5-Star Rated by Students
LSAT & Law School Accommodations
We support and empower students with cognitive, physical, and mental health challenges by providing advocacy and guidance, ensuring you can fully focus on your LSAT exam and future goals.
* Get the support you deserve to succeed at every step of your law journey — from the LSAT, GRE, MPRE, Grad school, and admissions to law school exams, interviews, and the bar.
How It Works
If something about the LSAT doesn’t work for you the way it should, you shouldn’t have to figure out the system alone. We help translate your real-world struggles into an accommodations request that actually makes sense to LSAC.
Here’s what that looks like in practice:
- Identify the accommodations that match your actual test-day challenges.
- Guide your provider on what LSAC needs to see in your documentation.
- Review and organize your request before it’s submitted.

Eligibility
Most students don't know if they qualify. That's normal. Eligibility isn't about labels.
It's about how your condition affects your testing.
The student must have a physical, visual, or mental impairment that substantially limits one or more major life functions.
The student must submit valid documentation of the disability from a qualified professional, such as a licensed healthcare provider.
The disability must meaningfully impact the student's ability to take the LSAT under standard testing conditions.
LSAC ultimately determines eligibility based on these criteria and the documentation submitted.
What Your Provider Does vs. What We Do
Understanding our distinct roles in the LSAT accommodations process.
Your Provider
- Diagnoses or confirms condition
- Writes medical documentation
- Treats symptoms
JD Mentors
- Translates symptoms into approvable accommodations
- Ensures documentation meets LSAC standards
- Identifies weak points before submission
- Reduces the risk of denial due to procedural or technical issues
- Handles strategy, framing, and timing
How JD Mentors Gets You Approved
We guide you through every step of the LSAT accommodations process.
Strategy Call
(30 minutes)

We start with a private consultation where we learn how your condition actually affects your test-day performance. Timing issues, focus breakdowns, fatigue, panic, reading speed, memory, physical limitations. This is not a diagnosis call. It's a strategy call.
Accommodation Mapping

Based on your symptoms and testing history, we determine which accommodations you should request and which ones are realistically approvable under LSAC standards. Extra time, stop-the-clock breaks, screen readers, separate testing rooms, assistive tech, etc.
Documentation Coordination

We guide you on exactly what your provider needs to write, how it should be framed, and what LSAC actually looks for. If revisions are needed, we help you request them. No guesswork. No generic letters.
Application Review

We review every piece of your submission before it's sent. Forms, statements, documentation. We make sure it's complete, consistent, and defensible.
Submission & Follow-Through

We stay with you through submission and responses. If LSAC asks follow-ups or clarification, we help you respond.
Conditions Commonly Supported by LSAT Accommodations
These are examples. You don’t need to match a label to qualify.
Autism Spectrum
Focus, sensory overload, transitions, communication

Visual Impairments
Low vision, eye strain, screen fatigue
Hearing Impairments
Audio processing, proctor communication
Physical / Mobility
Pain, movement, positioning, stamina
Learning Disabilities
Reading speed, processing, comprehension, memory
Mental Health
Anxiety, panic, mood instability, focus
Traumatic Brain Injury
Processing speed, memory, fatigue
Speech/Communication
Verbal responses, timing, stress
You don’t need to see yourself in a box. If something interferes with your ability to test under standard conditions, it’s worth exploring.
We Make Disability Accommodations Simple
— Get Clear, Effective, Step-by-Step Guidance
Receive expert guidance to secure accommodations and manage your symptoms, so you can focus entirely on your exam performance.
Expert Advice • Ask Anything Freely • Fast Response Guaranteed
