exam prep guide and our lsat exam tips playbook.
There is no universal best date, but there are eight factors every applicant must weigh. Most students focus on one or two โ usually "when do I have time to study" โ and ignore the others. The strongest applications come from people who reverse-engineer the entire timeline from their target law school deadline backward, then pick a sitting that satisfies every constraint. Below, each factor with the question to ask yourself.
Identify the earliest deadline on your school list (often an ED date in mid-October). Your score must release 2 weeks before that. Work backward 3-4 weeks for the release window โ that gives you your latest possible test date.
Top-14 schools quietly favor scores submitted in October or earlier. After November, you are competing against larger applicant pools for fewer remaining seats. Check each school's published "latest accepted LSAT date" โ most cap at the February or April sitting.
Map the 3-6 months before your target date. Block out finals, family events, work travel. If your window has more than 2 major disruptions, push the test back one sitting. Quality study weeks beat calendar fit every time.
Always pick a test date that leaves at least ONE more sitting before your application deadline. If your June score disappoints, August is your retake. If August disappoints, October. Never test on the last sitting before deadlines โ you have no escape route.
If you're burned out, sick, or facing a major life event, push the test. The LSAT score lasts 5 years; one sitting delayed is rarely fatal to admissions. A poor score forced through a bad week, however, stays on your CAS report forever.
Beyond those five strategic factors, three logistical ones close out the list. Score release timing is the LSAC-controlled 3-4 week window between test day and score post; you cannot speed this up, so build it into every backward calculation. Cancel window is the 6-day grace period after each test in which you can void your score before it is reported.
CAS processing time is the additional 1-2 weeks for transcripts and recommendations to consolidate after you register; that step has to happen before your file shows complete at any school. Add those three to the five cards above, and you have your full eight-factor LSAT date matrix.
If you're applying this fall for next fall's law school class: aim for the August LSAT, with October as your retake date. If you have 9+ months of runway and are gunning for top-14 schools: aim for the June LSAT, with August or October as backup. If you're already in late summer with no prep done: aim for the next year's June or August sitting โ do not rush a fall test for an application cycle you're not ready for. A well-prepared score next year beats a panicked score this year.
Different applicants face different LSAT timing puzzles. A 20-year-old college junior has a different runway than a 32-year-old career changer. Below, the four most common applicant profiles and the date pattern that historically works best for each. These are starting points โ your individual circumstances may push you one sitting earlier or later, but the framework holds across thousands of admitted students.
For a deeper look at how scores translate across percentile ranks and law school benchmarks once you do test, our LSAT score range resource breaks down the curve school by school. And if you need a 1-on-1 study partner because self-study isn't getting you to your target, the lsat practice test support page covers tutoring services, costs, and how to vet a tutor. Pairing the right test date with the right prep style is what closes the gap between current and target score.
Recommended date: June after junior year (apply early senior year for fall-after-graduation start) โ OR June after senior year for a one-year gap.
The classic K-JD timeline. Use spring semester of junior year for foundational prep, study heavily during the summer post-junior-year, sit for June, and use any retake sittings (August, October) before senior-year applications go in. The junior-summer prep window is the cleanest study time most college students will ever have.
Recommended date: June or August right after graduation, applying in the fall.
This is a one-year gap timeline. Senior year fall semester: prep + take LSAT in October. Senior spring: rest, retake in June if needed. Summer after graduation: apply with locked-in score. Start law school 12-15 months after undergrad commencement. Less ideal: trying to study during senior fall while also writing personal statements โ most students need either prep OR application work in a given month, not both.
Recommended date: June or August of gap year (applying same fall).
The strongest applicant profile by median LSAT. After graduation, work or save for 6-9 months while doing 1-2 hours of LSAT prep per day. Sit in June or August. Use August or October as retake. Submit applications by October. This timeline produces the highest score-to-effort ratio of any path because you have no academic distractions during peak study months.
Recommended date: any sitting that follows 6+ months of sustained weekend/evening prep.
If you're 25+ and working full-time, your test date is dictated by when you can carve out 15-20 study hours per week for 6 months straight. Many non-trads find August ideal โ summer offers more daylight evening study time and lighter work calendars. October is the next best window. Avoid testing during your busiest work quarter or major project deadlines.
The June LSAT and the October LSAT are the two most common "first-time" dates among admitted applicants at top law schools. They sit at opposite ends of the prep calendar and force different trade-offs. June is summer-heavy, with no academic competition; October is fall-heavy, with score release inside the rolling admit window. Below, a head-to-head breakdown of the two most popular sittings.
