Law School Admissions Advice

Law School Admissions: Myths, Mistakes, and Must-Knows

Read this before you hit submit. It’s a no-fluff snapshot of the biggest law school admissions myths, miscues, and self-inflicted wounds I have seen in nearly a decade of law school admissions consulting.


The Numbers Come First (Yes, Really)

  • Admissions is not holistic like undergrad. It’s mostly numbers-driven.
  • Being at or above one median can make you competitive, but only if you’re not wildly below the other.
  • Below both medians? That’s not a reach. That’s a prayer.
  • Splitters and reverse splitters have real lanes, but need strategy and support.

LSAT: The Most Controllable Piece of the Puzzle

  • Schools use your highest LSAT—they don’t average.
  • Retaking is normal. 3 times = common. 4 = fine. 5 = the max.
  • You can improve. Don’t let anyone (even admissions officers) say otherwise.
  • Studying more = scoring more. Retaking without changing your prep = wasted attempt.
  • If you’re plateaued, reassess how you’re studying, not whether you should.
  • If you’ve taken the LSAT 4 or 5 times, and especially if your scores fluctuate or spike unexpectedly, consider submitting a short LSAT addendum.

Timing and Rolling Admissions

  • Rolling admissions means spots fill up as the cycle goes on.
  • But rushing to apply in September with a weak LSAT or unpolished materials? Bad idea.
  • Final deadlines ≠ real deadlines. Most schools accept later LSATs if one is already on file (even as late as June).
  • Ideal window: Early October through late November.
  • September is great if you’re ready.
  • December is still on time, but it’s no longer “early.”
  • Before Halloween = super early.
  • Before Thanksgiving = early.
  • Mid-to-late January is pushing it. February = definitely late.

Personal Statement: Clarity > Cleverness

  • No childhood origin stories. No vague “justice” or “dream since age 8.”
  • Don’t stack your resume—go deep on one real story or show how interconnected experiences build toward law.
  • Earn your “Why Law.” Don’t open with it.
  • Trauma? Only if it ties directly into legal reform, growth, or mission. Otherwise, leave it out.
  • This is a writing sample. Make it structured, specific, and insight-driven.

Resume: More Important Than You Think

  • Two pages? Totally fine. Just keep it clean.
  • Include hours worked for jobs, internships, and leadership roles.
  • Focus on impact and action, not duties.
  • Add research, independent businesses, volunteering—even if unpaid.

Letters of Recommendation: Not All Are Equal

  • Still in school or recently graduated? You want 2 academic and maybe 1 professional.
  • Been out a few years? You want at least 1 strong professional letter.
  • Some schools (e.g., Northwestern) weigh professional experience more—plan accordingly.
  • Titles matter less than how well they know you and what stories they can tell.

Diversity, Identity, and Perspective Essays

  • Almost all schools want something here, even if they call it something else.
  • It might be framed as identity, worldview, experience, resilience, or a time you thought differently.
  • Can include race, gender, disability, culture, neurodivergence, socioeconomic background—or something else entirely.
  • Read the prompt for each school carefully.

Why X Essays: Required or Optional, Do It Right

  • Don’t just list classes or professors. That reads lazy. Go deeper.
  • Focus on fit: how your goals and their offerings align.
  • Location paragraphs matter for college towns (UVA, Michigan, Duke)—not big cities (NYC, DC, LA).
  • Write them thoughtfully, not sparingly. They can be powerful if done well.

Dual Degrees and Other Fancy Extras

  • Most JD/MBAs, JD/MPHs, JD/PhDs are expensive flexes that don’t increase job outcomes.
  • Only do them if you’re absolutely sure it’s required for your goals.
  • Otherwise: The JD is enough.

Scholarships, Early Decision, and Negotiation

  • Applying early ≠ getting more money.
  • Schools often don’t start awarding scholarships until January, February, or even March.
  • A strong December app can get the same aid as a September one.
  • ED boosts odds but kills leverage. Don’t ED if money matters.
  • You can negotiate scholarships, especially if your stats justify it.
  • Don’t assume sticker price = what you’ll pay.

Want an advantage in your law school applications?

The difference often isn’t in your stats, but your execution. That’s where I come in.

👉 Explore my services
👉 Book a free consultation

Leave a Reply