College SAT Averages: Admitted SAT Scores at Top US Colleges
College SAT averages for Ivy League, top 50, public flagships and HBCUs. See 25th-75th percentile ranges and target scores for 2026 admissions.

If you're researching college SAT averages, you're already doing the smart thing. Knowing the middle 50% range of admitted students at your dream schools turns SAT prep from guesswork into a measurable target. Instead of asking the vague question of whether your score is good enough, you can ask whether it's competitive at the specific schools you actually want to attend.
This guide walks through admitted SAT score ranges at the Ivy League, top 50 universities, public flagships, liberal arts colleges, engineering schools, HBCUs, and service academies. You'll also learn how to read the numbers, where they come from, what they leave out, and what to do whether your score sits comfortably above or stubbornly below the published range.
Most figures here come from each college's Common Data Set (CDS) and IPEDS submissions for the most recent admissions cycle. Numbers shift a little each year, and many schools changed policies during the 2020-2025 test-optional era, so always confirm the latest figure on the college's own admissions page before you finalize a target. The good news: outside of a handful of edge cases, college SAT averages move slowly. A range that was true last year usually holds within 10-20 points this year.
One more thing before you dive in: SAT averages are a planning tool, not a verdict. They tell you where the bar sits, not whether you can clear it. The rest of your application, especially your transcript, essays, and recommendations, often matters just as much as your test score, and at some schools, more.
Why the obsession with SAT averages now, when the test-optional era seemed to make scores irrelevant? Because the trend reversed. Most highly selective universities studied their data and concluded that SAT scores predict college performance better than they expected, particularly for students from less-resourced high schools. So scores are back, and they matter again.
That reversal hit fast. Yale announced its return to required testing in early 2024, Dartmouth followed, then Brown, Harvard, Caltech, MIT, Stanford, Penn, and others. By the 2026 admissions cycle, most of the original test-optional pioneers had walked it back. Treat any "test-optional" claim with skepticism unless you've confirmed it on the school's current admissions page for the cycle you're applying in.
The implication is simple. If you're a junior or senior heading into 2026 admissions, plan to take and submit the SAT or ACT for almost every selective school you're considering. Going test-optional at a school that technically allows it is now seen as a flag at many top universities, signaling that something in your testing profile may be weaker than the rest.
When a college reports an SAT range like 1500-1580, that's the middle 50% (25th-75th percentile) of admitted students. Twenty-five percent scored at or below the low number, twenty-five percent scored at or above the high number, and half landed in between. Your goal is to land at or above the 75th percentile, which makes you a competitive applicant on the score side, freeing the rest of your application to do the heavy lifting.
Before you obsess over a specific college's number, anchor yourself with context. The national SAT average score sits around 1050, and most four-year colleges admit students between 1100 and 1300. Selective universities are an outlier, not the norm. If you've already taken a SAT practice test and scored 1200, you're well inside the admit range for hundreds of solid universities, even if Harvard isn't one of them yet.
Why does perspective matter? Because most of the SAT panic in college admissions happens at the very top, where 50 points feels like the difference between getting in or not. For 90% of American college applicants, the realistic question isn't "am I a Princeton candidate?" It's "which schools fit my score, my goals, and my budget?" Those are very different questions, and they reward very different prep strategies.
Keep in mind that fewer than 1% of test takers ever hit 1500 or higher. Less than 5% reach the typical Ivy admit floor of 1450. The published averages at famous schools represent a tiny slice of all SAT takers, and the rest of the college landscape is far more accommodating than headlines suggest.
The good news for most students: there are well over 2,000 four-year colleges in the United States, and the vast majority admit applicants with SAT composites between 1000 and 1300. If your score is in that band, you have hundreds of strong options, and many of them offer excellent academics, strong job placement, and real merit scholarships.

National SAT Score Context (2024)
Notice how steep the curve gets at the top. Going from the 90th percentile (1320) to the 99th percentile (1500) is only 180 points, but those 180 points represent millions of test takers. That's why every 20-point gain matters more as you climb. For a deeper breakdown, see our guide on SAT score percentiles.
Now let's get specific. Ivy League admit ranges are remarkably tight at the top, and that consistency is part of why these schools dominate the conversation about admissions selectivity. The eight Ivies admit fewer than 5% of applicants in most cases, and even within their published ranges, only a fraction of qualified test takers ultimately get in. The score is a filter, not a key.
