Convert your raw score from any official PrepTest to an LSAT score (120–180) on the new Digital LSAT, which replaced the LSAT Flex.
Your Raw Score vs. LSAT Score
Your raw score—the number of questions you answered correctly—is converted to an LSAT score (120–180) using a conversion table from LSAC.
Score conversions vary from test to test because the difficulty of each test varies. The conversion tables help standardise scores by making a 170 on an easier test, for example, represent the same skill level as a 170 on a harder test.
To get your LSAT score for the new test format, we first convert your raw score to a percentage. We then match that percentage with an LSAT score on the conversion table for that test.
The New LSAT Format
For decades, the LSAT had four graded sections:
Reading Comprehension
Logical Reasoning
Logic Games
Logical Reasoning
In 2020, the LSAT dropped one of the LR sections:
Logic Games
Reading Comprehension
Logical Reasoning
In August 2024, the LSAT added back that LR section and dropped the games: