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Prepare for two scored Logical Reasoning sections, Reading Comprehension, one unscored variable section, LSAT Argumentative Writing, official LawHub practice, Prometric scheduling, ID checks, accommodations, and score planning.
The modern LSAT no longer includes Logic Games. Prep should focus on Logical Reasoning, Reading Comprehension, endurance across four sections, and the separate Argumentative Writing workflow.
The current LSAT is a digital admissions test with three scored multiple-choice sections, one unscored variable section, and a separate unscored writing sample.
LSAC says the LSAT has four 35-minute multiple-choice sections: three scored sections and one unscored variable section.
The scored LSAT includes two Logical Reasoning sections and one Reading Comprehension section.
LSAT Argumentative Writing is separate, unscored for the 2025-2026 testing cycle, and available as early as eight days before the multiple-choice test.
LSAC says that starting with the August 2026 LSAT it is moving toward in-center testing for almost all candidates, with limited exceptions.
Current LSAT prep should not center on the old Analytical Reasoning section. Candidates should spend most timed practice on Logical Reasoning and Reading Comprehension.
LSAC recommends free Official LSAT PrepTests in LawHub to learn the content and interface. Candidates should use official sections to build timing, endurance, review habits, and score estimates.
As of May 14, 2026, LSAC still describes remote and test-center options for current administrations, but it says August 2026 starts a move toward in-center testing for almost all candidates.
Use this LSAT exam help page for exam-specific context, then compare the broader online exam help services page or contact HiraEdu if you need a direct handoff. This page stays focused on LSAT while the linked service pages cover broader exam support options.
The LSAT is the Law School Admission Council's law school admission test, and current prep should reflect the post-August 2024 format rather than the older Logic Games structure. LSAC says the multiple-choice LSAT has four 35-minute sections: three scored sections and one unscored variable section; the scored sections include two Logical Reasoning sections and one Reading Comprehension section, while the unscored section can be Logical Reasoning or Reading Comprehension. LSAT Argumentative Writing is a separate unscored writing sample that LSAC says is available in LSAC accounts as early as eight days before the multiple-choice test; for the 2025-2026 testing cycle, LSAC says it remains unscored and is administered online on demand with secure proctoring software. LSAC currently has candidates schedule testing times through Prometric, and LSAC says that starting with the August 2026 LSAT it will move toward in-center testing for almost all U.S. and international candidates, with limited exceptions for certain medical accommodations or extreme hardship getting to a testing center. HiraEdu supports legitimate LSAT preparation with current-format diagnostics, Logical Reasoning argument drills, Reading Comprehension passage review, unscored-section endurance planning, LawHub official practice tests, Argumentative Writing practice, test-date planning, Prometric scheduling reminders, ID and LawHub readiness checks, accommodations planning, score-preview and score-release review, and application-timeline alignment.
No. Starting with the August 2024 LSAT, the multiple-choice test consists of two scored Logical Reasoning sections, one scored Reading Comprehension section, and one unscored Logical Reasoning or Reading Comprehension section.
LSAC says the multiple-choice LSAT has four 35-minute sections: three scored sections and one unscored variable section.
LSAC says LSAT Argumentative Writing is available in LSAC accounts as early as eight days before the multiple-choice test.
For the 2025-2026 testing cycle, LSAC says LSAT Argumentative Writing remains unscored, but an approved writing sample is still important for score release and law school applications.
LSAC says that starting with the August 2026 LSAT, it is moving toward in-center testing for almost all U.S. and international candidates, with limited exceptions for medical accommodations or extreme hardship.
Use LSAC dates, emails, LawHub, and Prometric scheduling windows to verify registration, test date, modality, score release, ID rules, accommodations, and application deadlines.
Take a current-format LawHub practice test, then separate results by Logical Reasoning question family, Reading Comprehension passage type, timing, endurance, and review accuracy.
Drill arguments, flaws, assumptions, strengthen and weaken questions, inference, principle questions, dense passages, comparative reading, timing decisions, and written-argument planning.
Check LawHub access, Prometric appointment, LSAT entry visibility 24 hours before the test, legal name, physical ID, accommodations, test-center or remote rules, and Argumentative Writing completion.
Use the guide to self-serve, or talk to a coordinator if you need help mapping timelines, official requirements, or troubleshooting day-of logistics.
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