One useful mental model: the SAT moves you from "impossible" to "possible." It rarely moves you from "possible" to "yes." Your essays, recommendations, transcript, and demonstrated character do that. So pick a target score that opens the door, then stop chasing every last point and pour your energy into the parts of the application that close the deal.
For Ivy candidates specifically, anything above the 75th percentile of your target school produces sharply diminishing returns. A 1560 doesn't beat a 1540 in any meaningful way. A 1580 doesn't beat a 1560. Past a certain point, you're spending hours of prep for points that admissions readers won't notice.
Ivy League SAT Averages (Middle 50%, Class of 2029 admits)
- 25th percentile: 1500
- 75th percentile: 1580
- Test policy 2026: Required
- 25th percentile: 1500
- 75th percentile: 1580
- Test policy 2026: Required
- 25th percentile: 1500
- 75th percentile: 1560
- Test policy 2026: Required (all scores)
- 25th percentile: 1490
- 75th percentile: 1570
- Test policy 2026: Required
- 25th percentile: 1480
- 75th percentile: 1560
- Test policy 2026: Required
- 25th percentile: 1480
- 75th percentile: 1560
- Test policy 2026: Required
- 25th percentile: 1450
- 75th percentile: 1560
- Test policy 2026: Required
- 25th percentile: 1470
- 75th percentile: 1550
- Test policy 2026: Required
Looking at those Harvard SAT scores and Princeton numbers, the message is clear: the bottom of the Ivy admit range still sits at the 99th percentile of all test takers. That doesn't mean a 1450 makes Cornell impossible, but it does mean your essays, recommendations, GPA, and extracurriculars need to be exceptional. The highest SAT score of 1600 isn't required, and going from 1550 to 1600 won't move the needle for admissions.
Pay attention to the policy column too. Yale flags "Required (all scores)" because it asks applicants to submit every SAT sitting, not just their best. Most Ivies allow Score Choice, but a few want the full picture. Always check the latest policy on each admissions page before you decide which scores to send.
The Ivies aren't the only game in town at the top. Stanford, MIT, Caltech, Duke, and the University of Chicago routinely match or exceed Ivy admit ranges, and they all attract the same caliber of student. If you're score-shopping for the strongest possible college experience, broaden your list beyond the Ancient Eight.
Many international students and STEM-focused applicants actually find better fits at MIT, Caltech, or Carnegie Mellon than at the Ivies. The cultures are different, the curricula are different, and the admit data reflects that. Your numbers tell you where you can apply; your interests tell you where you should.
Other Elite Universities, Public Flagships, Liberal Arts and State Schools
Many non-Ivy private universities match or exceed Ivy averages. Stanford SAT scores sit at 1500-1570, while MIT SAT scores reach 1530-1580 with the highest STEM-focused median in the country. Caltech tops everyone at 1540-1580. Other heavy hitters:
- Caltech: 1540-1580 (highest median overall)
- MIT: 1530-1580
- Stanford: 1500-1570
- Duke: 1500-1570
- WashU St. Louis: 1500-1570
- UChicago: 1500-1570 (test optional 2026)
- Northwestern: 1490-1560
- Johns Hopkins: 1490-1560
- Vanderbilt: 1480-1560
- Rice: 1480-1560
You've now seen ranges across more than 50 colleges. The patterns should be clear. The most selective universities cluster between 1450 and 1580. Top publics sit between 1300 and 1530. State flagships and broad-access schools admit students between 1100 and 1400, which is where the bulk of American higher education actually happens.
Now that you've seen the numbers, the obvious question becomes: what's a realistic college list for you? Admissions counselors usually frame this with reach, match, and safety classifications. The classification depends entirely on how your SAT compares to that school's middle 50%, but it also depends on your GPA, the rigor of your transcript, and the broader strength of your application. SAT alone doesn't decide the category; it's just the easiest metric to start with.
If you're an in-state applicant, also remember that public universities often admit local students at lower thresholds than out-of-state applicants. UCLA's published 1370-1530 range reflects all admits; California residents may be admitted with composites slightly below that floor, while out-of-state students typically need to score in the upper half of the range.
Specific majors also shift the bar. Engineering and computer science programs at most universities run higher than the school's overall average, sometimes by 50-100 points. Nursing, business, and architecture programs often have separate thresholds too. If you're applying to a competitive major, check whether the published range applies college-wide or to your specific program.

