Law School Admissions Calculator


LSAT & GPA Calculator for Law School Admission Chances

Estimate your law school admissions chances using LSAT, GPA, and ABA data calibrated by a former admissions director.

Want feedback on how to improve your admissions chances? Jump to the personalized feedback form below.

Rank School Category Your Chances LSAT GPA Acceptance Rate

How to Use This Calculator

Enter your LSAT score and GPA above, then click Calculate to estimate your chances.

Results include admit, waitlist, and deny probabilities based on real admissions data.

After generating results, use the submit form below for personalized feedback.

Get Personalized Feedback

Want my personal feedback on how to strengthen your application? Calculate, then enter your email and notes, and I’ll review your results and get back to you.

Law School Admissions Calculator for LSAT, GPA, and School List Planning

The PreLawPath law school admissions calculator helps applicants estimate admissions odds by comparing LSAT and GPA numbers with school medians, acceptance rates, and ABA 509 admissions data. It is designed to help you build a realistic school list with safety, target, reach, and high-reach options.

Unlike a simple LSAT/GPA predictor, this tool separates estimated admit, waitlist, and deny chances so you can better understand where your application may be competitive and where your numbers may need stronger written materials, timing, or strategy.

LSAT and GPA Predictor

Compare your numbers to each school’s reported LSAT and GPA medians to see how your profile fits the admitted-student range.

ABA 509 Medians

Admissions estimates are grounded in publicly reported law school data, including medians and acceptance-rate information.

Waitlist Chances

Results include estimated waitlist odds, not just admit or deny estimates, because many applicants fall into a competitive middle range.

How to Use These Admissions Odds

Additional Law School Admissions Resources

Frequently Asked Questions

How accurate are law school admissions calculators?

Admissions calculators provide estimates, not guarantees. Law schools also consider essays, resumes, recommendations, application timing, character and fitness issues, and institutional priorities.

Does applying later hurt admissions chances?

At many law schools, applying later in the cycle can reduce admissions odds because seats and scholarship funds become more limited.

What matters more: LSAT or GPA?

Both matter, but at many law schools the LSAT carries slightly more weight because it directly impacts reported median statistics and rankings.

Can a strong personal statement improve my chances?

Yes. Especially near a school’s medians, strong written materials and a clear application strategy can meaningfully improve outcomes.

Want Personalized Admissions Feedback?

Calculator estimates only tell part of the story. Personal statements, resumes, application timing, school selection strategy, and character and fitness issues can all affect outcomes.

If you want personalized guidance from a former law school admissions director, submit your results above or explore PreLawPath admissions consulting services.

Last updated: May 2026

This calculator uses publicly reported admissions medians and acceptance rates to estimate broad admissions likelihood. It does not account for essays, resume quality, recommendations, application timing, character and fitness issues, residency, scholarships, or institutional priorities.