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Our customer service team is available to answer any questions via our live chat 7 days a week from 5 am to 7 pm Eastern Time.
We're also available via phone or email:
info@LSATaccommodations.com(813) 214-2066Or just please submit your details below and we will get back to you.
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Complete the intake so a clinician can review your information and determine the next step for your LSAT accommodations documentation.
Start Your IntakeFrequently Asked Questions
When you place an order for LSAT accommodations, our clinician reviews your intake form and issues a completed and signed Qualified Professional form for the Law School Admission Test. You will also receive a detailed letter from the clinician explaining your need for accommodations for testing purposes for the LSAT. Additionally, you will receive a Candidate form that is pre-filled for you. You then review it and sign it electronically using SignWell, an electronic signature service.
Historically, 90% of our patients qualified for a 100% time extension (double time) on the LSAT and 8% qualified for a 50% time extension. Overall, approximately 98% of candidates who applied for LSAT accommodations with our company have been approved. If you do not receive approval for either 50% or 100% extra time, and we fail to appeal it, we will provide you with a full refund back to your original method of payment, under our 100% money-back guarantee.
Our service specializes in disability accommodations for the Law School Admission Test for individuals with anxiety-related disorders.
Common qualifying conditions include:
- Anxiety Disorders (e.g., Generalized Anxiety Disorder, Test/Performance Anxiety, Panic Disorder, Social Anxiety Disorder, and related conditions)
Other anxiety-related psychological conditions that substantially limit major life activities—such as concentration, processing speed, working memory, or test performance on the LSAT—may also qualify.
Eligibility for LSAT accommodations is determined on a case-by-case basis through clinical review.
Fill out the intake form to learn if your anxiety-related situation qualifies for accommodations on the Law School Admission Test.
We recommend that you fill out the intake form and provide as much detail as possible about your anxiety, including how it affects your daily life and performance on the Law School Admission Test. This helps the clinician understand your background and the severity of your symptoms for LSAT disability accommodations. If your anxiety is recognized by the clinician as a qualifying medical condition, they will issue an accommodation letter to support your LSAT request.
We do not submit your LSAT accommodation documentation to LSAC on your behalf. Once your request is fully processed, you will receive your completed accommodation documentation from us via email. That email will also include a clear, step-by-step guide explaining exactly how to upload the documents to your LSAC account. We are here to support you and answer any questions you may have. If you have any difficulties submitting your LSAT accommodation documentation to LSAC, please contact us and we will be happy to assist you further.
Normal processing times for an LSAT accommodation packet are five to seven business days. However, if you'd like to expedite your order for Law School Admission Test accommodations, we offer a 24 hour expedited processing option for an additional fee of $249, which provides you with a 24 hour expedite evaluation and delivery.
Our service does not currently provide LSAT accommodations for physical disabilities, as our clinicians are mental health professionals and not licensed for those types of evaluations.
However, if you are experiencing a high level of anxiety about taking the Law School Admission Test, we recommend filling out the intake form and explaining your full situation. The clinician will determine whether you may qualify for LSAT accommodations due to anxiety-related conditions through our service.
Our clinician will review your answers to the questionnaire in great detail.
The more severe your anxiety disorder is and the more thoroughly you explain your condition — including explaining any difficulties you’ve ever had in the past while taking exams — the higher your chances are for being approved for accommodations.
You are also covered by our 100% Money-Back Guarantee. If your request is denied by our clinical or by LSAC, and we fail to appeal it, then we will issue you a 100% refund to your original payment method.
There is no catch. Our money-back guarantee ensures that you either receive 50% extra time or 100% extra time (double time) on the LSAT, and, optionally, the ability to test remotely from home. If LSAC does not approve you for one of these accommodations, using the documentation we provide you, and we fail to appeal it with LSAC, we will issue you a refund for all or any of the accommodations that you did not get approved, to your original payment method.
If the Law School Admissions Council does not approve the LSAT accommodation letter and documentation, please contact us at info@lsataccommodations.com and provide proof of the LSAC denial. We will work with you to mediate the situation and correct the documentation if possible. If, after reasonable attempts, the LSAT accommodation is still not approved at the 50% or 100% extra-time level, we will issue a full refund to your original payment method.
If you are denied by LSAC for an add-on accommodation such as remote testing, we will attempt to appeal the decision by providing LSAC with additional information. If the main LSAT accommodation is approved but the remote testing accommodation is denied, and we are unable to successfully appeal it, we will issue you a refund for the optional add-on remote testing accommodation fee ($249). Please note that you should not apply for remote testing accommodations while building travel or hotel plans around approval. You must wait until LSAC has fully processed and approved the accommodation before making any financial commitments. We are not responsible for any losses related to hotel costs, changes in travel expenses, or other arrangements resulting from an LSAC denial of remote testing.
