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LSAT Format & Question Types

The LSAT is the main US law-school admissions test. As of August 2024 it no longer includes Logic Games (Analytical Reasoning); the scored content is Logical Reasoning and Reading Comprehension.

Heads up: Logic Games (Analytical Reasoning) were removed in 2024 — the first test without them was August 2024. Older prep that drills Logic Games is outdated.

Format

From August 2024: four 35-minute sections — two scored Logical Reasoning, one scored Reading Comprehension, and one unscored.

Sections

Logical Reasoning

A short passage with one question and five choices, about 24–26 per section. Prompts target argument parts, flaws, assumptions, conclusions, analogies and principles.

Reading Comprehension

Dense passages followed by multiple-choice questions on main ideas, inferences and structure.

Signature question types

  • Logical Reasoning (assumptions, flaws, principles)
  • Reading Comprehension

New to these formats? See the question-type glossary for how each one works.

Is it adaptive?

The LSAT is fixed and linear — it does not adapt.

Practice LSAT with AI Solve Quiz

AI Solve Quiz explains the structure of Logical Reasoning arguments — the assumption, the flaw, the conclusion — so practice questions build transferable reasoning.

For practice and learning only — never during a live, proctored, or graded sitting. See our Academic Integrity Policy.

Frequently asked questions

Does the LSAT still have Logic Games?
No. Logic Games were retired in 2024 following a 2019 accessibility settlement. The scored sections are now Logical Reasoning and Reading Comprehension.

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