Tutoring Marketplace

New post

This is a place for students to connect with LSAT tutors who are not affiliated with 7Sage. Do your own research before hiring! For vetted 7Sage tutors, check out our official tutoring page .

See all independent tutors

35 posts in the last 30 days

User Avatar

Edited Wednesday, Dec 10, 2025

NavyaVargese

Independent Tutor

Tutoring - 178 Scorer ($50/hour)

Edit: I'm not currently taking on any more students. I will make an updated post when I have additional availability.

Hi everyone,

I'm offering affordable LSAT tutoring at $50/hour. I scored a 178 on the LSAT and have been working with a few students in all different score ranges. The LSAT is a test that largely depends on identifying patterns of reasoning and learning formal logic skills. I think this test is super learnable, but it takes a lot of focus to be able to identify the gaps in your reasoning that might be preventing you from improving your score. Through tutoring sessions, I would be happy to work with you to identify these reasoning gaps and help you reach your goal score.

I'm currently looking to take on 3 or 4 more students, so let me know if you're interested. I also offer discounted rates for students who might be interested in scheduling several hours of tutoring at a time.

13

Hi! I am passionate about accessibility, and I have recognized through substitute teaching and being in the LSAT space how many people are excluded because they don't have the resources to meet their goals. I try to close that gap. If you are interested, just open a chat with me here :) My rates are below.

$60/hr for sessions

If you have demonstrated financial need, we can be a bit more flexible with the price :)

16

Hey all- excited about this new feature as I used 7SAGE to teach myself the LSAT and go from a low 150s diagnostic to a 180 on test day after a few months of studying.

I’ve been tutoring the LSAT for 4+ years, and now that October scores are out I have a few open slots, so I’m looking to take on a few motivated students for the next few months who want to achieve success on the LSAT. I received a 180 5 years ago and have been tutoring for about 4 years. This test opened a lot of doors for me, and I am very passionate about helping my students achieve their goals.

Discounted Rates for New Students:

• ⁠Free 30-minute strategy session

• ⁠$75/hr single session

• ⁠5 hours - $350

• ⁠10 hours - $600

• ⁠15+ - Flexible rates

My focus is on building strong approaches and eliminating bad habits by reviewing PTs together, breaking down problem sets, and giving feedback/tips throughout the week so progress continues between sessions.

Recently, I passed the bar exam and am taking some time off before work, so I have a lot of availability for tutoring and recent experience and tips related to intense studying. Feel free to reach out for tutoring or advice.

If you’re aiming for more consistency and higher scores, or just want some tips feel free to reach out, I’d be happy to help!

Email- 180lsatteacher@gmail.com

SCORE BELOW

13

My accolades are above, but here's a few more: students of mine have gone on to break into the 170's, and have been accepted to Colombia, The University of Chicago, Stanford, and Harvard.

I was where you are now: I had a test to crush and a gulf between my skills and achieving that T-14 goal score. Well, I did what any person would do who didn't know what they were doing; I went searching for advice from people who had already achieved success. I read for hours and hours, the accounts of people who had received perfect and near perfect scores. Their advice had a very few common threads:

-Find a major prep company and completely work through all of their strategy lessons and drills

-Take many sections and tests both in untimed and timed formats

-Blind review all timed tests (taking them again entirely without a timer)

-Carefully dissect all incorrectly answered questions

At the time, the LSAT was still on paper and so explanations for LSAT questions were scarce. This was to my benefit and it can be to yours as well. That means relying on the explanations of 7Sage should only be done after you've exhausted considerable effort trying to dissect the questions yourself, given the correct answer. If 7Sage's explanation doesn't make sense or you are curious to hear a question explained in a different way, well that's what a tutor is for! I'll add just one bit advice to that which I found in my research: learn and understand any vocab word related to argumentation that the LSAT uses, which you are unfamiliar with.

If you'd like a tutor to help you through the rough patches and plateaus, I'm eager to join you where you're at on your LSAT journey. I use an "I do, we do, you do" approach to new materials. I'll model the appropriate techniques, whether that means stem analysis, argument analysis, passage annotation, answer prediction, answer choice selection, or trap answer analysis. From there I'll check to see if you've got the basics and ask you to take the next step at various points. Then it will be your job to walk us through an example. Finally, I'll only observe as you begin a new example and work through it beginning to end, giving my analysis or commentary at the end.

Sessions are typically two hours, once or twice a week depending on availability and the student's timeline. We'll often spend the first third/half of the session reviewing any questions that have been flagged for review by you. From there we'll jump into new materials.

My hourly rate changes based on whether you buy a package of hours or seek to pay session by session. It is as follows:

20 hour package - $70/hr

10 hour package - $80/hr

Session by session - $90hr

For moderator use only: Apologies for the repost, I think the initial one was in the wrong room. 1 per week, I know.

0

Most of the time, a stuck score isn't a work-ethic problem. It's one or two specific things you can't see yet, and my whole job is finding them.

About me: I went through most of college not knowing I had ADHD, so I spent years thinking I just wasn't trying hard enough when really I just learned differently than how my schools taught. That experience is the core of how I coach now: no one-size-fits-all prep, everything built around how you specifically think through problems.

