Award-Winning LSAT Prep in New York
Award-Winning LSAT Prep in New York
Everything you need to crush the LSAT in New York, NY. Live prep classes, practice tests, 1-on-1 expert tutoring, and AI-powered diagnostics.
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Instructors from
- YaleUniversity
- PrincetonUniversity
- StanfordUniversity
- CornellUniversity
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LSAT Prep Classes
One-time classLiveLSAT Proctored Practice Test
Taking timed practice tests is one of the best ways of leveling up your LSAT skills and being ready to execute on test day. But it's easy to procrastinate taking a full-length practice test, and difficult to adhere to the rigid timing and break structures of the official test, too. So commit to an authentic, structured test experience with proctored LSAT practice exams. In each of these drop-in sessions, a proctor will simulate the actual exam, guiding you through the language used on test day, timing each section, and even giving official time warnings just like they do for the actual exam. Bring a printed (or digital) LSAT practice exam of your choice, a bubble sheet, and your pencils, erasers, and graphing calculator, and get ready to conquer the LSAT. Need an LSAT exam? Download a free, official practice test from LSAC: [https://lawhub.lsac.org/](https://lawhub.lsac.org/)
Short-term classLiveLSAT 4-Week Prep Class
The LSAT Group Class is designed to prepare students to take the LSAT by equipping them with skills and test-taking strategies to improve their score. The course will cover content and strategies for critical reading, verbal reasoning, and analytical thinking. Upon completion of the course, students should have an understanding of the exam structure, scoring methodology, section specific test-taking strategies, and the ability to identify and handle difficult or tricky questions.
Semester classLiveLSAT 8-Week Prep Class
The LSAT Group Class is designed to prepare students to take the LSAT by equipping them with skills and test-taking strategies to improve their score. The course will cover content and strategies for critical reading, verbal reasoning, and analytical thinking. Upon completion of the course, students should have an understanding of the exam structure, scoring methodology, section specific test-taking strategies, and the ability to identify and handle difficult or tricky questions.
Top-Rated LSAT Prep Instructors in New York
Patrick's dual Duke degrees — a JD and an MA in History — mean he spent years doing exactly what the LSAT rewards: reading dense arguments, identifying what they assume, and finding where they break d...
Education & Certificates
Emory University
Bachelor in Arts, History
Duke University
JD
Before enrolling at Columbia Law School, Nicolas taught LSAT prep both in classrooms and one-on-one for a private company — giving him a rare dual perspective on where group instruction falls short an...
Education & Certificates
Duke University
Bachelor in Arts
ACT Scores
Law school at NYU gave Nathaniel a firsthand look at exactly what the LSAT is designed to measure — and more importantly, where most test takers lose points they shouldn't. He breaks Logical Reasoning...
Education & Certificates
Harvard College
Bachelor in Arts, Economics & Government
New York University
Juris Doctor, Law
Harvard Law and a Columbia premedical background give Jeremy a cross-disciplinary lens on LSAT prep that most coaches can't replicate — he approaches Reading Comprehension passages the way a scientist...
Education & Certificates
New York University
Bachelor in Arts, Economics
Harvard Law School
Juris Doctor, N/A
Law school admission hinges on LSAT performance, and few coaches bring the combination of a Stanford undergraduate foundation and Columbia Law School enrollment to their LSAT prep work. Melanie breaks...
Education & Certificates
Stanford University
Bachelor in Arts
Columbia Law School
Juris Doctor, N/A
Economics training at Cornell builds a specific analytical habit that transfers directly to LSAT prep: the ability to evaluate whether a conclusion actually follows from the evidence presented, which ...
Education & Certificates
Cornell University
Bachelors, Economics, Asian Studies
Columbia Law School is where LSAT reasoning gets stress-tested in real time — and Lear's current J.D. training gives his LSAT prep a practitioner's edge that goes beyond strategy guides. His Universit...
Education & Certificates
Columbia Law School
Current Grad Student, J.D.
