Law Admissions exam prep

LSAT Practice Test 2026-2027 and Free Sample Questions

2026-2027 exam practice page

LSAT practice test students taking an online exam with rationales and sample questions
Law Admissions practice image for students preparing with 300-question bank with 20 sample questions before checkout.

Use this LSAT Practice Test to check pacing, wording, and review depth before you buy. Start with 20 free sample questions. Paid access unlocks the full 300-question bank with rationales, 3 analogies, article cards, and source checks.

PTV memory method
Every question review gives you rationales, 3 analogies, topic articles, and source checks.

Review why the right answer works, why traps fail, and what to study next with 3 memory analogies, article cards, and source checks.

Why the answer works Why distractors fail 3 analogies per question 3 topic article cards Source checks
Provider LSAC
Format 300 questions / 75 min
Free sample 20 questions
Exam cycle 2026-2027
Passing target 70%

Interactive sample

Try 20 free LSAT questions for 2026-2027 prep.

Use the sample first to inspect the question style, pacing, and answer review. The sample questions are separate preview items; the paid exam bank adds the same deeper pattern across the full set: rationales, 3 real-world analogies, topic articles, and source checks to help each idea stick.

Interactive Practice Test

LSAT

20 questions on this page 70% passing score 300 question bank
Practice mode Choose how you want to work through this set.

Exam mode keeps the timer running and shows review after submit. Study mode pauses the timer and lets you check each answer as you go.

Free trial mode: You are previewing 20 separate sample questions. Unlock the full bank to get 300 full-access questions, answer-level rationales, three real-world analogies in every review, and your complete score report.
Question progress Question 1 of 20
Timer
--:--

Autosaves until submit.

Done 0
Left 20
Question map Timer --:--

Question 1 Logical Reasoning

Question 1: Logical Reasoning

Consider the following argument. All the trees in the city park lose their leaves in autumn. The oak in the city park is a tree. Therefore, the oak in the city park loses its leaves in autumn. Which one of the following arguments has a logical structure most similar to the argument above?

Question 2 Logical Reasoning

Question 2: Logical Reasoning

Consider the following argument. A recent report found that towns with more public parks have lower rates of stress-related illness among residents. The report concluded that building more parks in a town will reduce stress-related illness there. Which one of the following, if true, most weakens the argument?

Question 3 Logical Reasoning

Question 3: Logical Reasoning

Consider the following argument. The new coffee shop downtown must be successful. Every time I walk past it, there is a long line of customers waiting to order. The argument is most vulnerable to criticism on which of the following grounds?

Question 4 Logical Reasoning

Question 4: Logical Reasoning

Consider the following argument. The city council argues that lowering the speed limit on Main Street will reduce accidents. However, the council has not considered that drivers frequently ignore posted speed limits unless enforcement is increased. The second sentence functions in the argument as which of the following?

Question 5 Logical Reasoning

Question 5: Logical Reasoning

Consider the following argument. If a plant receives adequate sunlight, it will grow tall. The fern in the corner did not grow tall. Therefore, the fern in the corner did not receive adequate sunlight. Which one of the following describes the reasoning in the argument?

Question 6 Logical Reasoning

Question 6: Logical Reasoning

Consider the following argument. A nutritionist claims that because a certain berry contains a high concentration of antioxidants, eating large amounts of it will significantly improve a person's overall health. Which one of the following, if true, most weakens the nutritionist's claim?

Question 7 Logical Reasoning

Question 7: Logical Reasoning

Consider the following argument. Every employee who completed the training program received a certificate. Jordan received a certificate. Therefore, Jordan completed the training program. The argument is flawed because it

Question 8 Logical Reasoning

Question 8: Logical Reasoning

Consider the following argument. The bookstore owner noticed that sales increased the month after she rearranged the store's displays. She concluded that the new arrangement was responsible for the higher sales. Which one of the following, if true, would most strengthen the owner's conclusion?

Question 9 Logical Reasoning

Question 9: Logical Reasoning

Consider the following argument. A columnist argues that since violent crime rates have fallen over the past twenty years, the public's fear of crime is irrational and should be dismissed. Which one of the following best describes a flaw in the columnist's reasoning?

Question 10 Logical Reasoning

Question 10: Logical Reasoning

Consider the following argument. No reptile is warm-blooded. All snakes are reptiles. Therefore, no snake is warm-blooded. Which one of the following arguments uses a pattern of reasoning most similar to the one above?

Question 11 Logical Reasoning

Question 11: Logical Reasoning

Consider the following argument. The manager claims that the company's new flexible scheduling policy has improved morale, citing the fact that employee complaints dropped sharply after the policy began. Which one of the following, if true, most undermines the manager's reasoning?