There is nothing wrong or shameful about getting disability accommodations for the LSAT. These accommodations for the Law School Admission Test were designed specifically to help people with disabilities gain a fair chance at taking the test and performing to the best of their abilitites, instead of being disadvantaged by their condition.
No. You are not required to show any history or documentation of your disability if you do not have it. You just have to fill out the intake form and allow the clinician to evaluate your entire story as a whole and determine if you qualify for disabilities accommodations for the Law School Admission Test.
For example, if a person is very anxious about taking the LSAT but says that they do not have any symptoms of anxiety, then the clinician could deny the accommodation request.
However, if a person thoroughly explains their anxiety disorder, then there may be a higher chance that the clinician approves their LSAT accommodation.
The deadline to submit your accommodations request to LSAC changes depending on the specific LSAT administration date that you have signed up for, and is subject to LSAC's current terms and conditions. To the best of our knowledge, the last date to submit your LSAT accommodation request is the same date as the last date to register for that Law School Admission Test administration. For example, if the registration deadline for the September 2026 LSAT is July 28th, 2026, then that is typically also the final day that LSAC will allow you to submit your accommodation documentation to them. Therefore, the latest date for you to request an LSAT accommodation evaluation through our website would be no later than 24 hours before the LSAT registration deadline (and choosing our optional 24 hour expedited evaluation and delivery service at checkout). If you have already registered for the LSAT, but the LSAT registration deadline has already passed, reach out directly to the LSAC customer service department to inquire whether they can still accept a late accommodation request for the test date that you have already enrolled in. We strongly recommend checking the official LSAC website for the most up-to-date deadlines for your chosen LSAT administration.
No. You must first register for the LSAT and then submit your accommodations request by the registration deadline for the test date you are signing up for. If the registration deadline has already passed, reach out directly to LSAC support to inquire whether they will still accept a late accommodation request for that test date. We strongly recommend checking the official LSAC website for the most up-to-date deadlines for your chosen LSAT administration.
We do not notify your school of your disability accommodation. Your disability is strictly confidential and protected by HIPAA laws. The only entities that have access to your medical data for this LSAT accommodation transaction are our website, our staff, the clinician assigned to your case, and then, once you submit it to your LSAC portal, the Law School Admissions Council. As of June of 2026, LSAC's policy has been not to notify schools that students used an accommodation while taking the LSAT. However, we recommend you reach out to LSAC directly to verify what their current policies are, as they are subject to change. The universities that you will be applying to for admission to law school will not know that you have qualified for a disability accommodation on the LSAT, and they will not know that you received any extra time or other accommodations on the Law School Admission Test. This will be strictly confidential and never disclosed to your university in any way.
All of the accommodation documentation we provide is specifically written for the LSAT. You should check directly with LSAC for the most current details on validity. As of June 2026, according to LSAC, approved LSAC test accommodations generally remain valid for five years from the date of your last test registration. If your registration is over five years old, LSAC may no longer have records on file, and you will need to submit a new request. Once approved, the same or equivalent accommodations are automatically applied to any future LSATs you take within that 5-year window.
No, absolutely not. LSAT accommodations were designed specifically to allow people with high anxiety disorders, ADHD, and other mental disabilities to have an even playing field and be able to fairly take and pass the Law School Admission Test. You should not feel bad or guilty about it in any way, as long as you answer the intake form truthfully and to the best of your knowledge.
We protect your medical history and your privacy. If you lie on our medical form in order to get an unfair advantage on the Law School Admission Test, then you will be banned from using our website for future LSAT accommodations. However, we will not disclose this to the Law School Admissions Council in any way, nor to the universities you are applying to. This information is protected by medical HIPAA laws and will not leave our company or our clinicians.
For 95% of our patients seeking LSAT accommodations, they will not need to speak to the clinician verbally nor by video, and they will never need to meet any clinician in person to receive a Law School Admission Test accommodation. The entire process is handled through the secure intake form. However, in some very rare instances, the clinician may call the client on the phone number they provided in the intake form, in order to clarify questions about their condition.
The best way to minimize (or eliminate) the chance of a phone call with a provider is to provide as much detailed information as possible in your intake form for Law School Admission Test accommodations. Thoroughly describe your condition, how it makes you feel, how it affects your ability to test on the LSAT, and any past testing experiences where your symptoms interfered with performance. Detailed submissions allow the clinician to make a determination without further questions in most cases.
