Expert guidance for law school applications to Yale, Harvard, Stanford, and every T14 program. From personal statement coaching to LSAT strategy, we help driven candidates build applications that read like the best legal arguments they'll ever make.
School selection, personal statement coaching, LSAT strategy, recommendation management, and resume work — built as one integrated process, not a menu of disconnected services.
A balanced T14/target/safety list aligned to your LSAT score, GPA, and intended practice area.
The personal statement is your single most valuable differentiator. We help you write one that reads like a compelling legal argument, not a resume in paragraph form.
A focused prep plan built around your current diagnostic score and your target range, not a generic curriculum.
Law schools want letters from people who can speak to your analytical ability, writing quality, and work ethic.
Law school resumes follow different conventions than job applications. We help you present your background in a format that speaks to admissions committees.
No guessing, no last-minute scrambling. Every student gets a structured roadmap from the first session to the offer letter.
A candid 90-minute audit of your LSAT score, GPA, undergraduate institution, work experience, and intended practice area — mapped honestly against your T14 and target programs.
We build a balanced list and define the single narrative thread your personal statement and application must reinforce across every school.
For most applicants, the LSAT is the single highest-leverage variable. We address it before application season begins, not alongside it.
Bi-weekly check-ins as you write your personal statement, diversity statement, and school-specific supplements. We review, give feedback, and push you to your best.
Final review before submission. Then waitlist strategy, scholarship negotiation, and help evaluating financial aid packages when offers arrive.
Results across every dimension of the law school admissions process.
“My personal statement went through four complete revisions. By the final version it was a completely different essay — sharper, more specific, and actually mine. Yale offered me a place I didn’t think was realistic.”
“I was sitting at a 164 and plateauing. The diagnostic broke down exactly where I was losing points — two sections later I was at 174. That score changed every school on my list.”
“I came in thinking I wanted one school. My counselor helped me understand the landscape and build a list that was both ambitious and honest. I got into my target with a merit scholarship.”
“I’d been out of undergrad for four years and had no idea how to frame my professional background for a law school audience. The resume rewrite completely changed how I presented myself.”
Everything you need to know before starting the law school admissions process.
Talk to a Counselor12–18 months before your target start date is ideal. That gives time for LSAT prep (which can take 3–6 months), recommender cultivation, and multiple personal statement drafts. The October LSAT is the most strategic test date for most Round 1 applicants.
Both matter, but the LSAT carries slightly more weight because it’s standardised and directly comparable across applicants. Schools use a median LSAT for rankings purposes — a strong LSAT can compensate for a softer GPA, but the reverse is harder. We’ll give you a candid read on your numbers relative to each school.
The strongest personal statements aren't about why you want to be a lawyer — they're about who you are as a thinker and how you've arrived at this moment. The essay should be specific, honest, and written in a voice that couldn't belong to anyone else. Generic 'I've always wanted to help people' narratives rarely distinguish strong candidates.
It depends on the school and the gap. A 3-point LSAT deficit is very different from a 10-point one. Some T14 schools are more holistic than others, and a compelling personal statement, strong softs, and a well-written diversity statement can move the needle. We’ll be honest about your odds before you spend application fees.
Most schools require two letters — typically at least one academic. A strong letter from a professor who knows your writing and analytical work closely outperforms a letter from a prominent figure who barely knows you. We help you select recommenders strategically and brief them effectively.
Yes. We work with students applying to Canadian JD programmes (Osgoode, U of T, McGill) and LLM applicants targeting international programmes. Strategy differs meaningfully from US JD applications, and we adapt our approach accordingly.
Spots fill quickly each season. Book a free strategy call to map your LSAT score and profile against your target programs and find out exactly what it will take.
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