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.