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Prior Testing Accommodations

You may be eligible for automatic approval based on accommodations you’ve received in the past.

Policy on Prior Testing Accommodations

Policy for Individuals Previously Approved to Receive Accommodations on the LSAT/LSAT-Flex

Except as noted below (see Exceptions to This Policy), registered test takers are automatically approved to receive the same or substantially similar accommodations they were approved to receive on their last registration for the LSAT/LSAT-Flex, without having to submit a request for accommodations. No supporting documentation is required from these candidates. Within one week of registering for the test, the candidate will receive an approval letter, which can be found on the LSAT Status page of their LSAC JD Account. This approval letter will provide notice of any accommodations granted. 

This is important. Your previously approved accommodations will be adjusted to provide equivalent accommodations for the LSAT’s current format and testing modalities as needed. LSAC will provide notice of any equivalent accommodations granted within the approval letter posted to your online account.  

Beginning with the August 2025 LSAT and LSAT Argumentative Writing, stop/start breaks will provide up to sixty (60) minutes of break time in any single testing day. Test takers who were previously approved to receive stop/start breaks on the LSAT will automatically be approved for stop/start breaks for up to 60 minutes of break time per testing day. If you would like to seek different or additional testing accommodations on a future administration of the LSAT in light of this change, you must submit a timely request with appropriate support in accordance with LSAC’s testing accommodation policies and procedures.

If you have any questions about an automatically approved accommodation, please contact an LSAC Accommodated Testing Customer Relations Specialist by phone at 855.384.2253, or by email at accom@LSAC.org.

Additionally, all candidates eligible for automatic approval based on past accommodations are encouraged to reach out to LSAC in advance of the registration deadline if they have any questions regarding their previously approved accommodations or want to submit a request for different or additional accommodations.

Exceptions to This Policy

  • Beginning with the August 2025 LSAT and LSAT Argumentative Writing, paper-and-pencil and modality exceptions (i.e., request to test in a specific mode) will be considered Category 3 accommodations. Any test taker who is seeking a paper-and-pencil format for the LSAT or LSAT Argumentative Writing and/or a modality exception will have to initiate a new request for this accommodation within their JD Account. If you do not submit a  new request for these accommodations, you will not receive a paper-and-pencil format or the modality exception accommodation beginning August 2025. Your new request for this accommodation, if approved, will automatically apply to any future LSAT administration, unless you have been approved for disability-related testing accommodations for a temporary condition. 
  • Accommodations that were approved due to a temporary condition (e.g., broken bone) are not subject to automatic approval. Candidates who were approved to receive accommodations on their last administration of the LSAT due to a temporary disability and who wish to seek the same, different, or additional accommodations on a later administration of the LSAT must submit a new request for accommodations and submit the required documentation (detailed below) by the accommodation request deadline.
  • If your last LSAT registration was more than five years before your current test registration date, LSAC may no longer have data or records related to your approved accommodations for that test. If for any reason you do not see an approval letter posted to your LSAC JD Account within one week of registering, please contact LSAC immediately by phone at 855.384.2253, or by email at accom@LSAC.org. If LSAC no longer has data relating to your prior request and approval, it will be your responsibility to provide LSAC with acceptable documentation that 1) shows testing accommodations were previously approved on the LSAT and 2) specifically identifies what those approved accommodations were.

Waiving Previously Approved Accommodations

It is your option not to accept some or all of your automatically approved accommodations and to test under standard testing conditions. If that is your election, please review Opting Out of Approved Accommodations for instructions on how to opt-out by the opt-out deadline for your LSAT administration. Once you have opted out of a testing accommodation, the opt-out becomes final – both for the current LSAT administration and for future administrations. If, after opting out of an accommodation you would like to seek the accommodation for a future LSAT registration, you will need to make a new request for the accommodation by the deadline associated with that test date.

Requesting New or Additional Accommodations

Candidates who were approved to receive accommodations on their last registration for the LSAT and who seek different or additional accommodations on a later administration of the LSAT must submit their request and all  required documentation by the accommodation request deadline associated with their test. This requirement applies if, for example, you were previously approved to receive 50% additional time on the LSAT but now wish to receive 100% additional time and extra breaks between sections on the LSAT. In this case, you will still be automatically approved to receive 50% additional time, but you must submit the appropriate documentation within the published deadlines to support your request for 100% additional time and extra breaks between sections.

Requests for new/additional accommodations must be submitted through your LSAC JD Account by the accommodation request deadline associated with your test.

Stop/Start Breaks

Beginning with the August 2025 LSAT and LSAT Argumentative Writing, stop/start breaks will provide up to sixty (60) minutes of break time in any single testing day. Test takers who were previously approved to receive stop/start breaks on the LSAT will automatically be approved for stop/start breaks for up to 60 minutes of break time per testing day. If you would like to seek different or additional testing accommodations on a future administration of the LSAT in light of this change, you must submit a timely request with appropriate support in accordance with LSAC’s testing accommodation policies and procedures.

Policy on Prior Testing Accommodations on Certain Other Standardized Postsecondary Admission Tests

If you were approved to receive testing accommodations on a prior administration of the SAT I, SAT II, ACT, GED, GRE, GMAT, DAT, and/or MCAT examinations, you will be approved to receive the identical (or equivalent) accommodations on the LSAT, provided that:

  1. You have a letter or similar documentation from the test sponsor that details the specific testing accommodation for which you were approved (Verification of Prior Accommodation from test sponsor);
  2. The accommodation(s) that you request do not require the LSAT to be administered on more than one day;
  3. You are requesting one or more of the following accommodations (which you previously were approved to receive on one of the tests listed above):

    • Unified English Braille (UEB) version of the LSAT
    • Large-print (e.g., 18-point font or higher) paper-and-pencil test
    • Extended test time, up to 100% additional time (i.e., double time)
    • Use of a human reader
    • Use of an amanuensis (scribe)
    • Breaks between multiple-choice test sections
    • Sit/stand during testing
    • Stop-the-clock breaks
    • Ability to pace (walk around) or stretch
    • Use of a braille writer, Braille Note, or braille display
    • Tactile manipulatives (e.g., rubber graph board and tactile letters or pictures; magnetic board with magnetic letters or objects)


    Some accommodations that you received on one of the tests listed above may not be needed as accommodations on the LSAT given built-in software tools (e.g., text zoom button, line spacing) and permitted items (e.g., earplugs, medication, magnification reading glasses, handheld magnifiers, etc.). Candidates are encouraged to review the ​​​​​​ Specifications of the LSAT and LSAT Argumentative Writing to determine their accommodation needs for that test format.

  4. You must submit your request and the required proof of previous testing accommodations through your LSAC JD Account by the accommodation request deadline associated with your test.

If you were approved to receive more than double time on one of the examinations listed above and are seeking more than double time on the LSAT, your request will be evaluated in accordance with LSAC’s current policies and documentation requirements. Likewise, if you request any additional accommodations that you were not approved to receive on one or more of the tests specified above, your request for any additional accommodations will be evaluated in accordance with LSAC’s current policies. Please review the  Documentation Requirements for LSAT Accommodation Requests Based on Prior Accommodations on Certain Other Standardized Postsecondary Admission Tests.

Note that new requests for test accommodations on the LSAT based on a history of previous accommodations on other standardized postsecondary tests should be submitted through your LSAC JD Account. All information related to your request can be completed online, and verification of your previous accommodations can be uploaded and submitted electronically, through your account. For information on how to get started, please review How to Request Accommodations on the LSAT.