How to Reschedule the SAT: Steps, Fees, and Deadlines

Reschedule the SAT through College Board before the deadline for a $30 fee. How to change your date, rescheduling vs. canceling, and missed deadline options.

How to Reschedule the SAT: Steps, Fees, and Deadlines

SAT Rescheduling Facts

šŸ’°$30Rescheduling FeePlus any test date price difference
šŸ“…~3 weeksDeadline Before TestMust reschedule before this window
āœ…OnlineReschedule Via College BoardThrough your College Board account
šŸ”„Any DateCan Move to Any Available DateSubject to seat availability
How to Reschedule Sat - SAT - Scholastic Assessment Test certification study resource

How to Reschedule Your SAT

Rescheduling the SAT is done through your College Board account on collegeboard.org. Log into your account, navigate to "My SAT," and find your upcoming registration. You should see an option to "Change Date or Test Center" for your registered sitting. Click this option, select your new preferred test date from the available options, choose a new test center if needed, and confirm the change. You will be charged a rescheduling fee of $30 at the time of the change. The new date and test center confirmation is sent to your registered email address.

The rescheduling process requires that both the old test date and the new test date are within the same testing year (August through June). You cannot roll over a registration from one testing year to the next — rescheduling works only between dates within the same academic year's test calendar. Available dates for rescheduling depend on seat availability at testing locations near you. Popular test centers in dense urban areas can fill up months in advance, so if you are rescheduling to a date that is close in time to your original test, act quickly to secure a seat. For all available test dates and their registration windows, see sat dates 2025.

Fee-waiver-eligible students who used a fee waiver for their original registration should contact College Board customer service before attempting to reschedule online. The interaction between fee waiver benefits and the rescheduling process can be complex, and a customer service representative can ensure the rescheduling is handled correctly without inadvertently consuming a fee waiver benefit. For other registration and fee logistics, see the sat cost guide which covers registration, late registration, and rescheduling fee structures.

Rescheduling Fees and Deadlines

The SAT rescheduling fee is $30, applied in addition to the original registration fee already paid. If the new test date costs more than the original (test dates are priced consistently at $68, so this is generally not a factor), any difference is charged. If you reschedule to a date with the same price, only the $30 rescheduling fee applies. The $30 rescheduling fee is also charged if you change only your test center (not your test date) — any modification to your registration that involves changing date or location incurs the rescheduling fee.

The rescheduling deadline is typically approximately 3 weeks before the test date. More precisely, College Board closes rescheduling around the same time as the late registration deadline for each test date. Students who need to reschedule should do so as early as possible — waiting until the deadline risks limited availability on the desired new date and can create additional stress. College Board provides the specific deadline for each test date within the registration dashboard when you view your upcoming registration. Do not wait until you realize you cannot attend on test day — if you know in advance you will not be available for your registered date, reschedule immediately to maximize your options for alternative dates.

After the rescheduling deadline passes, the only remaining options are to take the test as scheduled, cancel the registration (with partial or no refund depending on timing), or use the standby option to attempt to test on a different date by showing up at a test center with an additional standby fee. None of these post-deadline options are as clean as rescheduling before the deadline. If you miss the rescheduling window due to a documented emergency (illness, family emergency), College Board has a process for requesting fee consideration — contact their customer service with documentation of the circumstances.

Planning SAT Test Dates to Avoid Rescheduling

The most effective way to avoid SAT rescheduling fees and the stress of date changes is to plan your test calendar carefully before registering. Start by mapping out your college application timeline: when are your target schools' Early Action and Early Decision deadlines (typically November 1-15), when are your Regular Decision deadlines (January 1), and when do you realistically want to have your final SAT score available? Work backward from these dates to identify the latest acceptable test date for each application deadline, then choose test dates that give you a comfortable buffer — at least 4-6 weeks before your earliest application deadline.

