Skip to content
Studyabroad.wiki
Go back

SAT

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

AttributeDetails
Full nameScholastic Assessment Test (Digital SAT)
Administering bodyCollege Board
FormatComputer-delivered at test centres (no at-home option); adaptive
Total duration2h 45m (including breaks and instructions)
Score scale400–1600 (200–800 per section: Evidence-Based Reading & Writing, Math)
Pass/failNo pass/fail; scores reported as scaled score 400–1600 and percentile rank
Validity periodValid 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 attemptsTypically retake 2–3 times per academic year
Result turnaround6 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)

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)

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

Typical score requirements

Institution tierTypical SAT rangeAdmission rate (approximate)Percentile
Highly selective (Ivy, Stanford, MIT)1460–15603–8%98th–99th percentile
Very selective (top 20 national universities)1370–14608–20%94th–98th percentile
Selective (top 50 national universities)1250–137025–45%80th–94th percentile
Mid-tier (top 100–200 universities)1100–125050–70%60th–80th percentile
Less selective / Regional universities900–110070–95%30th–60th percentile
Community colleges700–900 (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:

ID requirements:

Retake rules:

Test-day procedures:

Rescheduling:

Preparation

Official materials:

Recommended materials:

Realistic prep time:

Common pitfalls:

Comparison with similar tests

TestFormatDurationScorePrimary useCost
SAT (Digital)Computer-delivered, adaptive2h 45m400–1600US undergraduate admissionsUSD $68
ACTPaper-delivered (mostly); non-adaptive2h 55m1–36 compositeUS undergraduate admissionsUSD $75
AP ExamsPaper/Computer; subject-specific2h–3h per exam1–5 scaleCollege credit, placementUSD $96 per exam
IB Diploma ProgrammePaper/Computer; global curriculum4 years curriculum45-point scaleInternational university admissionsUSD $2,000–3,000 total
TOEFL iBTComputer-delivered2h 30m0–120International student English proficiencyUSD $245
Duolingo English TestComputer-delivered, remote1h10–160International student English proficiencyUSD $49

Recent changes

Primary sources

Last updated: 2026-04-16.


Share this entry: Link copied

Related entries


Previous
UCAT
Next
Study in Canada