Start Your Journey to India’s Top Law Schools
The Common Law Admission Test (CLAT) is a national-level entrance exam for admission into prestigious National Law Universities (NLUs) and leading private law schools across India. With a competitive exam structure and high applicant volume, smart preparation with expert guidance significantly improves selection chances.
Boards We Cater To

CBSE

ICSE/ISC

IGCSE

IB
Signs CLAT May Be a Good Fit for You
CLAT tends to be right for students who

Enjoy reading & reasoning

Like current affairs & legal topics

Have strong comprehension skills

Want structured professional careers

Prefer debating, writing, or policy topics

Want to pursue law as an undergrad degree
Program Features

Live - classes Sessions

Sectional assignments

Daily practice questions

Weekly tests + monthly mocks

Mentor support for improvement
What You Will Learn
English Language
- RC passages
- Grammar & vocabulary
- Critical reasoning in reading
Current Affairs & GK
- National & international events
- Legal updates
- History, Polity, Economy
Legal Reasoning
- Reading-based case scenarios
- Legal principles application
- Argument & reasoning skills
Logical Reasoning
- Analytical & critical reasoning
- Patterns, arguments, inferences
Quantitative Techniques
- Basic math (up to Class 10 level)
- Data interpretation & charts
Why CLAT Matters
- 26+ NLUs (for 5-year BA LLB and LLM)
- Top private universities & law schools
- Legal programs in public & private institutions
- PSU recruitment in some cases
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Students Speak
Aryan Agarwal - Class 12 - Maths
Abhiraj Singh - Class 9 - Maths & Science
Mahika- Class 11 - NEET Physics
Darsh Jain - Class 10 - Maths & Science
Ahad - Class 10 - Maths & Science
FAQ
Ideally from Class 11 for best results; however, many students successfully crack from Class 12 or via drop-year preparation.
No. Legal reasoning questions only test understanding of logic, not pre-existing legal knowledge.
Yes, the exam is conducted in English and reading comprehension is a major component.
Yes. Typically -0.25 for every incorrect answer.
Many leading private law schools accept CLAT scores. Others conduct their own exams (e.g., LSAT—India).


