Scrolling past the ads for pricey tutors, she found a single, unassuming link: . No credit card form. No “14-day trial.” Just a clean, gray interface with a button that read: Start a Free Practice Exam .
Then she remembered a thread from a Reddit forum she’d bookmarked months ago: “Best free LSAT resources that actually don’t suck.” free lsat practice exam
She framed the free practice exam’s score report—the first one, the 164—and hung it above her desk. Not because it was perfect. But because it was proof that sometimes, the best things in life aren’t just free. They’re the starting line you didn’t know you needed. Scrolling past the ads for pricey tutors, she
The Reading Comprehension passage was a dense, sleep-inducing wall of text about 18th-century maritime law. Two minutes in, she wanted to quit. But the free platform offered another tool: a timer that didn’t just count down—it showed her exactly how much time top scorers spent on each paragraph. She mimicked their rhythm. Twenty seconds to skim the first paragraph, highlight the conclusion, move on. Then she remembered a thread from a Reddit
Over the next eight weeks, that free exam became her anchor. She took it seven more times, each time on a different free platform (Khan Academy’s official collaboration with LSAC, 7Sage’s free logic game videos, the LawHub’s free PTs). She never bought a course. She never hired a tutor. She just exploited every free resource like a pirate hunting treasure.
“This is either a miracle or a virus,” she muttered, clicking it.
By question 18, something clicked. She wasn’t just guessing. She was seeing the traps. The wrong answers felt greasy, manipulative. The right ones felt clean, inevitable.