CourseVerdict

Nova's LSAT Prep Course vs Magoosh ACT Prep

Same Bayesian formula, same rubric — so the difference in scores reflects the difference in the courses, not the difference in how we evaluated them.

Nova Press / Jeff Kolby (Udemy) · Test Prep

Nova's LSAT Prep Course

3.3/ 5 · 25 opinions
14 positive6 neutral5 negative/ 25 total

Magoosh · Test Prep

Magoosh ACT Prep

3.8/ 5 · 22 opinions
16 positive4 neutral2 negative/ 22 total

Per-criterion

Content quality3.4 / 5

The course delivers 403 lectures across 8.5 hours, working through fundamental logic principles — contrapositives, if-then chains, pivotal words — drawn from Nova Press's 560-page Master The LSAT book. Amazon reviews of the underlying book highlight thorough coverage of analytical reasoning and a clear step-by-step breakdown of argument structure. The critical content issue that every independent reviewer and community discussion now flags is currency: Logic Games (the Analytical Reasoning section) were permanently removed from the LSAT beginning August 2024, and any course built substantially around that section is teaching material no longer on the test. The Logical Reasoning and Reading Comprehension coverage is more durable, but the absence of an explicit update addressing the format change is a real gap.

Instructor3.7 / 5

Jeff Kolby of Nova Press carries genuine credentials — 20+ years in test preparation, millions of students reached through Nova's print materials, and a bestselling Amazon ranking for the Master The LSAT book. Amazon book reviewers describe the Nova approach as highly analytical and structured, with solid foundations for argument deconstruction. The honest deduction is that Kolby is primarily known as a publisher and author rather than an on-screen LSAT video instructor, and with only 187 Udemy enrolments the teaching format has had limited real-world stress-testing relative to competitors like 7Sage or Blueprint. Community discussions on Reddit do not mention him by name in the way that Blueprint or LSAT Demon instructors are cited.

Value for money4.1 / 5

This is where the course is hardest to argue against. At a typical sale price of $12-20 with lifetime access, it provides the equivalent of a two-month course framework for roughly the cost of a textbook — compared to $699-$1,899 for Blueprint, Princeton Review, or Kaplan. The onlinecoursespro.com review gives it 4.2/5 overall and cites the 30-day money-back guarantee, free course updates, and iOS/Android access as genuine extras at the price. The honest caveat is that the low price also reflects a small enrolled community (187 students) and a curriculum that has not been explicitly updated for the post-August 2024 LSAT format, which is a meaningful real cost in wasted study time if you are sitting the current exam.

Practice material2.6 / 5

The course is built around teaching logic principles through the Nova Press curriculum, not around supplying high-volume practice. There are no embedded full-length LSAT practice tests and no original question bank; Reddit's r/LSAT community consistently warns that effective LSAT prep requires drilling with official LSAC questions from LawHub, and no Udemy course can replicate that. Independent community reviewers note that the most cost-effective practice resource is free — Khan Academy's official LSAC-partnered prep — which raises the bar for what a paid course must add. The practice-materials gap here is the widest of the five criteria.

Score improvement3.2 / 5

Nova Press's own marketing claims "your score will improve significantly" if you master the course material, and Amazon reviews of the underlying book include anecdotes of successful law school admission after following the study plan. Community opinion gathered from LSAT forums and Reddit threads is more measured: structured prep courses are broadly credited with 10-15 point improvements versus unguided self-study, but reviewers consistently note those gains require pairing any video course with heavy LawHub official practice. At a competitive level, LSAT Demon, 7Sage, and Blueprint are the platforms cited when score improvement is the primary goal.

Content quality4.2 / 5

Magoosh ACT Prep covers all four ACT sections — English, Math, Reading, and Science — across 250+ video lessons, with optional Writing content available. The course has been updated for the Enhanced ACT format, and reviewers at EduReviewer and Sojourning Scholar confirm that the content accurately reflects current exam structure and difficulty. Lead instructor Erika holds 99th-percentile scores on the ACT, SAT, GRE, and GMAT, lending strong credibility to the instruction. A critical note from the PrepScholar comparison blog is that some video lessons were found to contain errors in ACT scoring system information, which slightly offsets the otherwise strong content quality score.

Instructor4.0 / 5

The teaching team at Magoosh is consistently described as "personable and clear" by Test Prep Insight reviewers, and students specifically cite strategy-first instruction that goes beyond memorisation — teaching how to "find the main idea quickly and beat the clock" and providing "tips and tricks to improve overall score." Lead tutor Erika's 99th-percentile credentials are prominently featured. The main criticism is the whiteboard-style video format, which multiple reviewers describe as slightly "on the boring side" despite being instructionally sound. The PrepScholar comparison also flagged specific lesson errors in earlier versions of the course, which Magoosh has since addressed in updated modules.

Value for money4.5 / 5

Magoosh ACT Prep is widely regarded as the best-value ACT prep option in the industry. At $99–$129 for 12-month access — or as little as $79 for a one-month plan — it costs roughly one-tenth of traditional private tutoring ($1,000+) and significantly less than Kaplan ($449–$1,000+) or Princeton Review ($799–$1,599). The 82,000+ students served and a backed +4 point score improvement guarantee (or full refund) are strong signals of institutional confidence in the product. Both Test Prep Insight (9.0/10) and EduReviewer (4.6/5) cite value as Magoosh's single strongest dimension.

Practice material3.8 / 5

The course includes 1,500+ practice questions and four full-length ACT practice tests, each with detailed video and text explanations for every question — a distinctive feature not found in all competitors. Customisable practice drills allow targeted section work. The main limitation, flagged by both Test Prep Insight and the PrepScholar comparison blog, is that the four practice tests are generated from the same question bank rather than being fully unique exams, creating potential overlap if a student cycles through all four. Princeton Review offers 11 simulated ACTs to Magoosh's four, making Magoosh thinner on full-test volume for students who need repeated full-exam simulation.

Score improvement4.2 / 5

Magoosh's own review page documents seventeen score improvement entries from students who reached final scores of 28–34, with individual improvements ranging from +1 to +12 composite points. The most commonly reported gains are +3 to +5 points. One student improved from 28 to 33 using Magoosh exclusively. The company reports helping more than 82,000 students, and their score improvement data page (Magoosh Schools Blog) shows that users outperform national averages when they commit 30–40 hours of preparation. The guaranteed +4-point improvement for students scoring under 30 is a meaningful benchmark backed by a refund policy.

Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.