Free LSAT Score Calculator
LSAT Score Calculator — raw to scaled, 120–180.
Use this LSAT score calculator to convert your raw practice-test score into the 120–180 scaled score, see your percentile, and know exactly how many questions you can miss to hit your target.
| Scaled | Approx. Raw | Missable | Percentile |
|---|---|---|---|
| 180 | ~76 / 76 | 0 | 99.9th |
| 175 | ~72 / 76 | 4 | 99th |
| 170 | ~66 / 76 | 10 | 97th |
| 165 | ~58 / 76 | 18 | 89th |
| 160 | ~51 / 76 | 25 | 78th |
| 155 | ~43 / 76 | 33 | 62nd |
| 150 | ~36 / 76 | 40 | 42nd |
How the LSAT score calculator works
The LSAT is scored on a scaled range of 120 to 180. Your raw score is the total number of questions you answered correctly across the two Logical Reasoning sections and one Reading Comprehension section (typically 76 scored questions total). LSAC converts that raw score to a scaled score using a curve specific to each administration. This calculator estimates that conversion using recent released tests.
Why the curve varies
Each LSAT administration is curved slightly differently so scaled scores stay comparable across test dates. Historically, curves for released tests have varied by ±2 raw questions at the 170 mark. Treat this calculator as a solid estimate, not a promise.
How to use this to plan your prep
Set section-by-section miss targets. If your goal is 170 and you can miss about 10 questions, budget four misses per LR section and two on RC — provided you attempt every question. Track your progress after every timed LSAT simulation, then decide whether it's time to sharpen a specific LR question type or work through another RC passage set. Once you know the score you're aiming at, the law-school score-target guide maps that number to actual admissions ranges.