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Many ABA-accredited law schools now accept the GRE, but the LSAT remains the gold standard for law school admissions.
The LSAT is designed to assess the skills needed for success in law school—logical reasoning, reading comprehension, and argumentative reasoning. The GRE is a general graduate admissions exam not tailored specifically to law school.
The LSAT is accepted by every ABA-accredited law school in the United States and Canada. The GRE is accepted by a limited number of law schools, and many top-ranked programs still require or strongly prefer the LSAT.
The LSAT is scored on a scale from 120 to 180, with the median score typically falling around 150–152 and scores in the 170–180 range in the top 2–3% nationwide. The GRE is scored from 130 to 170 per section and from 0 to 6 for Analytical Writing. There is no single combined score.
The LSAT is a digital, linear exam — not adaptive. All test-takers receive the same set of questions in the same order. The GRE is also digital but adapts difficulty level section-by-section.
The LSAT includes no math and no calculator — it focuses entirely on logical reasoning and reading comprehension. The GRE includes a full Quantitative Reasoning section covering algebra, geometry, and data analysis, with an on-screen calculator provided.
The LSAT includes a mandatory Argumentative Writing section completed separately via remote proctoring. It is unscored but sent to every law school you apply to. The GRE includes an Analytical Writing section — one “Analyze an Issue” task — scored 0–6 and included in your official score report.
LSAT and GRE scores are both valid for five years. However, the number of times you may take the LSAT is more restrictive: only five in a five-year period, and a maximum of seven over your lifetime. GRE attempts have no limit other than five times in a rolling year.
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| LSAT Test Section | # of Questions | Timing |
|---|---|---|
| Logical Reasoning — Section 1 | 23–26 (All Scored) | 35 minutes |
| Logical Reasoning — Section 2 | 23–26 (All Scored) | 35 minutes |
| Reading Comprehension | 27 (All Scored) | 35 minutes |
| Experimental Section — LR or RC | 23–27 (Unscored) | 35 minutes |
| Argumentative Writing (Separate, Remote) | 1 Essay Prompt | 50 minutes |
| GRE Test Section | # of Questions | Timing |
|---|---|---|
| Analytical Writing | 1 essay prompt | 30 minutes |
| Verbal Reasoning |
Section 1: 12 questions Section 2: 15 questions |
Section 1: 18 minutes Section 2: 23 minutes |
| Quantitative Reasoning |
Section 1: 12 questions Section 2: 15 questions |
Section 1: 21 minutes Section 2: 26 minutes |
| SAT Test Section | # of Questions | Timing |
|---|---|---|
| Reading and Writing |
1st module: 27 questions 2nd module: 27 questions |
1st module: 32 minutes 2nd module: 32 minutes |
| Math |
1st module: 22 questions 2nd module: 22 questions |
1st module: 35 minutes 2nd module: 35 minutes |
| ACT Test Section | # of Questions | Timing |
|---|---|---|
| English | 50 (40 Scored) | 35 minutes |
| Math | 45 (41 Scored) | 50 minutes |
| Reading | 36 (27 Scored) | 40 minutes |
| ACT Test Section | # of Questions | Timing |
|---|---|---|
| Science (Optional) | 40 (34 Scored) | 40 minutes |
| Writing (Optional) | 1 Essay | 40 minutes |