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Law School Admission Council

Other Information You Should Know About LSAC Services

Your LSAC Account Number and PIN

When you register with our services, you will be provided with an LSAC account number. This is your primary identification number for our services and should be used on all subsequent forms, registrations, orders, and correspondence to LSAC. Your LSAC account number will appear on your LSAT Admission Ticket and other LSAC documents. You will use your account number at the test center to mark your answer sheet.

You will also be asked to provide a PIN when you initially register. If you do not provide a PIN, one will be assigned to you. You will need your PIN if you choose to use our automated telephone services to access your file. You should also use this PIN on subsequent registrations or orders. You may review or change your PIN in your LSAC.org account.

Your Biographical Information

The submission of false or misleading biographical information on your law school application or registration (online, via telephone, or on paper) is grounds for a misconduct and irregularities investigation. Please see Misconduct and Irregularities.

Sign Up for the Candidate Referral Service (CRS)

This free service makes information about law school candidates available to law schools. Law schools may recruit potential applicants on the basis of specific characteristics; for example, LSAT score, undergraduate grade-point average (UGPA), age, citizenship, race or ethnicity, and geographic background. If you establish an LSAC.org account for any purpose, you may authorize release of your credentials to law schools participating in the CRS. LSAC recommends that you authorize release, because you may be contacted by interested law schools you otherwise might not have considered.

Multiple Deposit Notification

Each year, law schools that participate in LSAC's commitment overlap reporting service provide LSAC with information about applicants who have been accepted and have paid a deposit or provided a verbal or written agreement to attend their schools. Each spring, participating law schools receive periodic reports detailing the number of their committed applicants who have submitted seat deposits or commitments at other participating schools, as well as the identification of those other schools. Those reports also now include the names and LSAC account numbers for all candidates who have deposits/commitments at multiple participating schools.

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