The Digital SAT is a fundamentally different test from its paper predecessor—shorter, adaptive, and delivered entirely on a computer or tablet. If you're preparing for the Digital SAT, using the right practice tests is non-negotiable. Paper SAT practice materials won't capture the adaptive format, the digital interface, or the question style that makes the Digital SAT its own beast.
The good news: there are excellent free practice resources, including official full-length tests from College Board. The key is knowing what to use, when to use it, and how to extract maximum value from each practice session.
This guide covers where to find the best Digital SAT practice tests, how the adaptive format affects your practice strategy, how to score and analyze your results, and how to use practice tests to actually move your score.
Before diving into practice resources, you need to understand what you're practicing for. The Digital SAT has several features that distinguish it from both the old paper SAT and from ACT:
Multistage Adaptive Testing (MST): The Digital SAT uses a two-stage adaptive format for each section. Stage 1 is a standard difficulty set of questions. Based on how you perform in Stage 1, you're routed to either a harder or an easier Stage 2 module. Getting harder Stage 2 questions is actually better—it gives you access to the highest score ranges. This is why practice under adaptive conditions matters.
Shorter length: The Digital SAT runs approximately 2 hours and 14 minutes, compared to 3+ hours for the old paper SAT. Fewer questions, but each question carries more weight.
Integrated Reading and Writing section: The old SAT had separate Evidence-Based Reading and Writing tests. The Digital SAT combines these into a single Reading and Writing section with shorter passages and one question per passage.
Math with calculator access: You can use a calculator for all Math questions on the Digital SAT. Desmos is built into the testing app. Some questions still test mental math and algebraic manipulation—but the calculator availability shifts which skills matter most.
The most important practice resources come from College Board, the organization that creates and administers the SAT. Their official tests are the gold standard because they use actual test questions, actual scoring tables, and the actual Bluebook testing app.
Bluebook app (formerly Khan Academy): College Board's Bluebook app is the official Digital SAT practice and testing platform. It's free. You can download it on a computer, laptop, or tablet. Bluebook offers full-length adaptive practice tests that simulate the actual testing experience—including the adaptive routing between Stage 1 and Stage 2 modules.
As of 2026, College Board has released multiple full-length Digital SAT practice tests through Bluebook. The exact number of available tests changes as College Board adds new materials, so check the Bluebook app and College Board's website for the current count.
College Board's official practice questions: Beyond full-length tests, College Board provides standalone practice questions organized by skill and difficulty. These are useful for targeted practice in specific content areas.
Khan Academy: Khan Academy remains a strong free resource for SAT prep, though the integration with Digital SAT-specific materials has evolved since the transition. Khan Academy's question bank covers the core math and verbal skills tested on the Digital SAT.
Taking practice tests randomly—without analysis—won't improve your score. Strategic use of practice tests is what drives real gains.
Start with one full-length practice test to establish your baseline. Take it under real test conditions: same time of day as your scheduled test, no phone distractions, strict time limits. Score it and analyze your results by content area—don't just note the total score.
The Bluebook app provides detailed performance reports showing your results by skill area. Use this to identify your strongest and weakest categories within Reading and Writing (information and ideas, craft and structure, expression of ideas, standard English conventions) and Math (algebra, advanced math, problem-solving and data analysis, geometry and trigonometry).
Use your diagnostic results to prioritize. Don't spend equal time on everything—focus disproportionately on the skill areas where improvement is most possible. A student scoring 80% correct on algebra questions won't gain much from more algebra practice; that same time spent on geometry or data analysis has higher return.
Mix full-length tests with shorter drilling sessions. Full-length tests build stamina and test-taking consistency; skill-specific practice builds content knowledge.
In the final phase, take multiple full-length tests under real conditions. These aren't just for practice—they're for verifying that your score has actually improved and for identifying any remaining gaps before test day.
After each full-length test, review every wrong answer carefully. For each wrong answer: Did you not know the concept? Did you misread the question? Did you run out of time? Different error types need different responses—content gaps need more content study, careless errors need more careful reading habits, timing issues need pacing practice.
The adaptive routing of the Digital SAT means practice tests aren't identical experiences each time. Here's how the adaptive format plays out in practice:
If you perform well on Module 1, you get a harder Module 2—which gives you access to higher scores. The hard Module 2 has more difficult questions but a more favorable scoring curve for the questions you answer correctly.
If you perform poorly on Module 1, you get an easier Module 2—but your maximum possible score is capped lower regardless of how well you do on the easier module.
This means one of the most important strategies for the Digital SAT is doing your absolute best on Module 1. Guessing on Module 1 questions without effort isn't just harmful for those questions—it routes you into a scoring track with a lower ceiling.
In your practice, pay close attention to how you're performing on Module 1s. If your Module 1 performance is inconsistent, that's worth specifically practicing—reviewing the content areas and question types that appear in early modules.
The Digital SAT uses a 400–1600 scaled score, with Reading and Writing (200–800) and Math (200–800) as subscores. The Bluebook app scores official practice tests automatically and provides your scaled score along with the performance breakdowns.
Raw scores (number of correct answers) are converted to scaled scores using an equating process that accounts for the difficulty of the specific test version you took. This is why the same number of correct answers on a hard test vs. an easy test produces different scaled scores—the harder test rewards each correct answer more generously.
When tracking your practice test scores, focus on trends over multiple tests rather than individual scores. A single practice test score can vary due to test fatigue, the luck of which adaptive module you landed in, or genuine variation in daily performance. What matters is the average and trend over 4+ tests.
The Math section covers four content areas with these approximate weights:
Calculator access changes which Math skills to focus on. Mental calculation and arithmetic accuracy matter less than problem setup and algebraic reasoning. Learning to use Desmos effectively—graphing equations, finding intersections, checking answers—is a real performance multiplier on the Digital SAT.
The Reading and Writing section uses one short passage per question—typically 25–150 words. Questions test four content areas:
The short passage format means vocabulary-in-context questions require careful reading of just one paragraph, not skimming a multi-page passage. This is different from the old SAT—students who relied on passage-skimming strategies need to adjust.
In addition to College Board's official materials:
The priority should always be official College Board materials first. Third-party materials vary significantly in quality and accuracy—some don't properly reflect the adaptive format or the current question types.
Practice tests build skills, but test day strategy matters too. On the Digital SAT: