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The Best LSAT Prep Books

When thinking about taking the LSAT, you have to start somewhere.
Apr 2, 2023

Table of Contents

  1. Summary
  2. LSAC Prep Books
  3. "The Established" Players
  4. "The books and only the books"
  5. The Open Seas and the LSAT
  6. Related Articles

The Best LSAT Prep Books

Before you go any further, consider getting a 30-day free trial for Scribd. I don’t love pushing some rando product, but you can literally sign up (with a payment card, yuck) and then cancel 10 seconds later and still get access for 30 days. Scribd has a lot of prep books and a ton of downloadable tests that (if you cancel your free trial before it ends) you can get for free.

The Law School Admission Test, better known as the LSAT, is the main standardized test that law school admissions departments use to decide if you get into their JD program.

Competition for top law schools in the U.S. is intense. And for better or worse the LSAT matters a ton for your chances of getting into your dream law school. And because it matters, there is a whole industry that exists to help you do as well as possible on the test. At LSD, we think the test is learnable. Hard, but learnable. Because the LSAT is learnable, you should consider using the available resources to perform as well as you possibly can.

However, there are a lot of resources (books, classes, tutors) out there and it is hard to cut through all the noise. While you should consider books, classes, asynchronous programs, and tutors, books are the cheapest option so that’s usually where law school applicants start.

This article is about the ‘best’ LSAT prep books, but really the purpose is to highlight different categories of LSAT prep books in order to provide a little insight into the industry.

Category 1 of the Best LSAT Prep Books: Law School Admission Council (LSAC) books.

LSAC is the organization that creates and administers the LSAT. It stands to reason that their prep books are a good place to start. 

LSAC (a non-profit that seems to charge for a lot of things) provides (sells) a few different kinds of books: 

  1. Old LSAT tests
  2. Super Prep
  3. Triple Prep

Old LSAT tests

are exactly what they sound like. LSAC charges ~$17 for 20 old (~2009 and older) tests and ~$10 per new (~2010 and newer) test. If you want to find these tests you can search on Amazon for “Law school admission council” and then look for products by “Law School Admissions Council.” You can also get there by clicking on this link here. You can also find a lot of them on Scribd.

Triple Prep

books are 3-packs of past exams with a bit of a volume discount.

Super Prep books

include tests and an actual explanation of the answers. As far as we can tell, the most recent book came out in 2015 and is therefore a bit out of date. 

LSAC has also partnered with Khan Academy to offer a free, online prep course, which includes free old LSAT questions. You can check it out at Khan Academy

LSAC book summary:

LSAC makes the LSAT. You should definitely use the old LSAT tests to prepare. However, I’ve never heard of anyone using the Super Prep books to prepare for the LSAT.

LSAC books pros: 

Old LSAT exams are the best way to simulate the LSAT exam that you will eventually take. LSAC publishes almost every past exam and it’s definitely worth doing past exams. The best thing about Khan Academy is that it’s free and has real LSAT questions. If you’ve never heard of the LSAT before reading this article, the Khan Academy course is a good way to get yourself up to speed. If you’ve already dipped your toes in the pool and are looking to squeeze every last point out of the LSAT, you’ll find that Khan Academy is a bit too shallow for advanced study.

LSAC books cons:

Again, I’ve never actually heard of someone using the explanations in LSAC’s Super Prep books. The fact that even LSAC didn’t bother to refresh the Super Prep books after 2015 should tell you enough about how much effort was put into them.

Khan Academy has a fairly limited set of practice questions of each type, and they keep repeating over and over. Additionally, the practice questions and 'experimental' sections draw from recent PTs (I saw stuff from PT 54+) which 'burns' a section and prevents you from using the entire PT for timed practice.

Category 2 of the Best LSAT Prep Books: “The Established”

When I say Established, I mean for-profit LSAT prep book companies that have been around for a while and are well respected by previous test takers and industry professionals. 

PowerScore Bible

The PowerScore LSAT Bibles are a set of comprehensive self-study guides for the LSAT. These books are designed to help you master the skills necessary to succeed on the LSAT. The Bibles cover all aspects of the LSAT, from the basics of logical reasoning to more advanced topics such as game theory and reading comprehension. With clear explanations and detailed examples, the PowerScore LSAT Bibles are an essential resource for any student preparing for the LSAT. LSD co-founder cryptanon used these books.

Princeton Review Books

The Princeton Review books provide detailed explanations of the concepts tested on the LSAT, as well as practice questions and answer explanations. The books also include a full-length practice test, so you can get a feel for what the test will be like.

Kaplan LSAT Prep Books

There are a few different LSAT prep books on the market, but the Kaplan LSAT Prep Book is one of the most popular and well-respected options. The book is designed to help you score your best on the LSAT, and it includes six full-length practice tests, detailed explanations for every question, and strategies for tackling every section of the test. The books cover all of the topics you can expect to see on the LSAT.

