Your ACT scores are waiting in your account at act.org β no email, no text, no notification. You have to go look. This guide walks you through every step: logging in, reading what the score report actually contains, sending scores to colleges, and deciding what to do once you see the number.
The ACT score portal is at act.org β not College Board, not a third-party site. Here's the exact sequence to get your scores.
Open a browser and navigate to act.org. In the top navigation, click "Your ACT" then "Sign In." You can also go directly to act.org/scores. If you registered for the ACT, you already have an account β don't create a new one.
Your ACT account is separate from College Board (that's the SAT) and any test prep service you've used. You created it when you first registered. The username is the email address you used at registration. Forgotten your password? Hit "Forgot Password" β it sends a reset link to that email.
Once you're in, find the Scores tab in your account dashboard. Not "Tests," not "Registration" β specifically Scores. That's where your results live.
If your scores are ready, you'll see your composite (1β36) front and center, along with your four section scores: English, Mathematics, Reading, and Science. If you see a "Score Not Available" message or a processing indicator, they haven't posted yet β check again tomorrow. The ACT releases scores in batches starting 2 business days after each test date. Most students see results within 2 to 8 business days. Check when do act scores come out for the exact release window by test date.
From the Scores page, click into your score report for the detailed breakdown β composite, section scores, subscores within each section, and college readiness benchmarks. Writing scores appear on a separate line and post roughly one week after multiple choice results, since essays are graded by human readers.
The number most people focus on β the composite β is just the start. Here's what else is in the report and why it matters.
The composite is the average of your four section scores (English, Math, Reading, Science), rounded to the nearest whole number. It's the score colleges use for admissions decisions and scholarship cutoffs. Writing doesn't affect it.
Each of the four sections is scored 1β36 individually. Dig into the subscores if you're planning a retake β they tell you exactly which topics pulled your section score down. English subscores split into Usage/Mechanics and Rhetorical Skills. Math subscores break down by content area from pre-algebra through trigonometry. A low Reading score combined with a high English score, for example, points to a very specific prep target.
The ACT publishes its own thresholds indicating you're likely to earn at least a B in first-year college coursework in each subject. The 2026 benchmarks are: 18 for English, 22 for Mathematics, 22 for Reading, 23 for Science. Falling below a benchmark isn't disqualifying β it's a signal for where to focus prep if you retake.
Your report also shows a STEM score (average of Math and Science) and an ELA score (average of English, Reading, and Writing). Most four-year colleges don't use these in admissions. The composite is what matters for applications.
If you took the optional ACT Writing section, your essay score appears separately β scored 2β12 based on four domain scores from two independent human readers. It does not affect your composite. Verify whether your target schools require Writing before your test date, since most don't.
The ACT does not email or text you when scores post. No push notification, no alert. You have to log in to act.org and check. Start checking 2 business days after your test date and check daily until your composite appears. Many students first see scores between midnight and 8 AM Eastern, but there's no fixed time β scores post throughout the day as processing batches complete.
Your ACT registration fee covers four free score sends β but you must designate those colleges before your test day. After scores post, every additional send is $16 per school per score report.
Here's what most students miss: sending scores to a school doesn't mean you're applying there, and it doesn't notify them of any application. You're adding your scores to their database. Many test-optional schools recommend sending if your score falls within their middle 50% range.
Log in to your ACT account β click "Sending Your Scores" β search for colleges by name or code β select and confirm β pay $16 per report. Scores arrive electronically at most colleges within 3 to 5 business days.
By default, the ACT sends your most recent test date only. Most colleges prefer this. If a school accepts superscores or requests all test dates, they'll ask for them specifically β you're not obligated to send your entire history. For a complete breakdown of the sending process, review how to send act scores to colleges, including which schools require official reports and which accept self-reporting.
If you're up against an application deadline, the ACT offers priority processing for an additional fee β check your account under "Sending Your Scores" for current rush options. Standard sends don't have a guaranteed delivery date, so for hard deadlines, rush is worth it.
Past day 8 and still nothing? Here's what to check before you panic.
This is the most common cause. If you've taken the ACT more than once, or if you registered with a different email the first time, you might be logging into an account that doesn't have your most recent test on file. Try every email you've ever used β school email, personal Gmail, parent's email. Call ACT support to merge accounts if needed.
If the name or birthdate on your registration doesn't match what you used when you sat for the test, ACT may have flagged your booklet for manual review. Check your original registration confirmation email. Discrepancies β even a nickname vs. legal name β can add days to processing.
The ACT occasionally flags tests for irregularities: phone visible during the exam, unusual answer patterns, proctor-reported issues. If your test was flagged, you'll typically receive a letter β but not always immediately. If 15 business days have passed with no communication, call ACT directly.
December test scores routinely take longer. The holiday processing schedule means some December testers wait up to 10 business days. That's normal. Don't contact support until you're past 10 business days for December tests specifically.
Contact ACT support: act.org/contact or 319-337-1270, weekdays 8 AM to 8 PM Central.
Don't react before you have context. The raw number doesn't tell you much without comparison data. Here's the right sequence.
The only score that matters is one that's competitive for the schools you're actually applying to. Pull up each school's Common Data Set (Section C) or their admissions page and find the middle 50% ACT range for admitted students. A score in the 50thβ75th percentile range at each school is strong; below the 25th percentile means you're below-range and should consider a retake if time allows.
For a full breakdown of what's considered strong at different types of schools, check what is a good act score β it breaks down benchmarks by school selectivity tier, not just a single number.
Even if you've checked your target schools, knowing where you rank nationally helps calibrate a retake decision. The national average composite is around 20 β but averages hide a lot. A 26 is above average nationally but below median at many state flagship schools. What is the average act score shows precise percentile positions for every composite from 1 to 36 so you know exactly where you stand.
If you're below your target school's 25th percentile and you have 4+ months before your application deadline, booking a retake is almost always the right call. Test dates fill up β register the same week you see your score, not a month later.
Look at your subscores before registering. A 24 composite pulled down by a 19 in Reading is a very different prep target than a 24 pulled down by a 20 in Math. Focus retake prep on the section where you have the most room to improve, not the section that feels easiest.
The ACT allows up to 12 attempts. Most students who improve do so on the second or third test, particularly when they've spent 6β8 weeks on targeted section prep between attempts.
If you're planning to retake, you can wait before sending β most schools accept scores right up to their application deadline. Don't send a below-range score to a reach school unless the school's policy requires all scores. For test-optional schools, sending a score that's below their median range may hurt more than not sending anything. When in doubt, check the school's testing policy directly on their admissions page.