LSAT & Law School Calculators

Free tools for every stage of the application cycle. No sign-up required.

Updated for 2025-26 cycle

LSAT Score & Percentile Calculator

Convert raw score (0-76) to scaled score (120-180) and LSAC percentile rank.

LSAC 2022-2025 testing data

Law School Admissions Probability

Acceptance odds across the T14 plus one deep-dive at any of 195 ABA-accredited law schools.

ABA 509 disclosures

LSAT Retake Calculator

Should you retake? Project the odds-gain at the T25 before vs. after a higher target score.

ABA 509 + LSAC retaker data

Frequently asked questions

What data do these calculators use?
The score and percentile calculator uses LSAC's official 2022-2025 testing-year scoring data published in their Score Distribution and Status reports. The admissions and retake calculators use the ABA Annual Questionnaire (Fall 2025 JD applicant and enrollee data, published 2025-12-15) — the disclosures every accredited law school is required to file. Source: abarequireddisclosures.org.
Which calculator should I use?
If you're studying and want to translate your raw practice-test score, use the score and percentile calculator. If you have an LSAT and GPA and want to know your odds at a specific school, use the admissions probability calculator. If you have a current LSAT and are debating whether to study for another sitting, use the retake calculator.
How accurate are the probability estimates?
The model uses each school's reported LSAT and GPA percentile spread (25th, 50th, 75th) to fit a logistic curve, calibrated so the median admit gets roughly a 50% estimate. Treat the output as a competitiveness benchmark, not a verdict. Real admissions decisions weight personal statements, work experience, demographics, and yield modeling that no public dataset captures. The estimate is most reliable for splitter and reverse-splitter profiles where LSAT and GPA dominate the decision.
Are these calculators free?
Yes. Every calculator above is fully usable without signup or payment. Some have a Pro tier that unlocks extras (the admissions calculator shows all 195 schools at once instead of T14 plus one deep-dive; the retake calculator projects against your specific school list instead of the T25 average), but the free version of each is complete and useful on its own.