Q: How many questions can I get wrong on the LSAT to get a 170?
A: You can typically get approximately 12 to 18 questions wrong (out of 99-102 scored questions) to achieve a scaled score of 170. The exact number varies with each test's difficulty, as the LSAT uses a conversion scale (not a strict percentage) to equate scores across different administrations. On an average test, missing around 15 questions often results in a 170.
Q: How does the LSAT scoring conversion work?
A: Your raw score (number correct) is converted to the scaled score (120-180) via a test-specific equating process. A harder test allows more wrong answers for the same 170; an easier test allows fewer. There is no fixed "one question equals one point" relationship.
Q: What is the breakdown per section for a 170?
A: The test has three scored sections (two Logical Reasoning, one Reading Comprehension) with about 24-26 questions each (roughly 75-78 total). To model a 170:
- Target Raw Score: Aim for about 62-65 correct out of ~75-78 questions.
- This means you can miss: ~10-13 questions total across all three sections.
- Section Strategy: Consistent performance is key. For example, missing 3 in each LR and 4-5 in RC could still land you in the 170 range.
Q: How should I use this information in my test strategy?
A:
- Pace for Perfection, Accept Some Errors: A 170 does not require a perfect score. Do not obsess over a single tough question; make an educated guess and move on to secure easier points later.
- Focus on Section Balance: A major blow in one section (e.g., missing 8 in RC) is difficult to offset. Aim for steady, controlled performance.
- Build in an Error Budget: Knowing you can miss ~12-15 questions reduces anxiety and helps you make strategic, time-efficient decisions during the test.
Q: What is the best way to track my progress toward a 170?
A: Use official practice tests and their published conversion scales. After each PT:
- Calculate your raw score (number correct).
- Use the test's score conversion chart (provided in the answer key) to find your scaled score.
- Analyze which question types and sections you're missing to strategically reduce errors.
Q: How can TheEntryPass help me reach a 170?
A: At TheEntryPass, we help you build a precision strategy for high-score targets. For a 170, this means:
- Error Budget Allocation: Teaching you how to strategically distribute your allowed wrong answers across sections based on your personal strengths.
- Advanced Pacing Drills: Moving beyond basic completion to optimizing question selection and time per question to maximize your raw score.
- Performance Analytics: Helping you identify if your errors are concentrated in specific, fixable areas or scattered, which requires a different approach.
For the most accurate understanding, practice with recent official LSATs and review their individual scoring scales.