What GPA do you need for Howard Law? The honest frame: GPA is one of two numbers that decide this file, it is the one you can no longer move, and the committee reads it with more nuance than a cutoff. This page gives the actual numbers, how Howard Law interprets them, and the doctrine that follows from a fixed GPA and a live LSAT.
MetricFigureReadMedian GPA (LSAC)3.44The class center25th percentile3.2The pressure lineMedian LSAT153The other half of the fileAcceptance rate~28%Context for both numbers
Howard Law evaluates your LSAC cumulative GPArecalculated from every undergraduate transcript you’ve ever generated, including transfer credits, community-college summer courses, and that withdrawn semester, under LSAC’s uniform rules. It can differ materially from your degree GPA in either direction. Pull your CAS report before building a school list; applicants regularly discover they are aiming with the wrong number.
The class profile: a 3.44 median with a 25th percentile at 3.2, meaning a quarter of admits arrive below 3.2, virtually all of them with compensating strength elsewhere in the file. Read your own position against those lines, then apply the doctrine: GPA establishes the question, LSAT supplies the answer. Howard Law admits sub-25th-GPA candidates every cycle, almost always on the strength of a score that makes the admit defensible in the published medians. If your transcript is the weakness, your testing calendar is the response.
The strategic asymmetry of every application: your GPA is history and your LSAT is a decision. Hours spent re-litigating the transcript, explaining, regretting, gaming addenda, return nothing; the same hours on structured test preparation move the one number Howard Law can still watch change. An addendum has a job (one paragraph, factual, for genuine anomalies: illness, family crisis, a documented bad year). Everything else flows to the variable that votes.
The median is 3.44, with the 25th percentile at 3.2. There is no cutoff, below the 25th, admission runs through a strong LSAT and a coherent file rather than through the transcript.
Yes, it is the standard splitter path, and the only compensation the math reliably honors. A score above the 153 median answers most transcript questions; nothing else in the file carries comparable weight.
It evaluates the LSAC cumulative GPA, computed under uniform rules from every undergraduate transcript, which can land above or below your degree GPA. Pull your CAS report; that figure is the one every number on this page refers to.
Whatever the transcript says, the strategic posture is identical: honesty about position, brevity about anomalies, and full investment in the variable with a future. Howard Law admits imperfect GPAs every cycle, attached to scores that settled the question. Build that file.