Latest Update
CLAT & AILET patterns are officially published on their respective official sites. LSAT—India acceptance can vary by year and by college—always verify what your target university is accepting for your admission cycle.
Verified-first approach
1) What are CLAT, AILET, and LSAT—India?
CLAT (Common Law Admission Test)
A national-level entrance route to most National Law Universities (NLUs) and several partner institutions. If your goal is “top NLUs across India”, CLAT is usually the primary path.
AILET (All India Law Entrance Test)
The dedicated exam for admission into National Law University, Delhi (NLU Delhi) for UG/PG/PhD programmes. If NLU Delhi is your top target, AILET matters as much as CLAT—sometimes even more.
LSAT—India
A reasoning-heavy law admission test that many private universities historically used. However, acceptance and availability can change by admission cycle and by university (some institutions have moved to alternatives like LNAT or their own tests). Treat LSAT—India as “college-specific” and always confirm the latest admission notice of your target colleges.
Quick Fact Box (2026 snapshot)
| Exam | What it’s best for | Duration | Questions / Marking | Core Sections |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CLAT UG | Most NLUs + many partner colleges | 120 minutes | 120 MCQs; +1 / -0.25 (official UG-2026 pattern) | English, GK/CA, Legal Reasoning, Logical Reasoning, Quant |
| AILET UG | NLU Delhi (UG/PG/PhD admissions) | 120 minutes | 150 MCQs; negative marking -0.25 per wrong (official AILET-2026) | English, GK/CA, Logical Reasoning |
| LSAT—India | Private colleges (college-specific acceptance) | Varies by cycle | Reasoning-heavy sections; check your target college’s latest admission notice | Reading Comprehension + Logical/Analytical Reasoning focus |
Note: Always follow the official notification for your cycle. If any private college updates its admission test (LNAT/JSAT/own test), prioritize the college notice over old blogs/older guides.
2) The real difference: What each exam actually rewards
CLAT = “Reading + Reasoning under time + Current Affairs discipline”
- Passage-based questions dominate: you must read fast, understand arguments, and answer without overthinking.
- Legal reasoning + GK/CA typically makes or breaks rank.
- Quant is not “JEE-level” — but it punishes weak basics and slow calculations.
AILET = “Logical reasoning dominance + accuracy pressure”
- Logical reasoning has heavy weight in the UG scheme; you need strong practice depth, not just “tips”.
- English and GK still matter, but LR is the differentiator at top ranks.
- Negative marking makes guesswork expensive.
LSAT—India = “Pure aptitude: comprehension + analytical/logical reasoning”
- Less about memorizing legal GK; more about reasoning quality.
- Good for students who are strong readers and puzzle-solvers.
- Because acceptance can vary by college/cycle, treat it as a “target-college strategy,” not a universal plan.
Differences Table (student-friendly)
| Factor | CLAT | AILET | LSAT—India |
|---|---|---|---|
| Primary purpose | Most NLUs + partner institutes | NLU Delhi admissions | Private colleges (varies) |
| Core skill | Reading + legal reasoning + CA discipline | High-level logical reasoning + accuracy | Comprehension + analytical/logical reasoning |
| Prep style | Daily reading + weekly CA revision + mocks | LR drills + timed practice + review mistakes | Reasoning sets + RC practice + timed sections |
| Common mistake | Ignoring CA or overdoing “theory notes” | Doing LR without analysis; repeating the same errors | Treating it like GK-based exams; not timing sections |
3) How to prepare (the practical way, not the “motivation talk”)
CLAT Preparation Strategy
Focus: Reading + Legal + CA
Daily (60–90 mins):
- Read 2 quality articles (editorial + explainers). Write 5-bullet summary in your own words.
- English RC practice: 2 passages timed (quality > quantity).
- Legal reasoning practice: 20–30 questions (passage-based).
Weekly:
- Current Affairs: revise weekly notes + 1 monthly compilation.
- Quant basics: ratios, percentages, averages, time-work, data interpretation (short sets).