Reach, Match, Safety: How to Classify Your Schools
- Your score: Below 25th percentile
- Admit chance: Lower
- How many: 2-3 schools
- Your score: Between 25th and 75th
- Admit chance: Realistic
- How many: 3-4 schools
- Your score: Above 75th percentile
- Admit chance: Strong
- How many: 2-3 schools
A balanced list usually means 8-10 schools with roughly that distribution. Don't stack your list with all reaches; you'll either have no acceptances or one painful choice come April. Don't go all safety either; you'll always wonder if you sold yourself short. And remember, even at safety schools, admit rates below 30% mean nothing is truly guaranteed. "Safety" doesn't mean automatic; it means likely.
One common mistake: treating every Ivy as a reach because they're famous, regardless of your score. If your composite is 1580, Brown and Cornell are matches, not reaches. Conversely, treating a state flagship as a safety when your score sits at the 25th percentile is risky. Run the numbers honestly for each school. For background on the test itself, our guide on what is the SAT covers structure, sections, scoring, and recent format changes.
The financial dimension matters too. A reach school that admits you may offer little aid; a match school may offer generous merit; a safety school may offer a full ride. Build your list with affordability in mind, especially if your family income falls between standard need-based aid thresholds and full-pay territory.
What Score You Need by College Tier
- ✓Top 10 ranked colleges: aim for 1500 or higher
- ✓Top 25 colleges: aim for 1450 or higher
- ✓Top 50 colleges: aim for 1380 or higher
- ✓Top 100 publics: 1280-1380 is competitive
- ✓Most four-year colleges nationally: 1100-1200 is acceptable
- ✓Many state directional schools: any score is acceptable
- ✓Honors college consideration: typically 1400+ at most state schools
- ✓Merit scholarship eligibility: usually 1350+ at private schools
If your current score is below your dream school's 25th percentile, you have two paths: keep prepping to raise the score, or strengthen the rest of your application so admissions sees you as a complete candidate worth taking a chance on. Most admitted students do both. Practical lift on a second SAT attempt usually runs 30-80 points with focused prep, and section-specific drilling on Math or Reading often produces faster gains than working both halves equally.
Demographic and contextual factors matter too. Admissions offices read your application against your high school's profile. A 1350 from an under-resourced school can read more impressively than a 1450 from a wealthy prep school where everyone hits 1400+. Geography, first-generation status, and unusual life experiences all factor into a holistic decision.
Recruited athletes, legacy applicants, and students with specific institutional priorities (like underrepresented majors or geographic diversity) sometimes get admitted with scores well below the published 25th percentile. The published range describes the average admit, not every admit. Without one of those hooks, though, the range is the realistic bar you should plan to clear.
Submitting an SAT Score Below the College Average
- +Demonstrates effort and willingness to be evaluated on academics
- +Can be offset by strong GPA above 3.7
- +Compelling essays and recommendations carry more weight
- +Special talents (athletics, arts, research) can outweigh test scores
- +First-generation, geographic or socioeconomic context matters in holistic review
- +Demonstrated interest through visits and applications helps borderline cases
- −Submitted scores below the 25th percentile reduce admit probability
- −May exclude you from automatic merit aid thresholds
- −Honors college acceptance becomes much harder
- −Some scholarships require minimum scores you may miss
- −Score can become the easiest reason for rejection in a tight pool
The reverse problem is just as real. Scoring well above a college's 75th percentile feels great, but it raises tactical questions about whether that school is the best fit, whether you should aim higher, and how to leverage the score for merit aid. Many state universities and mid-tier privates publish automatic merit scholarships tied to SAT thresholds, and a score 100+ points above the median can mean tens of thousands of dollars off your tuition over four years.
It also opens doors inside a school. Honors colleges, accelerated programs, research scholar tracks, and named scholarships all use SAT cutoffs as part of admission. If you're shopping for value, a strong score at a mid-tier university often beats being middle-of-the-pack at an elite one, especially if you're paying a meaningful share of tuition out of pocket.
Don't underestimate the impact of being a strong fit on campus. Faculty mentorship, research opportunities, and competitive internships often go to top-of-class students. Being the strongest student at a good school can produce a better outcome than being middle-of-pack at a great school, depending on your goals and personality.
