Frequently Asked
Questions we get most often.
The 2026 LSAT format, scoring, prep timelines, and how LSAT Practice Test works.
What is on the 2026 LSAT?
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The 2026 LSAT consists of two scored Logical Reasoning sections, one scored Reading Comprehension section, one unscored variable section used to pretest future questions, and a separate, unscored Argumentative Writing section taken at home. The Analytical Reasoning ('Logic Games') section was retired in August 2024.
How long is the LSAT?
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The scored portion is about two hours and twenty minutes: four 35-minute sections with a 10-minute intermission after section two. LSAT Writing is a separate 50-minute session (15 minutes of pre-writing plus 35 minutes of drafting) that you complete on your own schedule.
How is the LSAT scored?
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Your raw score — the number of questions you got right — is converted to a scaled score between 120 and 180. The median LSAT score is around 152, and most top-14 law schools have median admitted scores in the 170s.
How long should I study for the LSAT?
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Most serious test-takers spend three to six months preparing, at 10–20 hours per week. Your diagnostic score, target score, and available time should shape the exact timeline.
Is the LSAT harder than it used to be?
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The removal of Logic Games has changed the difficulty distribution more than the overall difficulty. The exam now rewards students who are strong in reading and argument analysis and offers less relief to students who were relying on Logic Games as a scoring anchor.
Is LSAT Practice Test really 100% free?
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Yes. Every practice test, drill, full-length simulation, and explanation on lsatpracticetest.us is completely free. There is no premium tier, no signup, no credit card, and no account required.
Do I need to create an account?
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No account is required. Click any practice section and start immediately. If you want to save progress locally in your browser you can, but nothing is stored on our servers.
Does LSAT Practice Test use official LSAT questions?
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Our practice questions are original, written by 99th-percentile LSAT scorers, and closely modeled on the style and difficulty of officially disclosed PrepTests. For official questions, we recommend supplementing with LSAC's LawHub.