Product5 min read

Ah, September LSAT Season!

September 2, 2025
Norair Khalafyan

Norair Khalafyan

Co-Founder

Ah, September LSAT Season!

Test takers frantically refreshing LawHub to see if their scores magically appeared early.


Libraries mysteriously packed with people diagramming conditional logic on scratch paper that looks like a map to buried treasure.


Parents asking for the tenth time, “So… remind me again, this test is for grad school?”


It’s that time of year again: LSAT season.


Somewhere between pumpkin spice latte season and midterm season sits the season for law school hopefuls, the one where sleep schedules warp, highlighters dry out, and people start saying things like, “Well technically, that’s a sufficient condition, not a necessary one” at dinner parties. (Yes, they will stop being invited.)


The Ritual of Score Release

If you’re new to the LSAT world, let me explain: score release day is basically the Hunger Games meets Black Friday.


Everyone’s camped out in group chats, nervously speculating:

  • Did LSAC change the release time?
  • Is it true if you log in on Internet Explorer it shows up faster?
  • Why did my friend in Ohio get her score 12 minutes before me?

Nobody’s working. Nobody’s sleeping. We’re all collectively pressing F5.


The Strange New World of Online Testing

Remember when the LSAT was only offered in big university lecture halls with proctors who looked like they were summoned from another century? Now half of us are taking the test in our bedrooms, praying the Wi-Fi doesn’t hiccup mid-Logical Reasoning.


ProctorU: “Please show me under your desk.”
You: moves a pile of laundry out of frame with shame.


Truly the modern LSAT experience.


The Myth of the Perfect Study Plan

Every September, students ask: “What’s the secret?”


The truth is, there isn’t one. Some people thrive on 5 practice tests a week. Others hit their stride reviewing one Logical Reasoning section for 3 hours with enough coffee to keep Starbucks in business.


The real magic is consistency—and knowing when to walk away from the books to recharge. (Pro tip: zoning out with Netflix sometimes raises your score more than one more drill set.)


Why We’re Excited at LexPrep


At LexPrep, we live for this chaos. Not because we’re sadists (promise), but because we know how much grit it takes to push through the LSAT grind.


Our AI doesn’t get tired of your “Why is this wrong?” questions. It won’t judge you for asking about conditional logic at 2 AM. And unlike your best friend, it will actually answer when you ask, “Wait… what’s the difference between necessary and sufficient again?”


Final Thought

So whether you’re a September test taker, an October hopeful, or just someone doomscrolling r/LSAT for comfort: we see you.


Breathe.


Trust your prep.


And maybe… keep those scratch paper diagrams in case you ever need to design an actual treasure map.


Want to be first in line?


We’re opening early access soon, and spots are limited. Add your email to our waitlist at www.lexprep.ai, and you’ll be placed at the front of the line to try LexPrep the moment we launch.


Happy LSAT season. 🎉