Talk to people who actually attend the schools on your list. Reading admission averages on the internet is no substitute for a 30-minute conversation with a current student who can tell you what life is really like for someone with your stats. Most colleges will connect you with student ambassadors if you ask the admissions office directly.

If your SAT is well above a college's 75th percentile, you're a strong candidate for merit-based scholarships, honors college admission, and earlier admission decisions. Some schools auto-admit or offer named scholarships based on score thresholds. Always ask the financial aid office whether your score qualifies you for automatic awards before you commit.
Score Submission Strategy: Superscore, Score Choice and All Scores
Superscoring means the college takes your highest section scores across multiple test dates and combines them into one composite. If you scored 720 Math + 680 Reading on one date and 680 Math + 730 Reading on another, your superscore is 720 + 730 = 1450. Most selective colleges, including all eight Ivies, superscore the SAT.
Where do these admit numbers actually come from? You don't have to take any blog or ranking site at face value. Every college publishes a Common Data Set that includes its admitted-student SAT range, and federal IPEDS data backs it up. Here's where to look directly so you can verify any figure on this page or anywhere else.
Pay attention to one detail in the CDS: most colleges report scores for enrolled students, not admitted students. The enrolled set is usually slightly lower than the admitted set, because top admits often choose more selective schools. If you're benchmarking, the published CDS range is the right reference for understanding what gets you in.
One quirk to watch: at test-optional schools, only students who chose to submit scores are reported. The reported range therefore skews high, because students with weaker scores typically opt out. If a school is test-optional and reports 1450-1560, the true admit pool may include many enrolled students who never submitted scores at all.
Where to Verify College SAT Averages Yourself
- ✓Common Data Set (CDS): each college publishes annually on its institutional research page
- ✓IPEDS Data Center (federal database, free public access)
- ✓College Board's BigFuture college search tool
- ✓PrepScholar college search profiles
- ✓CollegeData.com profile pages
- ✓Niche.com admissions data
- ✓US News rankings (cite middle 50% admitted scores)
- ✓The college's own admissions page (most current and authoritative)
One last factor that affects your numbers strategy: timing. The SAT calendar interacts with college application deadlines, and missing the right test date can cost you a chance at Early Decision. Build your schedule backward from the application due dates of the schools you care about most, and leave room for a retake if your first sitting underperforms. The August or September SAT is often the last accepted test for ED applications.
Plan for two to three sittings. Most students improve between their first and second attempt because they finally know what the test feels like. A third attempt can also help if you've identified a single weak section to attack. Beyond three, gains tend to plateau, and admissions readers may notice diminishing returns.
Application Timeline With SAT Test Dates
Junior Fall
Junior Spring
Junior Summer
Senior Fall
ED / EA Deadlines
Regular Decision
Bottom line: target the 75th percentile of your dream schools, not the 25th. Reach schools have admit rates between 5% and 15%, so even a perfect score won't guarantee a yes. Focus on the holistic profile, build a balanced list with reaches, matches, and safeties, and use accepted SAT scores as a planning anchor rather than a verdict on your potential.
One more honest note: the SAT score is the easiest part of the application to control. You can practice, retake, and improve. Your transcript is mostly written by the time you start senior year, your recommendations come from teachers who already know you, and your essays will only ever be as strong as your willingness to revise them. The score is the lever where extra effort produces the most reliable lift, and that's exactly why it deserves real attention.
Get the score in range, then let the rest of your application tell admissions who you are. The students who get into reach schools usually do it by being undeniable on multiple dimensions: strong scores, strong grades, a focused passion, and a clear voice on the page. No single number, no matter how high, replaces the full portrait.
Use this guide as your starting reference, then go check the latest official numbers on each college's admissions page. The schools change, the ranges drift, and the test-optional landscape continues to evolve. The students who navigate this best are the ones who do their own research, ask hard questions about fit, and treat published averages as a starting point rather than a finish line. Good luck.
College SAT Averages Questions and Answers
About the Author
Attorney & Bar Exam Preparation Specialist
Yale Law SchoolJames R. Hargrove is a practicing attorney and legal educator with a Juris Doctor from Yale Law School and an LLM in Constitutional Law. With over a decade of experience coaching bar exam candidates across multiple jurisdictions, he specializes in MBE strategy, state-specific essay preparation, and multistate performance test techniques.