To a lot of students, that jump of three scaled points (from a 151 to a 154) doesn’t sound very impressive, but when you consider that around 130,000 people take the LSAT each year, that increase means that you’ve passed around 13,000 competitors, applicants potentially vying for the same school(s) you’re trying to get into. If you add just five correct answers, you’ll move to a 154 and be in the 60 th percentile. On a typical test, approximately 57 right answers will produce a score of 151 and land you squarely in the 50 th percentile, better than half of all test takers. Since there is no wrong answer penalty on the LSAT, you score is determined solely by the number of questions you answer correctly. A percentile score, comparing test-takers across various testing cohorts. ![]()
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