Established LSAT prep books pros:

Tens of thousands of people have used these books and left happy. Popularity alone isn’t a reason to trust a product, but these companies all have full teams dedicated to giving you the best LSAT prep book experience. 

Established LSAT prep books cons:

They ain’t cheap. 

Category 3 of the Best LSAT Prep Books: The ‘books and only the books’ 

There are quite a few companies (and a few random but [probably?] competent HLS grads) who write books in an attempt to have one of the best LSAT prep books. Unfortunately, we haven't been able to try out all these options, but we wanted to share the majority that we could find so that you can research them yourself if you are looking for something off the beaten path. Also, if you share your experience with any of these with us we are happy to share your words with the world. 

The Road to 180 is an LSAT prep book by TestMax, a company that provides LSAT prep courses

The LSAT Trainer by Mike Kim who used to work at Kaplan prep

Next Step Test Preparation we are pretty sure is a dead company. You can get some of the books on eBay if you want

Fox Test Prep provides a ton of books that cover each aspect of the LSAT

Next Step Test Preparation just promotes other courses 

Test Prep Books has pretty bad reviews on Amazon 

 APEX Test Prep's LSAT Prep Books has an LSAT tutor tool program too. If anyone has any experience with them, let us know.

The ‘books and only the books’ pros:

You can find some cheap ones so you might be able to prepare for the LSAT inexpensively. 

The ‘books and only the books cons: 

Since these are small companies they don’t really have accountability to customers. Every year a new cohort rolls through and it doesn't matter if these books are among the best LSAT prep books because someone who doesn’t know better will just buy them the following year. 

The Open Seas and LSAT Prep 

Many LSAT books (and old tests) are available via ebook on Scribd for pretty cheap (or free). You can also download most of the old tests by searching “LSAT” on certain websites that we at LSD would never promote. But did you know that before Wikipedia came along, people used to pay hundreds of dollars for encyclopedia sets?

Related Articles

  1. What is the LSAT?
  2. Law School Admissions Reddit
  3. Timeline for Applying to Law School
Windsor MIT '22, Harvard College Advisor

I am the half of LSD that didn't take the LSAT, or go to law school (Sorry about that). But I did go to MIT business school while surrounded by law students and lawyers, so I am somewhat qualified to talk about the intricacies of law school apps and finances.

Windsor (the dog) didn't write this but he WAS a Resident Tutor and career advisor at Harvard College with me, so deserves some credit.

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i plan to go in public interest, i wont have that kinda money lol
omg same
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i'll be lucky to afford a home lol
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omg yess
International status generally being a debuff sucks tho for sure
LegalUsername
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There are waitlist sessions for GULC? I never got one after receiving the SPWL.
LegalUsername
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Or maybe it's because I got it yesterday?
SplitOnMe
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yeah they happened a while ago
theres one for NU coming up
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Georgetown waitlists 4000 people a year, they basically have to divvy the waitlistees up across multiple sessions over time
yeah I'll be logged into the NU one so they don't ding me for missing but no shot I'll actually be able to pay attention bc I'll be working
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Imagine being the admissions staffer(s) who need to monitor Q&A for a 4,000 person zoom
USNWR needs to just bump schools back 20 places if they waitlist more than like 10% of apps
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Penn Purge, the reprise
Everyone who was on the WL at the time got that invite but you might not have gotten it if you applied later
Re: GULC WL session
i didnt get it but i believe i received the wl notif after the email went out which like, fair
17:34
It *is* somewhat tricky to plan waitlists, because there are a whole bunch of subgroups you need there. Not just the stats you need to tune and needs people fill (URM, veteran, regional balance, international, STEM), but buckets like "These are the specific STEM majors we might take if we have a bunch of STEM majors go elsewhere, and we've locked down our GPA median, and we need to shore up our LSAT median, and our aid budget is almost exhausted so we need people that would accept a waitlist A with minimal aid (not the 180s)
17:38
And how much "padding" you need in your waitlist is inversely related to how patient applicants will be for that school (HYS can cover their bases with a small waitlist because most people on the list would drop everything and commit; Georgetown needs a large waitlist because a lot of people on their list will end up with better options)
17:38
But even understanding why schools do this, the result sucks for anyone on the WL
kimchi queen if you see this im sorry but i dont have the talent to paint birds on my nails and i have shaky hands today so i went with skittle nails
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@manifestT14acceptances: Haha no need to apologize! Skittles and candy style nail art is super cute!
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Just praying for the WL gods now :(
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Oh damn penn wtf sorry to everyone that got hit
@KimchiQueen: thank you i do like how they came out i always feel bad fielding suggestions and then doing something else
KimchiQueen
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Suggestions can always be used next time! No need to feel bad :)
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