The verdict: June is the safer first-time date for nearly every applicant who has the runway. October works well as a retake or for applicants who started prep late but still want to apply in the current cycle. If you have to pick blind and your study calendar is open, take June.
If your study calendar is constrained until summer ends, take October but accept the retake risk. Either way, do not let your first sitting be the November LSAT unless you are 100% certain you will not retake โ November scores release in mid-December, after most ED decisions have already been made.
Roughly 30% of LSAT takers retake at least once, and the data is encouraging โ second-time scores average 2.8 points higher than first-time scores, with many students gaining 5-10 points when they address specific weak areas between sittings. LSAC has no formal cap on the number of LSATs you can take in any 12-month period anymore (the old 3-test limit was retired), though there is a soft lifetime cap of 7 administrations. What you cannot do is take the LSAT in back-to-back weeks; sittings are spaced roughly 5-6 weeks apart by design.
The minimum gap between retakes is one sitting cycle (about 45 days), but practically, you need 8-12 weeks between attempts to materially change your score. The score increase comes from focused work on your weakest areas, not from "just trying again." After your first sitting, request your test booklet through LSAC's score auditing service (if it was a disclosed test), review every miss, and design a targeted 8-week study plan around your specific question-type gaps.
Then retake. Random retakes without diagnosed weak areas produce flat scores or, occasionally, lower ones from anxiety carryover. Our how to pass the LSAT exam guide includes a retake diagnostic framework worth reading before any second sitting.
One reporting note: law schools see every LSAT score on your CAS report, but the vast majority weight your highest score in admission decisions. Score addenda are not required for normal score progression โ it's only when scores drop dramatically that a brief explanation helps. Take the retake without fear, but take it with a plan.
Your score is 5+ points below your target school's median. You felt sick, distracted, or technically disrupted on test day. You averaged higher on full-length practice tests in the 2 weeks before sitting. You have at least one open sitting before your application deadline closes.
Your score is within 2-3 points of your target school median. You felt the test went "about as expected" with no major disruption. Retaking might add 1-2 points but unlikely to swing schools dramatically. Weigh the scholarship impact vs the time cost of another prep cycle.
Your score matches or exceeds your target school's 75th percentile. You're applying to schools where your current score is well above median and would shift you into the 75th percentile pool. Better to invest time in personal statement, optional essays, and law school visits.
You have a 6-day window after each LSAT to cancel your score through LSAC. Cancellations are recorded on your CAS report as "Cancel" โ they don't show a number, but admissions committees can see that you canceled. Most schools say a single cancellation is functionally invisible to your application; multiple cancellations raise eyebrows. So cancel only when you have a genuine reason to believe the score will be far below your reasonable range, and almost never as a reflex from test-day anxiety.
Reasons to cancel: you fell asleep mid-section, you had a serious medical emergency, the proctor disrupted your test, your home internet failed mid-Live-Online exam, you guessed on more than half of one section. Reasons NOT to cancel: "I felt nervous," "one section was hard," "I think I missed a few games," "my practice test scores were higher." Anxiety routinely makes test takers underestimate their performance โ most people who consider canceling end up with usable scores when they let the test stand. If you genuinely cannot decide, default to letting it stand; you can always retake.
Cancel only if you can name a specific, factual disaster from test day โ not a feeling. "I fell asleep during section 3" = cancel. "I felt the games section was harder than my practice" = let it stand. The 6-day cancel window ends at 11:59 PM Eastern on the sixth day after your test. Miss the window and the score is permanently on your record.
The final 30 days before your LSAT are about consolidation and recovery, not new material. Test-day performance is dictated by sleep, mental focus, and confidence โ not by cramming. Below, a day-by-day checklist that high scorers consistently follow in the 30 days leading up to their sitting. Print it, tape it above your desk, and check items off as you go.
Some context on how many people are sitting alongside you, and what the data says about retakes and score progression. These numbers come from LSAC's annual volume reports and confirm the patterns most prep advisors share anecdotally. Knowing the scale of the field โ and your spot in it โ takes some of the mystery out of test day.
One more pattern worth flagging: the June and October sittings draw the largest applicant pools each cycle, while January and February are the lightest. That doesn't change the difficulty of the test itself โ LSAC scales every administration โ but it does affect test-center availability. If you want a specific location or in-person time slot, register the day registration opens, not 4 weeks before the deadline.