Question 12 Logical Reasoning

Question 12: Logical Reasoning

Consider the following argument. All the documents in the locked cabinet are confidential. This document is confidential. Therefore, this document is in the locked cabinet. The reasoning in the argument is flawed because it

Question 13 Logical Reasoning

Question 13: Logical Reasoning

Consider the following argument. A study found that people who eat breakfast regularly tend to weigh less than people who skip breakfast. A health writer concluded that skipping breakfast causes weight gain. Which one of the following is an assumption required by the health writer's conclusion?

Question 14 Analytical Reasoning

Question 14: Analytical Reasoning

Consider the following setup. Four books, labeled J, K, L, and M, are placed on a shelf in a row from left to right. The following conditions apply: J is somewhere to the left of K. L is immediately to the right of J. M is not at either end of the row. Which one of the following is an acceptable left-to-right order of the books?

Question 15 Analytical Reasoning

Question 15: Analytical Reasoning

Consider the following setup. Five students, P, Q, R, S, and T, finish a race in positions 1 through 5, with 1 being first. The conditions are: Q finishes ahead of R. S finishes immediately after Q. P finishes last. If Q finishes second, which one of the following must be true?

Question 16 Analytical Reasoning

Question 16: Analytical Reasoning

Consider the following setup. A gardener plants exactly one of three flowers, rose, tulip, or daisy, in each of four beds numbered 1 through 4. The conditions are: bed 1 does not contain a rose. Bed 2 and bed 3 contain the same type of flower. At least one bed contains a daisy. Which one of the following must be false?

Question 17 Reading Comprehension

Question 17: Reading Comprehension

Read the following passage, then answer the question. Legal scholars have long debated whether judges should interpret statutes according to the lawmakers' original intent or according to the plain meaning of the words as written. Proponents of original intent argue that it honors the democratic will behind a law. Critics respond that lawmakers' intentions are often unclear, contradictory, or unrecorded. They favor the plain-meaning approach as more predictable and less open to a judge's personal bias. The passage is primarily concerned with

Question 18 Reading Comprehension

Question 18: Reading Comprehension

Read the following passage, then answer the question. Historians once portrayed the medieval guilds purely as instruments of economic control that restricted competition and fixed prices. More recent scholarship has complicated this view. Guilds, these historians note, also provided members with social insurance, funded religious festivals, and trained apprentices in skilled trades. This research suggests that guilds served their communities in ways that a narrowly economic account overlooks. The author of the passage would most likely agree with which of the following statements?

Question 19 Reading Comprehension

Question 19: Reading Comprehension

Read the following passage, then answer the question. The philosopher argues that scientific progress is not the steady accumulation of facts that many people imagine. Instead, she contends, science advances through occasional dramatic shifts in which an entire framework of assumptions is replaced. Between these shifts, scientists work within a shared framework and rarely question its foundations. Progress, on this view, is punctuated rather than gradual. Which one of the following, if true, would most weaken the philosopher's argument?

Question 20 Logical Reasoning

Question 20: Logical Reasoning

Consider the following argument. A newspaper editor argues that the paper should stop printing horoscopes because astrology has no scientific basis. A reader objects that many subscribers enjoy the horoscopes and would be disappointed if they were removed. The reader's response is best understood as

Question 1 of 20

Upgrade for full exam access

Unlock the full LSAT prep pack

Move straight into secure checkout, unlock the full question bank, and come back to this page for a longer exam-day simulation with answer-by-answer review.

Unlock Full Exam $9.97

Choose the right access level

Choose the access level that matches the way you are studying.

Most students only need one exact 2026-2027 exam page. Use same-exam practice packs when you want more 300-question forms for that same test, and use My Account when you are reopening something you already bought.

Free preview

Start with the sample

Use the first 20 questions to inspect the writing quality, score report, and review depth before you spend anything.

20 free questions
Start sample
Single exam access

Unlock the full exam only if it helps

Go from preview mode into the full 300-question bank, timed practice flow, and full rationale review for this same exam type.

300 total questions
Unlock one exam
More same-exam practice

Add more full-length forms for this same exam type

Practice packs stay focused on this same test type. Each paid form has its own 300-question set, and the 20 sample questions are separate.

5 practice forms
See practice packs
After checkout

Keep everything in one account

Your purchased exams stay in My Account so you can reopen the exact page later on a phone, laptop, or desktop without hunting for the original checkout link.

Account created at checkout
Open My account

Student game plan

Use LSAT like a focused 2026-2027 practice block.

Start with a diagnostic attempt, review the misses carefully, then retake in timed mode once you know what actually needs work.

01

Start with the 20-question free sample to spot whether logical reasoning or argument flaws is slowing you down before you buy the full exam.

02

After each block, review every rationale and the 3 real-world analogies, topic article cards, and source checks so the tested pattern behind assumptions becomes easier to remember.

03

Retake the full LSAT practice test in timed mode and focus on cleaner decision-making, not just memorizing the last answer.

After the sample

Use the score to decide the next move.

The first result tells you whether your LSAT 2026-2027 prep needs more content review, better pacing, or a longer timed rehearsal before test day.

