Legal Reasoning is the section that scares most beginners and rewards most planners. Here is the secret nobody tells you on day one: CLAT Legal Reasoning is not a law exam. You are not expected to know the Indian Penal Code, the Constitution, or any statute. Every question hands you the law you need inside the passage. Your only job is to apply it carefully. Master that skill and roughly a quarter of the paper becomes your strongest section.
This guide walks you through everything: what the section actually measures, the passage-and-principle format step by step, the marks and time strategy, a repeatable 4-step method, the traps that quietly steal marks, and worked examples in real CLAT style. We finish with a four-week plan and a tight nutshell summary. By the end you will know precisely how to attack every clat legal reasoning question you meet.
What Legal Reasoning actually tests
After the Consortium of NLUs redesigned the paper, Legal Reasoning stopped being about memorised legal trivia. The modern format is comprehension-based. You read a passage of around 450 words that may discuss a legal situation, a public-policy issue, a moral question, or a recent development. The passage either states a legal principle outright or contains the rule you must infer. Questions then test whether you can apply that rule cleanly to new facts.
This shift matters for how you prepare. The old exam rewarded the student who had crammed the most sections and case names. The new exam rewards the student who reads carefully, thinks precisely, and stays disciplined under pressure. Those are skills you can build in weeks — which is exactly why a well-planned candidate can turn this section into reliable, repeatable marks.
- ✓Identify the principle — pin down the exact rule the passage supplies.
- ✓Apply it to facts — map the rule onto a fresh scenario without adding anything.
- ✓Spot exceptions and qualifiers — notice words like 'unless', 'only', 'provided' that change the outcome.
- ✓Reason to a conclusion — pick the option the principle forces, even if it feels harsh.
- ✓Stay inside the passage — ignore any outside law you happen to know.
The passage-principle format, step by step
Almost every Legal Reasoning question follows the same hidden skeleton: Principle + Facts → Conclusion. Learn to see this skeleton and the section becomes mechanical rather than mysterious.
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The principle (the rule)A general statement of law given in or drawn from the passage — for example, 'a person who keeps a dangerous animal is liable for the harm it causes'. This is your one source of truth. Treat it as gospel for that question, even if you think the real law differs.
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The facts (the scenario)A short story that the question attaches to the principle — who did what, to whom, and how. The facts are deliberately chosen to test whether the principle applies, partly applies, or does not apply at all.
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The conclusion (the answer)The result you reach by laying the principle over the facts. There is only one logically correct conclusion. Your task is to find it, not to decide what would be fair or what you would do in real life.
Apply the principle to the facts. Add nothing. Assume nothing. Decide accordingly.
Sometimes the passage gives multiple principles, and a single question tests which one governs the facts. Sometimes the question changes one fact slightly across options to see if you notice. The skeleton stays the same — only the difficulty of matching principle to facts goes up.
How to read a principle and turn it into a checklist
The strongest students do something simple: they convert every principle into a checklist of conditions. A principle is rarely one idea — it is usually a set of boxes that must all be ticked for liability or validity to follow. Break it apart and the facts almost sort themselves.
Take this principle: 'A person is liable for negligence when they owe a duty of care, breach that duty, and thereby cause foreseeable harm.' That is not one rule; it is three boxes.
- Was a duty of care owed?
- Was that duty breached?
- Did the breach cause foreseeable harm?
Do the same with qualifiers. If a principle says liability follows 'unless the person took all reasonable precautions', add a fourth box: 'Did they take all reasonable precautions?' If the facts say yes, the conclusion reverses. Reading a principle as a checklist is the single highest-return habit in this section.
Weightage, marks and time strategy
CLAT UG is 120 questions in 120 minutes, marked +1 for a correct answer, −0.25 for a wrong one, and 0 for an unattempted one. Legal Reasoning is roughly 25% of the paper — about 28 to 32 questions spread across several passages. That makes it tied with Current Affairs as the heaviest section, so it deserves serious time and serious practice.
| Section | Approx weight | Style |
|---|---|---|
| English Language | ~20% | Comprehension passages |
| Current Affairs incl. GK | ~25% | Passage-based |
| Legal Reasoning | ~25% | Principle + facts passages |
| Logical Reasoning | ~20% | Argument passages |
| Quantitative Techniques | ~10% | Data / graph passages |
Time-wise, aim for roughly one minute per question across the paper, but Legal Reasoning gives you a small advantage: once you have read a passage, several questions hang off it, so the reading cost is shared. Budget around 2 to 3 minutes to read a passage, then 40 to 50 seconds per question attached to it. That shared-reading effect is why a confident reader can finish this section comfortably inside its time share and bank a minute or two for the harder sections.
There is also a strategic order to the section itself. Some passages are kind — a single clear principle and direct facts. Others are dense — multiple principles, layered facts, and options designed to mislead. Scan and bag the easy passages first so you never leave guaranteed marks on the table because a hard passage ate your clock.
