LSAT Score Converter
Convert between raw score, wrong answers, scaled score, and percentile.
Convert between raw score, wrong answers, scaled score, and percentile.
| Wrong Answers | Raw Score | Scaled Score | Percentile |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0 | 77 | 180 | 99.9 |
| 1 | 76 | 180 | 99.9 |
| 2 | 75 | 179 | 99.8 |
| 3 | 74 | 178 | 99.6 |
| 4 | 73 | 176 | 99.0 |
| 5 | 72 | 175 | 98.0 |
| 6 | 71 | 173 | 96.0 |
| 7 | 70 | 172 | 95.0 |
| 8 | 69 | 170 | 93.0 |
| 9 | 68 | 169 | 91.0 |
| 10 | 67 | 168 | 89.0 |
| 11 | 66 | 167 | 87.0 |
| 12 | 65 | 166 | 85.0 |
| 13 | 64 | 165 | 82.0 |
| 14 | 63 | 164 | 79.0 |
| 15 | 62 | 163 | 76.0 |
| 16 | 61 | 162 | 72.0 |
| 17 | 60 | 161 | 68.0 |
| 18 | 59 | 160 | 65.0 |
| 19 | 58 | 159 | 61.0 |
| 20 | 57 | 158 | 58.0 |
| 21 | 56 | 157 | 55.0 |
| 22 | 55 | 156 | 52.5 |
Understanding your LSAT score can be confusing. Our LSAT Score Converter helps you translate your raw score (correct answers) into a scaled score (120–180) and estimate your percentile ranking—so you know exactly where you stand.
Whether you’re preparing for the LSAT or analyzing a practice test, this tool gives you a clear breakdown of your performance.
The LSAT scoring system follows a standardized process:
Your raw score is simply the number of questions you answered correctly.
Your raw score is converted into a scaled score between 120 and 180 using a statistical method called equating.
This ensures fairness across different test versions—even if one test is slightly harder than another.
Your percentile shows how you performed compared to other test takers.
The LSAT is scored on a scale from 120 to 180, with most scores clustering around the average range.
|
Score Range |
Meaning |
|
170–180 |
Top law schools (highly competitive) |
|
160–169 |
Strong candidate |
|
150–159 |
Average range |
|
140–149 |
Below average |
|
120–139 |
Needs improvement |
Top law schools often expect scores above 165–170+.
While exact conversions vary slightly by test, here’s a typical approximation:
|
Raw Score |
Scaled Score |
|
~75/78 |
180 |
|
~67 |
170 |
|
~61 |
165 |
|
~54 |
160 |
|
~40 |
150 |
These variations exist because LSAC adjusts scores based on test difficulty to maintain fairness.
This converter provides an estimate, not an official LSAT score.
Actual results may vary because:
However, the differences are usually small and consistent.
It’s the number of questions you answered correctly on the test.
LSAC converts raw scores to a 120–180 scale using a statistical process to adjust for test difficulty.
No, only LSAC provides official scores. This tool gives a close estimate.