Sample Admissions Timeline

Sample Admissions Timeline

December

  • Start studying for the LSAT.

March

June

  • Take the LSAT.
    • It's best to give yourself plenty of time to retake the test if necessary—so June is a great time to take the LSAT.
  • Register for the LSAC's Credential Assembly Service (CAS).
    • The Credential Assembly Service makes your life easier. Instead of sending your transcripts and recommendations to twelve different law schools, you can send them to the LSAC and forward them to each school with a few clicks. Most law schools require you to use the CAS. Register here.
  • Make yourself an admissions checklist.
  • Send your transcripts to CAS.
  • Sanitize your social media and get a professional email address.
    • Google yourself and go through your social media accounts. If you wouldn't want your mom to see something, you probably wouldn't want your admissions officer to see it either. Adjust your privacy settings or delete embarrassing content.
    • Get a sensible firstname.lastname email address.
    • Lots of admissions officers look through online law school forums, so post carefully.

July

  • Develop a school list.
  • Research the applications.
    • You may not be able to access law school applications until the fall, but you should be able to learn each school's application requirements on its website. Make a note of optional essay questions and personal statement prompts that might require a tailored essay.
    • We've compiled the application requirements for top schools for you.
  • Create a law school résumé.
    • Your law school résumé is probably the first thing an admissions officer will look at, so you shouldn't let it be an afterthought.
  • Begin your personal statement.
    • Your personal statement should tell a story—about an experience of personal growth, your motivation for pursuing a JD, or both.
  • Ask for your letters of recommendation.
  • Begin a diversity statement, maybe.
    • A diversity statement is an optional essay about your background that explains how you'll enrich the student body. You can write about socioeconomic factors, race, ethnicity, religion, gender, sexual orientation, or anything else that distinguishes you. Don't write a diversity statement unless you mean it, though.
  • Begin your other essays.

August

  • Write your character and fitness addendum if necessary.
    • If you've ever been subjected to disciplinary action at school or charged with a criminal offense, you'll probably have to explain what happened in a character and fitness addendum.
  • Write an addendum about extenuating circumstances, maybe.
    • If illness, family trouble, or some other extenuating circumstance affected your transcript or résumé, you may explain what happened in a non-required addendum. You may also want to explain a jump in your LSAT scores.
  • Revise your essays.
    • It often takes many drafts to find the best version of each essay.

September

  • Finish your essays and proofread the heck out of everything.

October

October and November

  • The best time to apply.
    • Most law schools start to accept applications by early October and evaluate them on a rolling basis. There are more open spots at the beginning of the season, so early applicants have an advantage.
    • That said, you shouldn't rush. Take an extra week or month to develop the best possible application.

December

  • A good time to apply.

January

  • A fine time to apply.

February

  • A bit late to apply.

March or later

  • Don't apply unless you have to.
    • Even though some schools accept applications throughout the spring, it's usually better to wait for the next cycle than to apply in March.

March

April

  • Send a letter of continuing interest.
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