The Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT) is the College Board’s standardized test for US undergraduate admissions, taken by approximately 2 million students annually. The SAT transitioned to digital delivery in 2024 and now measures Evidence-Based Reading & Writing and Math across a 1600-point scale (200–800 per section). The digital SAT is adaptive, adjusting difficulty based on performance, and is completed in approximately 2 hours 45 minutes. The test is required or optional at most US universities (policies vary by institution as of 2025–2026); when required, typical scores for selective institutions range from 1300–1550. SAT scores are valid for undergraduate applications for 2–3 years but do not expire for personal records.
Key facts
| Attribute | Details |
|---|---|
| Full name | Scholastic Assessment Test (Digital SAT) |
| Administering body | College Board |
| Format | Computer-delivered at test centres (no at-home option); adaptive |
| Total duration | 2h 45m (including breaks and instructions) |
| Score scale | 400–1600 (200–800 per section: Evidence-Based Reading & Writing, Math) |
| Pass/fail | No pass/fail; scores reported as scaled score 400–1600 and percentile rank |
| Validity period | Valid for 2–3 years for university applications; official transcript reflects all scores |
| Cost (USD) | USD $68 (standard, as of January 2026); fee waivers available for low-income students |
| Number of attempts | Typically retake 2–3 times per academic year |
| Result turnaround | 6 weeks for first attempt; subsequent attempts reported within 3 weeks |
Score structure
The digital SAT consists of two sections, each scored 200–800:
Evidence-Based Reading & Writing (64 minutes, 52 questions)
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Reading Module (27 minutes, 27 questions): Candidates read short passages (100–150 words) from literature, history, social sciences, and natural sciences. Question types include single-select multiple-choice, dual-select multiple-choice, and vocab-in-context. Adaptive algorithm adjusts passage difficulty based on accuracy. Assesses comprehension, inference, word meaning in context, and rhetorical analysis.
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Writing & Language Module (27 minutes, 25 questions): Candidates read passages and answer grammar, syntax, and style questions. Questions assess standard English conventions (punctuation, grammar, sentence structure) and expression of ideas (clarity, organisation, word choice). Adaptive algorithm escalates difficulty based on performance.
Scoring: Each section scored independently; total Evidence-Based Reading & Writing score = Reading raw + Writing raw converted to 200–800 scale.
Math (70 minutes, 58 questions)
- Adaptive format with two modules: Module 1 (easier questions) determines Module 2 difficulty.
- Question types: Multiple-choice and student-produced response (grid-in answers).
- Content covered: Algebra, advanced math, problem-solving and data analysis, geometry, trigonometry, function definitions, polynomials, radicals, rational expressions.
- Assesses quantitative reasoning and problem-solving across multiple mathematical domains.
Scoring: Raw score converted to 200–800 scale.
Overall SAT Score: Sum of Evidence-Based Reading & Writing (200–800) + Math (200–800) = 400–1600.
Accepted by
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All US universities: The SAT is accepted by all colleges and universities in the United States. As of 2024–2026, test-optional policies remain in effect at most selective institutions (Harvard, Yale, Stanford, MIT, etc. allow applicants to submit or withhold scores). Lower-ranked and regional institutions more commonly require SAT.
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US military service academies: Require SAT for appointment (US Naval Academy, West Point, Air Force Academy, etc.).
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International universities: Accepted by some universities outside the US (Canada, UK, Australia, Singapore, Hong Kong) as alternative to IB or A-levels for US-focused undergraduate programs; acceptance is institution-specific.
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Merit scholarships: Most US colleges offer merit scholarships partially contingent on SAT scores (often above 1300–1400 for substantial funding).
Typical score requirements
| Institution tier | Typical SAT range | Admission rate (approximate) | Percentile |
|---|---|---|---|
| Highly selective (Ivy, Stanford, MIT) | 1460–1560 | 3–8% | 98th–99th percentile |
| Very selective (top 20 national universities) | 1370–1460 | 8–20% | 94th–98th percentile |
| Selective (top 50 national universities) | 1250–1370 | 25–45% | 80th–94th percentile |
| Mid-tier (top 100–200 universities) | 1100–1250 | 50–70% | 60th–80th percentile |
| Less selective / Regional universities | 900–1100 | 70–95% | 30th–60th percentile |
| Community colleges | 700–900 (or no SAT required) | 100% (open admission) | <30th percentile |
Note: Test-optional policies (2024–2026) mean many institutions no longer report score ranges; ranges above reflect historical data and approximate typical submitted scores. Submitting SAT likely improves admission chances at selective institutions (50%+ likelihood test-optional students who apply without scores are disadvantaged).
Registration & logistics
Registration:
- Online via collegeboard.org or through a high school guidance counselor.
- Create account, verify email, select test date and centre location.
- Registration available 8 weeks before test date; later registration may incur USD $20–$30 late fee.
- Payment required at registration.
ID requirements:
- Valid government-issued photo ID (passport, driver’s licence, school ID with photo).
- Name on ID must match registration exactly.
- ID checked at test centre check-in; students without ID may be denied entry.
Retake rules:
- SAT offered 7 times per year (typically in August, October, November, December, March, May, June).
- No mandatory waiting period; may retake next available test date.
- Most students retake 1–2 times to improve scores (especially in junior and senior years of high school).
