Is 158 a good LSAT score?

A student scoring a 180 is in the 99.9 percentile because the student scored better than 99.9% of test-takers….Law School Enrollment.

Risk Band LSAT
Score Percentile
Minimal Risk 156-180 ≥ 67.4
Low Risk 153-155 55.6 – 63.9
Modest Risk 150-152 44.3 – 52.5

What did Barack Obama get on the LSAT?

Though not conclusive, we can predict that President Barack Obama scored somewhere between the 94th – 98th percentile on his LSAT. Converting his approximated LSAT percentile to today’s grading system would give him about a 170 LSAT score.

Is a 167 LSAT score good?

The average LSAT score for law schools at the top of the rankings ranges from 167-172. On the other hand, scores of 145-155 are generally good enough to be accepted into less prestigious law schools.

How good is a 165 on the LSAT?

We’ve already developed a general sense of LSAT score percentiles from some of the common score thresholds above (160: 80th percentile; 165: 90th percentile; 170: 97-98th percentile, and 174: 99th percentile).

Do colleges accept February LSAT scores for fall admission?

Well, yes and no. It used to be that most schools did not accept the February LSAT for fall admissions. However, applications and enrollment are so far down at most schools that they will in fact accept applications from Feb LSAT takers, even if their official policy is that they do not consider Feb LSAT scores.

What is the official score release date for the LSAT?

The official score release date is not considered to be the date when scores will be sent out; rather, it’s more of a “you’ll have your score by this day” date. With the exception of the December LSAT, scores tend to be released an average of 3 days prior to the official score release date.

Why are LSAT scores being released a day early?

Some scores were released a day early due to a manual LSAC error, situation was then corrected and scores were released on the intended date. Score release day was originally announced as July 1 st, but was bumped a day to June 30 th. Date change announcement was made on June 22 nd

What happened to the LSAT-flex?

The LSAT-Flex was a special exam offered to students effected by the coronavirus throughout 2020 and half of 2021. A technical error in LSAC’s system caused 140 test scores to go missing. Some scores were released a day early due to a manual LSAC error, situation was then corrected and scores were released on the intended date.