Our website was built by software engineers who specialize in medical, HIPAA-compliant databases which protect your data and ensure that it is not leaked or shared with anyone other than you, the clinician, and our staff for LSAT accommodations. Our system has safety measures such as requiring our clinicians and our staff to periodically update their passwords and make the passwords extra strong. Our computers are also scanned and analyzed for any unauthorized software so that we can prevent any type of unauthorized access to your information.
We use the payment processor PayPal for Business to process credit cards for LSAT accommodations. The credit card information is never stored by us. The credit card form on our website is provided directly from PayPal. When you enter your credit card information, it goes into a PayPal secure database which is encrypted and is then processed and deleted. We do not have access to your credit card information, and PayPal does not store it either. Also, we only accept payment by debit or credit card. Most banks typically provide their customers with a 0% liability guarantee which protects them when making purchases using a credit or debit card online.
You are also protected by our 100% money-back guarantee which ensures that you get a full refund if our clinician denies your LSAT accommodation request or if the Law School Admissions Council does not approve the accommodation letter after reasonable efforts.
LSATaccommodations.com, provided by American Disabilities Testing Association LLC, is an independent service and is not affiliated with, endorsed by, sponsored by, or associated with the Law School Admission Council (LSAC). LSAC, the LSAT, and related names, trademarks, and services are the property of their respective owners. We do not administer the LSAT, provide testing services, or perform any of the functions offered by LSAC. Our role is limited to helping eligible individuals obtain professional accommodation evaluations and supporting documentation that may be used when submitting accommodation requests to LSAC.
If anxiety or other challenges make taking the LSAT under standard conditions difficult for you, you may qualify for accommodations. Our clinicians specialize in evaluating anxiety-based needs and other conditions that can affect test performance. You do not need prior documentation or an existing diagnosis to apply. Many people who struggle with test anxiety or focus during exams choose to fill out the intake form to allow the licensed mental health clinician to determine if they qualify for an accommodation. The only way to know for sure is to complete our short intake form. Our licensed clinicians will review your information and determine whether accommodations (such as extended time, additional breaks and the ability to test remotely from home) may be appropriate for you.
No, we do not condone falsifying your medical symptoms in order to obtain an LSAT accommodation. LSAT accommodations are intended to help qualified individuals with disabilities receive an equal opportunity to demonstrate their abilities on the exam. The purpose of accommodations is to level the playing field for individuals whose disabilities may substantially affect their test-taking experience, not to provide an unfair advantage over other test takers. We ask all applicants to answer the intake form honestly and accurately so that our clinicians can properly evaluate their circumstances.
Important Disclaimers
LSAC and LSAT Affiliation Disclaimer
"LSAC" and "LSAT" are registered trademarks or service marks of the Law School Admission Council (LSAC). American Disabilities Testing Association LLC (ADTA) is an independent organization and is not affiliated with, endorsed by, sponsored by, or associated with LSAC or the LSAT. Any reference to LSAC or the LSAT on this website is made solely for descriptive and nominative fair use purposes to identify the testing accommodations services we help facilitate. American Disabilities Testing Association LLC assists candidates in obtaining disability accommodations for the LSAT through independent licensed clinicians and does not administer the Law School Admission Test.
Trademark Notice
"ADTA," "American Disabilities Testing Association," and the "ADTA American Disabilities Testing Association" design mark are trademarks of American Disabilities Testing Association LLC (U.S. Patent and Trademark Office Registration Serial No. 99878644).
Dun & Bradstreet Accredited Business
American Disabilities Testing Association LLC is a Dun & Bradstreet registered business. D-U-N-S® Number: 145043025.
Testing and Diagnosis Disclaimer
ADTA is a platform that connects users with independent licensed clinicians for the purpose of obtaining documentation to support LSAT accommodation requests. We do not provide medical or psychological diagnoses.
Any evaluation or documentation provided by a clinician through our platform is intended solely for use in requesting LSAT or other testing accommodations. It should not be interpreted as a formal medical or psychological diagnosis for any other purpose.
If you have concerns about any clinical information you receive, we strongly recommend consulting your own licensed mental health professional for a comprehensive evaluation.
Dispute Resolution and Refund Policy
If your request for an LSAT accommodation is not approved by a clinician or by LSAC, we will first attempt to resolve the issue in good faith. If we are unable to resolve the matter, you will receive a 100% refund of your purchase.
By using this website and agreeing to our Terms of Use, you agree that any and all disputes arising from your use of the site or our services shall be resolved exclusively through binding arbitration administered by the American Arbitration Association (AAA) in the State of Florida.
You further agree to waive your right to sue the Company in any court, whether individually or as part of a class action, collective action, or representative proceeding. This waiver applies to all claims, whether brought in your individual capacity or on behalf of others. For complete details, please refer to our full Terms of Use.
