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Argfluent is an adaptive LSAT prep platform — a free diagnostic, adaptive Logical Reasoning and Reading Comprehension drills, score analytics, and full practice exams scored 120–180, built around the question types holding your score back.

7 days free · no card up front · $24.99/mo after · cancel any time

Analytics that tell you EXACTLY what to do.

Argfluent builds a custom lesson plan from your results, ranks the question types costing you the most points, and drops you straight into the drill.

Take a full LSAT under real conditions.

Same as test day. Four sections, 35 minutes each.

Start 7-day free trial

How it works

01

Upload your results

Submit your LawHub score reports. Argfluent reads every question, including the colored marks, to map your strengths and weaknesses by type and difficulty.

02

Take a short diagnostic

Tag the parts of three short arguments and answer ten questions, explaining your reasoning.

03

Train, then recalibrate

Every week recalibrates to focus on what you struggle with now, not what you did before.

Built for serious candidates.

Your scores, your weak spots, and the next drill you should run. Every session reads from your own data. A streak keeps you honest about consistency; nothing else fakes progress.

Start free for 7 days

Built to train every part of the LSAT

The modern LSAT is two Logical Reasoning sections, one Reading Comprehension section, and an unscored experimental section, scored on the 120–180 scale. Argfluent drills all of it.

Logical Reasoning

Adaptive drills across all 14 LR question types — necessary and sufficient assumption, flaw, strengthen, weaken, must-be-true, parallel reasoning, principle, and paradox — each with per-choice explanations.

Reading Comprehension

Passage-by-passage Reading Comprehension practice with difficulty-weighted timing and tagging, so you see exactly which passage types and question stems slow you down.

Free LSAT diagnostic · adaptive drills · full practice exams scored 120–180 · per-question analytics · a study plan that recalibrates weekly.

Frequently asked questions

How is the LSAT scored?
The LSAT is scored on a 120 to 180 scale. Your raw score (number correct out of roughly 75 to 77 scored questions) is converted to a scaled score using a PrepTest-specific equating curve. A 165 places around the 89th percentile; a 170 places around the 97th percentile. The median LSAT score is approximately 152.
Are Logic Games still on the LSAT?
No. LSAC removed the Analytical Reasoning (Logic Games) section in August 2024. The modern LSAT is two Logical Reasoning sections, one Reading Comprehension section, and one unscored experimental section, plus an optional Writing Sample taken separately from home.
What is the best way to study for LSAT Logical Reasoning?
Drill assumption-family questions first. Necessary assumption, sufficient assumption, flaw, strengthen, and weaken together make up roughly 60 percent of a Logical Reasoning section, so score impact per practice minute is highest there. Argfluent ranks every question type by score impact and serves the highest-leverage drill next.
What is a good LSAT score?
165 or higher is considered a strong score (top 11 percent). 170 or higher opens the door to T14 law schools (top 3 percent). The median LSAT score is approximately 152. There is no penalty for wrong answers, so always guess on the questions you can't finish.
Is Argfluent free?
Argfluent offers a free LSAT diagnostic scored on the 120 to 180 scale, a free question-by-question explanation library covering Argfluent's original LSAT-style practice sets, and a 7-day Pro trial that requires no credit card. Argfluent Pro is $24.99 per month for unlimited adaptive drills and full in-app practice exams.
Does Argfluent use official LSAT questions?
No. Argfluent does not host or reproduce official LSAC PrepTest questions. Every practice question is original, LSAT-style material written by Argfluent and modeled on the current LSAT format (Logical Reasoning and Reading Comprehension). Argfluent is an independent study tool and is not affiliated with LSAC.
What is the difference between free and Pro on Argfluent?
Free includes an LSAT diagnostic scored 120 to 180 and the public explanation library. Argfluent Pro ($24.99 per month, 7-day free trial, no credit card to start) adds unlimited adaptive drills, full-length in-app practice exams, and a personalized weekly study plan.
What is the format of the LSAT in 2026?
The LSAT consists of two scored Logical Reasoning sections (about 25 questions each, 35 minutes each), one scored Reading Comprehension section (about 27 questions, 35 minutes), and one unscored experimental section that can be either LR or RC. Total test time for scored sections is about 2 hours 20 minutes. An optional Writing Sample is taken separately at home.

Drill what moves your score.

Try Argfluent free for seven days. No card. Cancel any time.

Start free trial

Frequently asked questions

How is the LSAT scored?
The LSAT is scored on a 120 to 180 scale. Your raw score (number correct out of roughly 75 to 77 scored questions) is converted to a scaled score using a PrepTest-specific equating curve. A 165 places around the 89th percentile; a 170 places around the 97th percentile. The median LSAT score is approximately 152.
Are Logic Games still on the LSAT?
No. LSAC removed the Analytical Reasoning (Logic Games) section in August 2024. The modern LSAT is two Logical Reasoning sections, one Reading Comprehension section, and one unscored experimental section, plus an optional Writing Sample taken separately from home.
What is the best way to study for LSAT Logical Reasoning?
Drill assumption-family questions first. Necessary assumption, sufficient assumption, flaw, strengthen, and weaken together make up roughly 60 percent of a Logical Reasoning section, so score impact per practice minute is highest there. Argfluent ranks every question type by score impact and serves the highest-leverage drill next.
What is a good LSAT score?
165 or higher is considered a strong score (top 11 percent). 170 or higher opens the door to T14 law schools (top 3 percent). The median LSAT score is approximately 152. There is no penalty for wrong answers, so always guess on the questions you can't finish.
Is Argfluent free?
Argfluent offers a free LSAT diagnostic scored on the 120 to 180 scale, a free question-by-question explanation library covering Argfluent's original LSAT-style practice sets, and a 7-day Pro trial that requires no credit card. Argfluent Pro is $24.99 per month for unlimited adaptive drills and full in-app practice exams.
Does Argfluent use official LSAT questions?
No. Argfluent does not host or reproduce official LSAC PrepTest questions. Every practice question is original, LSAT-style material written by Argfluent and modeled on the current LSAT format (Logical Reasoning and Reading Comprehension). Argfluent is an independent study tool and is not affiliated with LSAC.
What is the difference between free and Pro on Argfluent?
Free includes an LSAT diagnostic scored 120 to 180 and the public explanation library. Argfluent Pro ($24.99 per month, 7-day free trial, no credit card to start) adds unlimited adaptive drills, full-length in-app practice exams, and a personalized weekly study plan.
What is the format of the LSAT in 2026?
The LSAT consists of two scored Logical Reasoning sections (about 25 questions each, 35 minutes each), one scored Reading Comprehension section (about 27 questions, 35 minutes), and one unscored experimental section that can be either LR or RC. Total test time for scored sections is about 2 hours 20 minutes. An optional Writing Sample is taken separately at home.
Argfluent LSAT Prep — Adaptive Drills, Practice Exams & Free Diagnostic