I went from a 151 to a 177, and looking back, learning the LSAT was fun. Learning how to learn the LSAT was incredibly difficult. The test itself rewards you the moment you find the right approach, the hard part is the months of trial and error figuring out what your specific right approach even is. That process, plus three years and 1,000+ hours of coaching since, taught me how to shortcut that part for other people so they get to the fun part faster.

What I do:

  • Review your 7Sage analytics before every session so I already know where your biggest point gains are

  • Build custom drill sets for your specific weaknesses, with difficulty levels, set sizes, and clear benchmarks

  • Send a detailed study plan after every session covering everything you need for the week

  • Teach you how to diagnose your own mistakes so the hours you study without me are actually effective

  • Work through problems with you live to catch the mental habits costing you points

A couple of recent examples of that in practice:

One student was putting in 4-6 hours a day and had been getting 2-4 misses on her LR sections, with virtually no improvement over the last month and a half. In our diagnostic session I noticed she was excellent at catching the precise stuff: term shifts, quantifier mismatches, the kind of error that's wrong right there on the page. But she kept missing a specific category of Weaken and Phenomenon questions, where the argument simply hadn't ruled out an alternative explanation. We isolated that one issue and had her drill into it almost exclusively. Her LR went from a stagnant 2-4 misses to just 1-2. That kind of jump from one specific fix is what tends to happen once we find the real bottleneck.

Another student had no trouble reading a passage and summarizing it well, but kept missing questions that depended on how the paragraphs related to each other, not just what each one said on its own. We shifted his focus from summarizing content to tracking the relationship between parts, how one paragraph sets up, complicates, or answers another. Over three weeks his RC went from a -7 to a -3.

Good fit for students who:

  • Feel stuck despite putting in serious hours

  • Understand explanations after the fact but keep making similar mistakes

  • Want real structure in their study plan, not just "do more practice tests"

  • Want help with how you study, not just what, things like session pacing, timing, and building a routine that actually holds up

If that sounds like the kind of help you're after, here's how it works:

  • Start with a free 20-30 minute consultation. I've got room for about 2-3 more students right now, so DM or text me and we'll find a time. So I can learn where you're at and what you're aiming for before we meet.

  • Your first real session is a flat $100, fully refundable. I want you to see exactly how I work before you commit. If it's not the right fit, you get the full amount back, no questions asked.

  • After that, it's $150/hour. Sessions run about 90 minutes, so $225 each session.

  • No packages, no commitments. We go week by week, and you stop whenever you want.

0

Hi! I am looking for a tutor!

A bit of background: I have been studying for the LSAT since 2022, while I was still in undergrad. From 2022-2025, I was studying for the LSAT, while finishing my undergrad degree, internships, and working a full-time job. As you can tell, I was juggling a lot at once. From my studying, I was able to score at one point a 160, but never had that or a resembles of that score on an official LSAT test. I have taken the LSAT 3 times already and now taking a gap year.

I am familiar with the LSAT concepts, have had previous tutoring experience, but looking to strengthening the concepts while not paying an arm and a leg for the price of tutoring.

What I believe the type of tutoring that will help me reach my desired LSAT goal is a resembles of a classroom instruction, where we can go over a concept that I am struggling with, break it down, and I can be assigned weekly homework to strengthen said concept. From previous tutoring experience, I do not excel with only doing randomized LR/RC questions, get some right, get some wrong but with no explanation. I am looking for in-depth explanations and corrections.

If this is the type of structure you offer, I would love to connect!

0

175 scorer, Cornell grad magna cum laude. I'm also an LSAT instructor/tutor with 10 years of private tutoring experience and five years of experience at a major test prep company, where I tutored one-on-one as well as taught in front of a classroom.

I have helped countless LSAT students achieve their law school goals. The LSAT can feel like an insurmountable challenge and is viewed as the predictive indicator of law school success. LSAT requires a way of thinking that might feel unfamiliar to most. It's not a test of intelligence - it is a test of pattern recognition and understanding of the structure of arguments. I help you study strategically so you develop the skills you will need on test day, such as reading critically, inductive and deductive reasoning, and organizing evidence. I lay the foundation for the skills you will need to succeed in law school! I identify the techniques that will be most useful to you on test day and shore up against weaknesses so you can attack the test with confidence.

I also help craft graduate application essays, supplemental essays, law school application personal statements, and academic papers. I help with ideation, conceptualization, style, grammar, vocabulary, and structure. I guide, support, and help develop craft, de-stressing an often-fraught process.

Feel free to reach out! Happy to chat about where you are on your law school journey.

-1

Hi, I'm Nick! I work primarily with students who feel stuck despite doing a lot of practice and need a clearer system for understanding why they’re missing questions.

I went from 158 --> 178 in 4 months by learning how to diagnose my mistakes and change how I approached the test. I now work with students using that same approach, focusing on underlying reasoning issues that lead to fast, durable score improvements. I’m a good fit for students who want structured feedback and are willing to think carefully about their mistakes—not just do more questions.

You can find more about my tutoring philosophy and availability on my website. Happy to answer any questions!

0

Confirm action

Are you sure?