If you're still on the fence between an in-person sitting and the Live Online format, both produce equivalent scores statistically and both are accepted by every law school. In-person feels more like the "classic" testing experience and reduces tech failure risk; Live Online removes commute stress and lets you test from a familiar environment.
Many high scorers report that lsat accommodations users in particular benefit from the controlled home environment, since proctor variability is lower. Whichever format you pick, lock it in at registration โ switching format after registration is not always possible and may push you to the next sitting.
Finally, one piece of advice from admissions consultants across the board: treat the LSAT as a project with a deadline, not as a hurdle to clear at the last minute. Pick your date now, work backward to set milestones, and protect your study calendar like a job. The applicants who score in the 165+ band almost universally treated their prep as a serious commitment for 6+ months. Picking the right test date is step one in making that commitment real.
Most law school applicants take the LSAT 12-15 months before they intend to start law school. For a fall start, that means testing in June or August of the prior year โ early enough that your score is finalized for September application opens, with room for an October retake if needed. You can technically take the LSAT any of the 8 sittings per cycle (January, February, April, June, August, September, October, November), but the timing that produces the strongest applications is consistently June or August. See our LSAT date page for the full calendar.
Take the LSAT when you have completed 4-6 months of consistent prep AND when there is at least one more sitting available before your application deadline as a retake buffer. The best single-date answer for most fall-start applicants is the June LSAT โ long summer prep window, score releases in July, August and October available as retakes, complete score on file before applications open in September. If you cannot test in June, the August sitting is the next-best option.
LSAC administers the LSAT 8 times per cycle: January, February, April, June, August, September, October, and November. Each administration spans 2-3 test days, with both Live Online (remote-proctored at home) and in-person test center options at most sittings. Registration opens roughly 3-4 months before each sitting, with standard registration deadlines 5 weeks before test day and late registration available for an extra fee until 3 weeks out.
If you're aiming for a Fall 2026 law school start, your application cycle opens in September 2025 and closes between November 2025 (ED) and March 2026 (RD) depending on school. Ideal LSAT date: June 2025 first sit, August 2025 retake if needed. Latest practical first sit for competitive Regular Decision: October 2025. November 2025 LSAT works only if you skip ED and accept being late in the rolling admit window. January-April 2026 LSAT dates are too late for the Fall 2026 cycle unless a school explicitly accepts them.
The LSAT is offered 8 times per cycle: January, February, April, June, August, September, October, and November. Each sitting is delivered in both Live Online (home-based, remote-proctored) and in-person test-center formats at most administrations. Specific dates change slightly year to year โ bookmark our LSAT date page or LSAC's official calendar for current cycle dates.
The cleanest path is taking the LSAT in June after your junior year of undergrad. That gives you a finalized score before senior year starts, two retake options (August and October) before fall applications close, and your full senior year for personal statements, recommendations, and school visits. If you're already a senior with no prep started, take the June LSAT right after graduation and apply during a gap year โ this is the highest-median-score timeline at top law schools.
The most popular LSAT sittings are June, August, and October, which together account for roughly 60% of all administrations. June draws gap-year applicants and rising seniors; August draws those who needed a longer summer prep window; October catches first-time takers who started prep late or retakers from earlier in the cycle. January, February, and April sittings are heavier on retakers and applicants targeting the next cycle.
Yes. LSAC removed the formal 3-test-per-year cap; you can retake the LSAT up to 7 times in your lifetime (with rare exception waivers possible). Roughly 30% of test takers retake at least once, and second-time scores average 2.8 points higher. The minimum gap between sittings is about 45 days, but 8-12 weeks of focused review on weak areas produces the largest score gains. Our lsat courses page lists structured retake-prep options.
The best time to take the LSAT is whichever sitting falls 3-6 months after you started serious, structured prep AND that leaves at least one more sitting open before your application deadline as a retake option. For most fall-start applicants with no prior LSAT experience, that's the June sitting. For applicants who started prep later or whose summer is consumed by work, August or September. For retakers, schedule the next sitting 8-12 weeks after your first attempt with a targeted weak-area plan in between.
Plan 6-9 months in advance for first-time takers with no prior exposure to the LSAT, and 12+ months in advance if you're balancing prep with full-time work or school. Register for your chosen sitting the day registration opens โ usually 3-4 months before test day โ to lock in your preferred test center and format. Budget another 3-4 weeks after the test for score release and another 1-2 weeks for CAS report processing before your file shows complete at any law school.