The four levers that actually move a Georgetown decision.
Most applicants obsess over LSAT and GPA. Georgetown evaluates four. Each one is a lever you can pull deliberately — not a number you receive passively.
Numbers
171/3.93 medians. The 25th is 166 — wider than peer T14s. Below median requires the next three to compensate.
Narrative
A personal statement that demonstrates a thesis about your career. Not "why Georgetown" — why this work next.
Signal
Letters that vouch for legal aptitude specifically. A strong professor beats a famous senator.
Fit
The DC argument. Why Georgetown, in DC, in this moment, for this student. Specific. Researched. Earned.
What does your file look like?
Set your numbers. The model returns a Georgetown-specific verdict — calibrated against the actual 25/50/75 percentiles in Georgetown's Fall 2025 ABA 509 disclosure and the 15.8% overall acceptance rate.
Where your LSAT puts you — and what to do about it.
Each band has a different strategy. The mistake is treating Georgetown as one decision. It is four different decisions, depending on where you start. Bands set against Georgetown's Fall 2025 25/75 of 166–173.
Two files. Same numbers. Different outcomes.
Anonymized from Lovare's database. Both at-median Georgetown applicants. The difference was not the numbers. It was the architecture of the file.
"The Middle East analyst who picked Georgetown for one specific reason."
Personal statement opened with a CIA briefing room. Closed with the specific Georgetown national security clinic she'd already met with. Why-Georgetown wasn't generic — it was a research memo.
"The valedictorian whose statement read like a résumé."
Strong on paper. Late in the cycle. Statement listed accomplishments. Why-Georgetown said "ranked top 14." No clinic mentioned. No DC argument. The file had nothing the next 200 files didn't have.
The cycle is not linear. Apply on the right day.
Georgetown opens September 2 and uses rolling admissions through March 2 (strongly recommended deadline). Decisions arrive 8–12 weeks after the file is complete; ED decisions in 4–6 weeks. The same file submitted October versus February is not the same file.
The actual frameworks Lovare students use.
The Thesis Statement Architecture
Georgetown's PS prompt is fully open-ended. The four-paragraph structure for a personal statement that proves a career thesis instead of recounting a story.
Open frameworkWhy-Georgetown Research Memo
The exact research process for writing a why-Georgetown that names specific clinics, professors, and DC integrations — not "Top 14" filler.
Open frameworkThe Letter-of-Rec Brief
The one-page brief you give to a recommender so they write a letter that covers legal aptitude, not character traits or generic achievement.
Open frameworkSplitter Addendum + ED Strategy
How to use Georgetown's binding ED + an addendum to convert a 167–169 LSAT into a story Georgetown wants to admit. Real ED math included.
Open frameworkTen things every Georgetown file must do.
Six mistakes that burn at-median files.
Generic why-school
"Top 14 ranking" is not a why-Georgetown. It's a why-anywhere. Names a clinic and a faculty member or doesn't ship.
Late submission
Submitting in February with at-median numbers is a self-inflicted wound. Decisions take 8–12 weeks. The seats are gone.
Personal statement = résumé
Listing accomplishments in narrative form is not a story. It's a self-reported brag. Show, don't tell.
Famous-name letters
The senator your dad knows wrote you a letter. He doesn't know your legal mind. A professor you worked with for two years beats this every time.
No addendum below median
Submitting a 167 LSAT with no explanation is leaving money on the table. The addendum is free, optional, and read every time.
Stale stats
Citing a 173 median when Fall 2025 ABA 509 says 171 — or vice versa — flags you as not paying attention to the file you're applying to.