LENS·LAW.
Where you really stand on the LNAT — the multiple-choice score AND an honestly-marked essay.
A ~67-minute diagnostic at the real LNAT's pace: twelve critical-reading and logical-reasoning questions under a live clock, then one 40-minute argumentative essay that is actually marked — by AI, to the LNAT rubric, at temperature zero, so the same essay always earns the same grade. You leave with your critical-reasoning score — how well you break down and judge written arguments — on the 42-mark scale, a real essay grade with the reasoning behind it, and one honest verdict on whether you need coaching or just a plan. If you're already there, we'll say so plainly — you don't need any paid prep or coaching, just a plan you can run yourself. That's the point.
AED 199 INCL. VAT · REPORT IN ~15 MINNot a practice paper. A measurement.
The LNAT is two tests in one — a multiple-choice reasoning section that a deterministic engine can score to the mark, and an essay that most online tools quietly refuse to touch. LENS does both, at the real LNAT's pace: twelve argument-passage questions decided by the text and its reasoning alone, then one 40-minute essay that is genuinely read and graded on the things examiners care about.
| Section | Questions | Time | Pace | Marking |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Critical Reading & Logical Reasoning | 12 | 27 min | 135s/Q | Deterministic |
| Essay | 1 essay | 40 min | One sitting | AI — LNAT rubric |
~67 timed minutes: 27 for the multiple-choice section, 40 for the essay. The multiple-choice section runs at the real LNAT's own pace — every answer is decided by the passage and its reasoning, never outside legal knowledge. The essay is one argumentative piece: choose a prompt, take a clear position, and defend it in about 500–600 words. Section order is fixed, the timer never pauses, and a finished section is locked, just like test day.
Three questions this test answers
Wherever you are right now, LENS·LAW gives a straight answer — no upselling, no vague “keep practising.”
My critical-reasoning score
Your projected multiple-choice score on the 42-mark LNAT scale, anchored to how UK applicants actually score nationally — so you plan from a real number, not a guess or a random practice-book percentage. The reasoning section is scored to the mark by a deterministic engine: identical answers always get the identical result.
How good is my essay, really?
Not a word count and a smiley face — a real grade, marked on the four things that actually matter: whether you defend a clear position, whether the structure holds, whether you write with economy, and whether you engage with the counter-arguments instead of ignoring them. The AI reads it the way an LNAT examiner would.
Do I need coaching, or a plan?
If focused self-prep with free official LNAT materials will get you to your target, the report says exactly that and hands you the plan. If structured help genuinely pays, it says that instead — and shows the reasoning either way.
What the report gives you
One honest verdict
Ready / targeted fix / structured prep / rethink the plan — decided by fixed rules, with the reasoning shown. If you don't need paid help, the report says so and names free official resources instead.
Your MCQ score, as a range
Your projected critical-reasoning score on the 0–42 LNAT scale, anchored to how UK applicants actually score nationally — a range, not false precision — against the score competitive law programmes actually look for.
A grade, and why
Your essay marked on a clear scale against four rubric criteria — defended position, structure, economy, engagement with counter-arguments — with the specific reasoning behind the mark. Pasted text is flagged.
Week by week
A focused plan to your chosen sitting, guidance across the LNAT/LSAT cycle, and a parent one-pager in plain language. If a sitting can't be validly scored, the re-sit is on us.
Backed by AI that thinks like a top tutor
Two engines, one report. Your multiple-choice marks are scored by fixed rules, so the numbers are always fair and consistent — identical answers always get the identical result. Your essay is read by AI at temperature zero against a fixed rubric, so the same essay always earns the same grade. Then the AI reads the pattern behind it all the way a sharp tutor would, and surfaces the smart, specific things most reports never reach:
Where you really lose marks
It separates a reasoning-section weakness from an essay-craft weakness — because the fixes are completely different, and mistaking one for the other is how students waste months drilling the wrong thing.
What's holding you back
It finds the single skill quietly dragging your whole profile down — a habit of ignoring the counter-argument, say, or rushing the passage — the highest-yield thing to fix first, the way a great tutor spots it in five minutes instead of five weeks.
How long it actually takes
It turns the gap to your target into an honest number of focused weeks against the sitting you're aiming for — so you never have to guess whether you have enough runway before test day.
The AI writes the insight and marks the essay to the rubric; it never touches your multiple-choice score. That is exactly what keeps the report both smart and fair — and it's why students and parents actually act on it.
The multiple-choice engine is deterministic and the essay is marked by AI at temperature zero to a fixed rubric — so two students with identical work always get the identical result, and the call is decided before a single word of advice is written. If the honest answer is “self-prep with free official materials,” that is the verdict that prints. We sell nothing inside the report — no coaching company can copy that sentence.
How it works
Get your code
Enrol for AED 199 (incl. VAT). Your one-time access code and the exam-conditions sheet arrive by email. Codes stay valid for 14 days.
Sit it properly
~67 quiet minutes, laptop or tablet, one sitting: the multiple-choice reasoning section at real LNAT pace, then the 40-minute essay — the timer never pauses.
Read the call
The report lands in ~15 minutes: your reasoning score, your essay grade with the reasoning behind it, and one honest verdict with the plan to act on it.
- One ~67-minute sitting at the real LNAT's pace
- Critical-reasoning score on the 42-mark scale
- A full argumentative essay, honestly marked to the LNAT rubric
- Full PDF report to student + parent — one honest verdict + weekly plan
- Free re-sit if a sitting can't be validly scored
Questions, answered straight
Law applicants
Students applying to LNAT or LSAT law programmes — anyone who wants to know where they stand on the reasoning section and, just as importantly, whether their essay actually holds up, before spending anything on prep. It's an LNAT-format sitting; LSAT applicants use it to test the same critical-reasoning and argument skills.
Yes — properly
Not a word count and a template. The essay is read by AI to the LNAT rubric — defended position, structure, economy, engagement with counter-arguments — at temperature zero, so the same essay always earns the same grade. Pasted text is flagged.
~67 minutes
27 minutes for the twelve-question reasoning section at the real LNAT's pace, then 40 minutes for the essay. One sitting, timer never pauses — exactly the shape of the real thing.
~15 minutes, emailed
The full PDF report is generated and emailed about 15 minutes after you submit — to you and your parent.