- ✓Read the whole passage first — skimming costs more than it saves here.
- ✓Attack the easy questions on each passage before the tricky 'which principle applies' ones.
- ✓Don't sink 4 minutes into one stubborn question — flag it and move on.
- ✓Leave 2 minutes at the end to revisit flagged questions with a fresh eye.
The repeatable 4-step solving method
Use the same routine on every single question. Consistency under exam pressure is what separates a 28/32 from a 20/32. Here is the method to make automatic.
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1. Isolate the principleFind and underline the exact rule the passage gives. Strip it to its conditions — turn it into your checklist. If there are several principles, note which question is asking about which.
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2. Read the facts neutrallyRead the scenario without judging it. Note who did what. Resist any urge to feel sympathy for a party — the law in the passage decides the outcome, not your sympathy.
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3. Apply, box by boxLay the checklist over the facts. Tick or cross each condition. Watch the qualifiers — 'unless', 'only', 'provided', 'except'. The first box that fails usually decides the answer.
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4. Match to the cleanest optionChoose the option that follows purely from your application. Reject options that add new law, appeal to fairness, or quietly drop a condition. If two look close, re-read the principle's exact wording — the answer is hiding in it.
The common traps (and how to dodge them)
Most lost marks in this section come from a handful of repeating mistakes. Learn to recognise each one and you protect a big block of marks.
- ✓Importing outside law — you remember a real rule the passage didn't give. Forbidden. Use only the principle in front of you, even if it's a simplified or unusual version of the real law.
- ✓Choosing the 'fair' option — the answer that feels just and kind is often a trap. The principle may compel a harsh result. Apply the rule, not your conscience.
- ✓Ignoring qualifiers — small words like 'unless', 'only', 'provided', 'except' and 'reasonable' flip outcomes. Circle them as you read.
- ✓Adding facts that aren't there — don't assume motive, intention or knowledge the passage never states.
- ✓Overlooking 'all' vs 'some' / 'must' vs 'may' — quantifiers and modal verbs change scope and force. 'May be liable' is not 'is liable'.
- ✓Answering the wrong principle — in multi-principle passages, match each question to the principle it actually invokes.
Worked examples in real CLAT style
Theory only sticks once you see it in action. Work through these four examples exactly as you would in the exam: isolate the principle, build the checklist, apply, then choose. Read the solutions only after you've committed to an answer.
From across a quiet street, R shouts at S, 'I'll thrash you!' while standing still with his hands in his pockets. S is frightened. Is R liable for assault?
▸ Show solution
D leaves a small puddle of water near a shop entrance. A customer, wearing unusually slippery experimental shoes that no ordinary footwear resembles, slips and is injured. Is D liable?
▸ Show solution
At 17, M borrows Rs 8,000 from L, promising in writing to repay. Soon after turning 18, M writes to L confirming he will repay. M then defaults. Can L enforce the agreement?
▸ Show solution
A State reserves a number of college seats for students from a recognised socially and educationally disadvantaged community. A general-category applicant challenges this as a denial of equality. Will the challenge succeed?
▸ Show solution
The six chapters of CLAT Legal Reasoning
Although you never need to memorise statutes, certain areas of law supply most CLAT passages. Knowing the basic concepts of each lets you read passages faster and spot traps earlier. We've split the section into six chapters, each with a focused guide and 10 drills (150 questions) in the real exam format. Start with Contracts — it's the most-tested of all.
A 4-week study plan
You don't need months. Four focused weeks turn Legal Reasoning from a worry into a strength. Pair each chapter's concept guide with its drills, review every wrong answer, then graduate to mixed and timed practice.
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Week 2 — Criminal + ConstitutionalCover Criminal Law and Constitutional Law. Keep building the checklist habit on every principle. Start lightly timing yourself — aim for 40–50 seconds per question once you've read the passage.
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Week 3 — Family/Personal + Legal GKFinish Family and Personal Law and Legal GK, then revisit your weakest area from weeks 1–2. Begin mixed drills that blend chapters, so you practise switching principles quickly. Keep an error log of every trap that catches you.
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Week 4 — Full-speed, exam conditionsDo full timed sets and section mocks. Drill the traps from your error log. Re-attempt the questions you got wrong earlier — getting them right now proves the method has stuck.
- It tests reading + application, not memorised law — no prior legal study required.
- Every question hides the skeleton: Principle + Facts → Conclusion.
- Turn each principle into a checklist of conditions; the first failed box decides the answer.
- ~25% of the paper, ~28–32 questions, +1 / −0.25 / 0 — read the passage once, then mine it.
- Beware the big traps: outside law, the 'fair' option, and ignored qualifiers (unless / only / provided).
- Six chapters power the section — start with Contracts, the most-tested of all.