University of Chicago
Bachelors in Economics and Political Science
Two master's degrees — one in business from Tulane, one from Northwestern — trained Danielle to stress-test quantitative arguments and spot the gap between a claim and its evidence, which is precisely...
Education & Certificates
Tulane University of Louisiana
MS
Northwestern University
MS
Psychology training sharpens something most LSAT prep misses: the ability to recognize how people reason incorrectly, which is exactly what flaw and assumption questions test on Logical Reasoning. Jon...
Education & Certificates
University of Maryland-Baltimore County
Bachelor in Arts, Psychology
SAT Scores
First-year law school at Columbia sharpens exactly the skills the LSAT is designed to test: breaking apart dense arguments, spotting flawed reasoning, and reading with precision under pressure. Sumait...
Education & Certificates
Arizona State University
Bachelor of Science, Political Science and Government
SAT Scores
Frequently Asked Questions
Logic Games is often the most intimidating section because it requires both pattern recognition and spatial reasoning under time pressure—skills that don't transfer directly from other academic work. A tutor can break down the diagramming systems that make games manageable, help you recognize game types quickly, and build the muscle memory needed to set up and solve games in under 8-9 minutes each. Many students improve dramatically once they have a consistent, personalized approach rather than trying random strategies.
LSAT Reading Comp requires active annotation and identifying the author's main point and argument structure—not just understanding content. A tutor can teach you how to map passages efficiently, spot common question traps (like answers that are true but don't answer the specific question), and manage the cognitive load of dense passages. The key is learning to read strategically for test purposes, which is very different from how you'd read for pleasure or even for college classes.
Students often miss the distinction between the argument's conclusion and supporting premises, fall for answer choices that sound reasonable but don't match the logical structure, or spend too much time on complex wording. A tutor focuses on teaching you to strip arguments down to their skeleton, identify assumption-based reasoning, and recognize common logical fallacies (like scope shifts or false causation). With targeted practice, you can learn to spot these patterns instantly rather than re-analyzing each argument from scratch.
Timing isn't just about speed—it's about strategic allocation. A tutor helps you identify which question types you should tackle first (usually easier ones to build confidence), which to skip strategically, and how to allocate your 35 minutes per section based on your strengths. For example, if Logic Games is your weakness, you might spend 22 minutes there and 13 on Reading Comp, rather than dividing time equally. Personalized pacing strategies are far more effective than generic "spend X minutes per question" advice.
Score improvement depends on your starting point and effort level. Students starting around 140-150 often see 10-15 point improvements with consistent tutoring, while those already at 160+ may see 3-5 point gains since the questions become significantly harder. The LSAT rewards mastery of patterns and strategy, so students who are willing to do untimed practice and review mistakes thoroughly tend to see the best results. A tutor can help you identify exactly which question types are costing you points and create a focused improvement plan.
Practice tests are essential—they build stamina, reveal your weak areas, and let you experience the actual test format. A tutor should have you take full, timed tests regularly (typically every 1-2 weeks) and then spend most of your tutoring time reviewing mistakes in depth rather than drilling individual questions. The goal is understanding why you got something wrong: Did you misread the question? Miss a logical inference? Run out of time? This diagnostic approach is far more valuable than just practicing more questions.
Test anxiety often stems from unfamiliarity with question types or uncertainty about your approach. A tutor builds confidence by ensuring you've seen every common question format, have a reliable strategy for each section, and have practiced under realistic timed conditions repeatedly. When you've solved dozens of similar problems successfully, test day feels less like a mystery and more like executing a plan you've already practiced. Tutors also help you develop mental strategies for managing pressure, like knowing when to skip a tough question and return to it later.
A strong LSAT tutor should have a high personal LSAT score (typically 170+), deep familiarity with the test's logic and structure, and experience teaching students across different starting levels. They should be able to explain not just the right answer, but why the wrong answers are traps and what logical principles they violate. Look for someone who stays current with LSAT changes, uses official LSAC materials, and can diagnose your specific weak areas rather than using a one-size-fits-all approach. Experience with students similar to your situation is also valuable.
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