Subscription pricing
I am two and a half weeks into the core curriculum through 7sage. I decided to take a diagnostic test to see where I am at and got around a 151. I plan to take the June LSAT, which is roughly 6 months away from the time of me writing this. I want to get about a 165 on the LSAT. Is this at all possible? I don't know if it is feasible for your score to jump that high. Any help or guidance would be greatly appreciated.
1
8 comments
So possible... Don't ever listen to people who say a diagnostic is a measure of your potential. I've learned that has never been true except for the copers who didn't work hard enough to improve themselves and remained in a similar range as a diagnostic. As long as you put in the work you will be successful. I wish I got rid of that thought when I was first starting out in my studying journey - would've saved a lot of stress.
this is very possible!!!!! i started studying in june 2025 and since then, have gone from a 157 (original diagnostic) to a 167 on my most recent diagnostic and a 163 on my most recent LSAT. i am taking the LSAT again in january and hoping to keep seeing progress! but i work full time and thus only study once a week (4-5 hours on saturdays) and have seen that much growth, so im sure that you will see even more if you have even more time to study <3 and don't forget to take breaks - that has been really helpful for me when i get to points where i just can't keep going <3 taking a week or two off (or even a little more) can be beneficial and it isn't the end of the world to get to a point where you need a rest! good luck, you have plenty of time and you are doing great!
I originally tested at 155 diagnostic (Although that was only three sections, so its very likely my diagnostic was 150-153). Five months later, I am testing at a 160 level! You can absolutely make it there, 7sage's foundational curriculum is great IMO. The beginning can be rough, don't focus too much on analytics in the beginning, it might get you down. You got this!
Hi Thomas, this is absolutely in the realm of possibility. I was around a 153 for my diagnostic test, and have been studying since August, and now I'm at a 168-173 Unit Test score range. I would say to just stay consistent and practice drilling as much as you can, while finding your areas of weakness, going back to the curriculum for those question types / concepts, and then heading back to drilling. Once you hit a flow state and know the right answers (and not just the one that sounds the best), start testing sections and then nail down one practice test per week.
I also utilized untimed drills (5-10) of level 4 to level 5 questions and really just analyze them, don't look at the time, don't worry about your score, just become acquainted with the questions, practice highlighting the main conclusion and premises, review the answer choices and see how they relate to the stimulus, etc.
I'm not sure what kind of 7sage subscription you have, but if you have access to live classes I HIGHLY recommend attending those and participating in them as much as you possibly can.
Also, a lot of the Analytics on some of the questions can sometimes be disheartening if you're already feeling a bit frustrated or burnt out, but take them more as a guiding North Star than a slap in the face. If/when you join the live classes you'll see a lot of people from all stages of their LSAT learning.