Under 60%

Slow down and learn the pattern behind the misses

Treat the first 20 questions like a topic finder. Review every rationale, write down repeat mistakes, and use the study plan below before you retake this page.

Use the study plan
60% to 79%

You are close enough to turn this into a timing problem

You probably know more than the score feels like. Tighten weak topics, then retake in a full timed block so your pacing catches up with your content knowledge.

Review access details
80% and above

Shift from learning mode into exam-day rehearsal

Use this page to rehearse calm decision-making under pressure. Keep the timer on, review the few misses that remain, and choose a same-exam practice pack if you need more full-length forms.

See bundle options

About this practice test

What this 2026-2027 LSAT Practice Test covers

This practice test is designed for students and professionals preparing for LSAT who want stronger exam-day confidence, better explanation quality, and more useful answer review than a generic test bank.

Focus areas include LSAT practice test, LSAT practice questions and LSAT free practice test. Focus areas include logical reasoning, argument flaws, assumptions, reading comprehension, along with scenario-based judgment, careful review of why distractors are less correct, and real-world analogies that help the key ideas stick.

Work through up to 50 LSAC-style questions built around logical reasoning, argument flaws, and the wording patterns students usually miss on the first read.
Use answer-by-answer rationales to learn why the correct option wins and why weaker distractors fail in Law Admissions exam situations.
Review 3 real-world analogies, topic article cards, and source checks after each question so assumptions and reading comprehension feel easier to recognize under pressure.
Build timing, confidence, and recall with scenario-based practice that feels closer to the real LSAT than a generic flashcard dump.

Prepare for the LSAT with realistic LSAC practice questions, timed review, detailed rationales, and real-world analogies that make harder Law Admissions concepts easier to remember.

This practice test is designed for students and professionals preparing for LSAT who want stronger exam-day confidence, better explanation quality, and more useful answer review than a generic test bank.

Focus areas include logical reasoning, argument flaws, assumptions, reading comprehension, along with scenario-based judgment, careful review of why distractors are less correct, and real-world analogies that help the key ideas stick.

What you will practice on this page

  • Work through up to 50 LSAC-style questions built around logical reasoning, argument flaws, and the wording patterns students usually miss on the first read.
  • Use answer-by-answer rationales to learn why the correct option wins and why weaker distractors fail in Law Admissions exam situations.
  • Review 3 real-world analogies, topic article cards, and source checks after each question so assumptions and reading comprehension feel easier to recognize under pressure.
  • Build timing, confidence, and recall with scenario-based practice that feels closer to the real LSAT than a generic flashcard quiz.

How to use this exam to study smarter

  1. Start with the 20-question free sample to spot whether logical reasoning or argument flaws is slowing you down before you buy the full exam.
  2. After each block, review every rationale and the 3 real-world analogies, topic article cards, and source checks so the tested pattern behind assumptions becomes easier to remember.
  3. Retake the full LSAT practice test in timed mode and focus on cleaner decision-making, not just memorizing the last answer.

Students often land on this page after searching for terms like LSAT practice test, LSAT practice questions, LSAT free practice test, LSAT study guide, LSAC LSAT practice test, LSAT logical reasoning questions. That is why the free sample gives you 10 questions first and the full version goes deeper into the tested patterns.

Frequently asked questions

Is this LSAT Practice Test built for the 2026-2027 exam cycle?

Yes. This PracticeTestVault page is positioned for 2026-2027 prep for LSAT and is written as independent practice material. It is not an official exam, not copied from a live test, and not endorsed by the exam owner.

Can I try LSAT Practice Test before I buy?

Yes. You can take 20 free sample questions before checkout. Those sample questions are separate preview questions and are not counted as part of the paid 300-question bank.

What is included with single LSAT access?

Single-exam access unlocks one 300-question bank for this exact exam, a timed practice flow, instant score reporting, answer-level rationales, option-by-option review, and 3 real-world analogies, topic article cards, and source checks per question to make the concepts easier to remember.

How do the same-exam practice packs work?

Practice packs stay focused on this exact exam type. A 5-form pack gives 5 separate paid forms, a 10-form pack gives 10 forms, and a 15-form pack gives 15 forms. Each paid form has 300 questions, so students can get more full-length practice without mixing unrelated exams.

Does PracticeTestVault guarantee that I will pass?

No practice site can honestly guarantee a passing score. This LSAT Practice Test is designed to help you study more effectively by combining timed practice, a 70% suggested passing benchmark, detailed rationales, and memory-building analogies so you can find weak areas before test day.

Study articles for this exam

Study articles that support LSAT prep

Use these when you need a short reset on pacing, planning, or a weak topic before the next attempt.

PracticeTestVault review illustration for timed accuracy on LSAT

Resource Center

LSAT Review: Timed accuracy

May 13, 2026 2 min read

Review timed accuracy for this LSAT question with the key prompt clue, correct-answer reasoning, distractor checks, and sources to verify next.

Read article