- All scores reported to colleges (no “score choice” for SAT; institutions see full history). However, many test-optional institutions ignore lower scores.
Test-day procedures:
- Arrive 30 minutes before scheduled start time (typically 8:00 AM).
- Bring valid ID, admission ticket, pencils, calculator (for Math section only; specific models allowed).
- No bags, phones, smartwatches, or external materials allowed in test room.
- Testing completed on computer at assigned seat.
- Breaks provided: 5 minutes between Reading & Writing and Math modules; 5 minutes within Math modules.
- Total seated time ~2 hours 45 minutes; administration time adds 15–20 minutes.
Rescheduling:
- Free rescheduling if requested at least 4 weeks before scheduled test date.
- USD $20–$30 rescheduling fee if 1–3 weeks before test date.
- No rescheduling within 7 days; must register for new test and pay full fee.
Preparation
Official materials:
- College Board’s Official SAT Study Guide (latest edition 2024–2025); includes 4–6 full-length practice tests and digital delivery.
- Khan Academy + College Board SAT Prep (free partnership; 400+ lessons aligned to Digital SAT; highest-quality free resource).
- Digital SAT Practice Hub (collegeboard.org/sat/practice); includes sample questions and adaptive practice modules.
- College Board Blue Book (printable PDF practice tests).
Recommended materials:
- Barron’s SAT Superpack (2024 ed.); 3+ practice tests plus content review.
- The Princeton Review Cracking the SAT (2024 ed.); strong strategies and practice.
- Erica Meltzer: The Complete Guide to SAT Reading (grammar and comprehension strategies).
- Khan Academy video lessons (excellent for Math and foundational Reading/Writing skills).
- Magoosh SAT YouTube channel (free strategy and sample walkthroughs).
- UWorld SAT question bank (subscription; 2,000+ questions with detailed explanations).
Realistic prep time:
- Starting from weak test-taker (~1000–1100 SAT equivalent): 4–6 months, 10–15 hours weekly.
- Starting from average (~1200 SAT): 2–3 months, 5–10 hours weekly.
- Starting from strong (~1350+): 4–8 weeks, 3–5 hours weekly (targeted weak areas).
- Most high-school students prepare over 2–4 months spanning sophomore–junior year.
Common pitfalls:
- Ignoring adaptive algorithm; missing questions on Module 1 leads to easier Module 2 questions with lower scoring potential. Accuracy on every question matters.
- Rushing through Reading passages; slower, careful reading leads to higher accuracy than rushing. Time = ~2.5 minutes per passage + questions.
- Weak Math algebra skills; advanced math content heavily weighted. Algebra is prerequisite; review if weak.
- Not using calculator strategically; graphing calculators permitted for Math, but non-programmable scientific calculators sufficient. Practice both.
- Inadequate time on practice; many students underprepare. 200+ hours of study typical for 200+ point increase.
Comparison with similar tests
| Test | Format | Duration | Score | Primary use | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SAT (Digital) | Computer-delivered, adaptive | 2h 45m | 400–1600 | US undergraduate admissions | USD $68 |
| ACT | Paper-delivered (mostly); non-adaptive | 2h 55m | 1–36 composite | US undergraduate admissions | USD $75 |
| AP Exams | Paper/Computer; subject-specific | 2h–3h per exam | 1–5 scale | College credit, placement | USD $96 per exam |
| IB Diploma Programme | Paper/Computer; global curriculum | 4 years curriculum | 45-point scale | International university admissions | USD $2,000–3,000 total |
| TOEFL iBT | Computer-delivered | 2h 30m | 0–120 | International student English proficiency | USD $245 |
| Duolingo English Test | Computer-delivered, remote | 1h | 10–160 | International student English proficiency | USD $49 |
Recent changes
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Digital SAT launch (January 2024): College Board transitioned SAT from paper-based to digital delivery globally; all tests since January 2024 are digital. Adaptive algorithm adjusts difficulty module-by-module. Scoring, content, and percentile alignment maintained; test slightly shorter (~2h 45m vs. 3h+ paper version).
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Adaptive format (January 2024): Digital SAT employs adaptive testing (Module 2 difficulty depends on Module 1 performance). This increases precision and shortens test duration compared to traditional paper SAT.
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International digital SAT rollout (2024–2025): Digital SAT now administered internationally (outside US) at select centres, replacing paper-only option in some regions.
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Fee structure (January 2026): SAT fee increased from USD $65 to USD $68 (January 2026) to support digital infrastructure. Fee waivers remain available; most low-income US students receive 2–4 free test registrations.
Primary sources
- Official SAT site: collegeboard.org/sat; accessed 16 April 2026.
- SAT test information and dates: collegeboard.org/sat/registration; accessed 16 April 2026.
- Official SAT Study Guide (College Board, 2024–2025 ed.).
- Khan Academy + College Board SAT Prep: khanacademy.org/test-prep/sat; accessed 16 April 2026.
- College Board Blue Book SAT Practice Tests: collegeboard.org/sat/practice; accessed 16 April 2026.
- SAT percentile ranks: collegeboard.org/sat/scores (latest percentile distribution); accessed 16 April 2026.
- US News & World Report SAT score ranges: usnews.com/education/best-colleges (university profiles with admitted student test ranges); accessed 16 April 2026.
Last updated: 2026-04-16.