When selecting test dates, also consider your academic calendar. Major exam periods, school-year commitments, athletic seasons, and planned travel should all be factored in before registering. The most common reasons for SAT rescheduling — school events, family trips, illness during a busy period — are often predictable well in advance. Students who map out their full academic calendar for the upcoming year before registering for SAT dates avoid most of these conflicts. Registering for a test date that feels certain rather than convenient-but-risky is a better default than registering speculatively and paying the $30 rescheduling fee later.

Students planning multiple SAT attempts (2-3 sittings) should space their registrations to allow sufficient preparation time between sittings — at minimum 6-8 weeks, ideally 3-4 months for the most focused preparation between first and second attempts. Registering for all planned sittings at once, as soon as dates open, secures seats at preferred test centers before popular locations fill up. Once registered, mark rescheduling deadlines for each date in a calendar to ensure that any necessary changes are made before the fee-free (or minimum-fee) window. For the full test date calendar with registration windows, see sat dates 2025. For guidance on the overall strategic timing of multiple SAT attempts, see when to take sat.

Reschedule vs. Cancel vs. Keep Registration

How to decide between rescheduling, canceling, and keeping your original registration.

Reschedule when:

• You have a conflict on the test date (school event, family commitment, travel) and another available date works better
• You feel unprepared for the upcoming date but want to test on a different date in the same testing year
• You registered for a date that is too close to important deadlines and want to test earlier
• Your preparation is on track and you simply need to shift to a more convenient date

Rescheduling costs $30 but preserves your registration and guarantees a seat on the new date. It is the most efficient option when you want to test on a different specific date and know which date you want.

Note: rescheduling does NOT change your score report history — once you test, that score exists in your College Board record regardless of when you took the test.

How to Reschedule the Sat - SAT - Scholastic Assessment Test certification study resource

What to Do If You Missed the Rescheduling Deadline

If the rescheduling deadline has passed and you cannot take the SAT as scheduled, your options are limited but not zero. The first option is standby testing: show up at a test center on your registered test date (or a different nearby date) and request a standby seat. Standby testing requires an additional standby fee and is not guaranteed — seats are assigned only if space is available after all registered students have been accommodated. Standby is more likely to succeed at test centers that historically have available seats, and less likely at popular urban centers that regularly fill to capacity.

If you miss the test entirely without canceling or rescheduling, you do not receive any score and your registration fee is not refunded. This is simply a forfeited registration. The test sitting will appear as unused in your College Board record, but no score is recorded. Students who miss the test for a documented emergency (severe illness, family emergency, natural disaster) should contact College Board customer service with documentation — College Board has policies for providing consideration in genuine emergency situations, including fee credits or registration transfers.

For students whose schedule conflict is predictable (a confirmed school athletic event, college visit, or travel), the best practice is to reschedule well in advance before the deadline rather than hoping to resolve the conflict closer to the test date. Registering early for a test date and then needing to reschedule is common — just do it as soon as you know about the conflict. For planning multiple SAT attempts and their timing relative to application deadlines, see the guides on when to take sat and how many times can you take the sat. For retake strategy if you miss an attempt and need to plan a new schedule, see can you retake the sat. For building a preparation plan for your rescheduled date, see our sat test library for full-length timed practice tests.

SAT Rescheduling vs. Cancellation: Cost Comparison

Decision matrix for reschedule vs. cancel:

• If you want to test on a different date: Reschedule ($30 fee). You keep your registration and guarantee a seat.
• If you no longer need the SAT at all: Cancel (partial refund of ~$40-50, depending on timing). Better than forfeiting the full fee.
• If you want to test on the same date but at a different location: Change test center ($30 fee, same as rescheduling).
• If the deadline has passed: Standby or forfeit the registration.

The $30 rescheduling fee is almost always preferable to canceling if you still plan to take the SAT, since a new registration also costs $68. Paying $30 to preserve an existing registration (and avoid a new $68 fee) saves $38 compared to canceling and re-registering. For SAT registration cost structure, see sat cost. For test date calendar reference, see sat dates 2025.

SAT Rescheduling Questions and Answers

About the Author

James R. HargroveJD, LLM

Attorney & Bar Exam Preparation Specialist

Yale Law School

James 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.