Academic Transcripts

Your transcripts provide a complete record of your academic history, and law schools use them to examine the types of courses you’ve taken and the success you’ve had in the classroom. Because of that, law schools will want to review all the transcripts that contributed to your undergraduate degree, as well as transcripts for graduate courses or other higher education institutions you may have attended — even if you didn’t earn a degree.

You should provide transcripts from:

  • Community colleges

  • Undergraduate and graduate institutions

  • Law, medical, or professional institutions

  • Institutions you attended for summer or evening courses

  • Institutions you attended, even though you never received a degree

  • Institutions from which you took college-level classes while in high school, even though they were for high school credit

  • Institutions that clearly sponsored your overseas studies (i.e., the courses received the sponsoring institution’s credit and were not included as transfer credit on your degree-granting institution’s transcript)

  • International transcripts, if applicable

You must send transcripts even if:

  • Credit was transferred from one institution and appears on another institution’s transcript

  • The institution is unaccredited

  • The institution is closed

  • "Withdraw" or "Incomplete" are the only grades listed

  • You have just enrolled

How to Request U.S. Transcripts

To request your transcripts, log in to JD Services and select the “Credentials & CAS” tab. Under the “Actions and Information” heading, select “Add Institutions.” Once you’ve entered all the institutions you’ve attended, visit the “Transcripts” page of your account, where you’ll find a link to the Transcript Request Form with each school listing. Transcripts must be sent to LSAC directly from the registrar’s office of each institution OR from one of the following approved electronic transcript transfer sources:

  • National Student Clearinghouse

  • Credentials Solutions

  • Scrip-Safe

  • Parchment

  • MyCreds (select Law School Admission Council from the list of Institutional Recipients)

We’ll process your U.S. transcripts within two weeks of the date they are received. Additional time is required to process and evaluate transcripts from international institutions that you attended for more than one year.

Note: You may request updated transcripts at the conclusion of a semester while an application is under review, and you are required to request that a final transcript (which includes the date on which your degree was conferred) be sent to LSAC.

How to Request International Transcripts

To request an international transcript, print and send the Transcript Request Form to the school and request they mail it, with your official transcript, to LSAC in a school-sealed envelope. Our mailing address will be shown on the transcript request form. You can access the form by selecting the “Transcript Request Form” link under each institution’s listing on the “Transcripts” page of JD Services.

The academic record must be issued by the institution’s central administrative office responsible for preparing and verifying official student records. It must be sent directly to LSAC by the issuing institution, in a securely closed envelope, and with the institution’s official stamp or seal across the securely closed flap. All international educational records must be provided in the original language. If the transcript or other required documents are not in English, a translation must be included.

Note: If you studied abroad through an international school for an equivalent of one year (or more) of credit, you must submit transcripts from those institutions. An international credential evaluation will be completed to determine degree and credit equivalency to degrees or credit earned in the U.S. Even if you studied abroad for less than a year, you may want to request those transcripts to allow law schools to see your grades — especially if you performed well in those classes.