- 1 sectional mock + 1 full mock (then review mistakes properly).
CLAT score booster rule: After every mock, write down:
(a) why you got wrong, (b) what pattern repeated, (c) what you’ll do next week to stop it.
(a) why you got wrong, (b) what pattern repeated, (c) what you’ll do next week to stop it.
AILET Preparation Strategy
Focus: Logical Reasoning + Accuracy
Daily (70–100 mins):
- Logical reasoning drill: 40–60 questions (timed), mixed difficulty.
- English: 1 RC + 15 vocab/context questions.
- GK/CA: 20–30 minutes (focus on high-impact national + international topics).
Weekly:
- 2 sectional LR tests + 1 full-length AILET mock.
- Review is mandatory: Identify “trap patterns” (assumption, inference, strengthening, weakening).
Accuracy rule for AILET: If you are guessing, you are bleeding marks. Build “attempt discipline” and attempt only when your reasoning is clean.
LSAT—India Preparation Strategy
Focus: RC + Analytical/Logical
Daily (60–90 mins):
- Reading comprehension: 2 passages timed + summarize argument structure.
- Analytical reasoning: puzzle sets (arrangements, grouping, sequencing).
- Logical reasoning: assumption, inference, principle, flaw, strengthen/weaken.
Weekly:
- 2 timed sections + 1 full test simulation (if your target colleges still use this score).
- Maintain an “error log” with reasoning type + why you missed it.
Important: Before investing heavily, confirm which colleges you want and what test they accept for your admission year (some have moved to LNAT/own tests).
4) 90-Day Preparation Timeline (works for CLAT + AILET together)
| Phase | Days | Main Goal | What you do | Mock plan |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Foundation | Day 1–30 | Build reading speed + accuracy basics | Daily RC + Legal reasoning + LR drills + CA notes; Quant basics 3 days/week | 1 sectional mock/week |
| Performance | Day 31–60 | Convert practice into exam scores | Timed mixed sets, strengthen weak sections, weekly CA revision, error log discipline | 1 full mock/week + 1 sectional |
| Rank Push | Day 61–90 | Stabilize score + master time management | Full mocks, strict review, last-minute CA consolidation, attempt strategy finalization | 2 full mocks/week + deep analysis |
Daily time suggestion (if you’re in school/college):
2.5–3.5 hours/day is enough if it’s structured:
- RC + English: 45 mins
- Legal Reasoning: 45 mins
- Logical Reasoning: 45 mins
- Current Affairs: 30 mins
- Quant (alternate days): 30 mins
Safety Section: Don’t lose marks to avoidable mistakes
1) Random guessing is expensive
Negative marking means “attempt discipline” is a real strategy. Build accuracy first, then push attempts.
2) Don’t memorize “law” for legal reasoning
Most questions are passage-based. Practice applying principles to facts; that’s where marks come from.
3) Your mock analysis matters more than your mock count
“I gave 40 mocks” means nothing if you repeat the same errors. Keep an error log and revisit it weekly.
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FAQ: CLAT, AILET & LSAT—India (2026 aspirants)
Should I prepare for CLAT and AILET together?
Yes. The overlap is strong (English + GK/CA + reasoning). Add extra logical reasoning depth for AILET, and keep CLAT-style legal reasoning + quant in your routine.
What section should I prioritize first?
Start with reading habit + RC + reasoning. Once your reading speed stabilizes, your accuracy improves across legal and logical sections automatically.
Is LSAT—India still relevant for admissions?
It depends on your target colleges and admission year. Some institutions have shifted to alternatives (like LNAT/JSAT/own tests). Always verify the latest admission notice of the colleges you are applying to before planning your entire preparation around LSAT—India.
How many mocks are enough?
Enough mocks to make your score stable. A practical target:
10–15 full mocks (with deep review) + weekly section tests. Quality of analysis is the real secret.
10–15 full mocks (with deep review) + weekly section tests. Quality of analysis is the real secret.
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