Master the LSAT &
Get Into Law School
Free practice tests, logic games, logical reasoning, reading comprehension, and writing samples — everything you need to maximize your LSAT score and earn your spot in a top U.S. law school.
What Is the LSAT Exam?
The Law School Admission Test (LSAT) is the gateway to law school in the United States and Canada. Administered by LSAC, it is required for admission to all ABA-accredited law schools and is one of the most important factors in admissions decisions at schools like Harvard, Yale, Stanford, and Columbia.
Unlike subject-based exams, the LSAT tests pure reasoning skills — how you think, analyze arguments, and interpret complex information. It is scored on a scale of 120–180, with the national average around 152.
National avg: ~152
Full-Length LSAT Practice Test
The best way to start — simulate real exam conditions before diving into section-specific practice
Logical Reasoning Practice Questions
The largest section — strengthen argument analysis and inference skills
Analytical Reasoning — Logic Games Practice
The most learnable section — consistent practice leads to dramatic score improvements
Reading Comprehension Practice
Complex passages from law, science, humanities — build deep analytical reading skills
LSAT Writing Sample Practice
30 prompts, model essays, and a complete guide — sent to every law school you apply to
LSAT Score Ranges & Law School Targets
Know what score you need for your target school
| Score Range | Percentile | Target Schools | Competitiveness |
|---|---|---|---|
| 174–180 | 99th+ | Yale, Harvard, Stanford, Columbia | |
| 170–173 | 97–99th | Chicago, NYU, Penn, Michigan | |
| 165–169 | 93–97th | Duke, Georgetown, UCLA, Texas | |
| 160–164 | 80–93rd | Emory, BC, Indiana, George Mason | |
| 155–159 | 63–80th | Many regional & T2 law schools | |
| 120–154 | Below 63rd | Local & regional law schools |
How to Maximize Your LSAT Score
A proven, section-by-section strategy used by high-scoring LSAT candidates
Take a Diagnostic First
Start with the full-length practice test to establish your baseline score and identify your weakest sections.
Master Logic Games First
Analytical Reasoning is the most improvable section. Systematic diagramming practice can add 5–10 points quickly.
Learn LR Question Types
There are 14+ Logical Reasoning question types. Learn each type’s strategy before practicing sets.
Read Actively Daily
Reading Comprehension improves with daily reading of dense legal, scientific, and philosophical texts.
Review Every Wrong Answer
Untimed review of wrong answers teaches more than timed practice. Understand why each wrong answer is wrong.
Practice the Writing Sample
Don’t neglect the Writing Sample. Law schools read it. Practice the structure: position, reason 1, reason 2, conclusion.
Free LSAT Practice Questions — Logical Reasoning, Logic Games, Reading Comprehension & Writing | TayariMCQs
TayariMCQs provides one of the most comprehensive free LSAT preparation resources available online. Whether you are aiming for a top-14 law school or a regional program, our LSAT practice materials cover every section of the exam: Logical Reasoning, Analytical Reasoning (Logic Games), Reading Comprehension, and the Writing Sample.
Our LSAT resources include a full-length practice test, section-specific question sets, 20 complete logic games with step-by-step solutions, 100+ reading comprehension questions, and 30 writing sample prompts with model essays. Each resource includes detailed explanations to help you understand the reasoning process — not just memorize answers.
The LSAT is designed to test pure reasoning ability, and the best way to improve is through consistent, deliberate practice with quality materials and thorough review. Bookmark this page as your central LSAT preparation hub and return regularly as we continue adding new content.
LSAT — Frequently Asked Questions
Start Your LSAT Journey Today
Free practice questions, logic games, and writing prompts — no signup needed. Build the reasoning skills to earn your seat in law school.
Educational content only. Not affiliated with or endorsed by LSAC or the Law School Admission Council.
LSAT® is a registered trademark of the Law School Admission Council, Inc.