Next SAT Test Date: 2026 Schedule, Registration Deadlines & Tips

Find the next SAT test date, registration deadlines, fee waiver rules, Bluebook digital format details, and a checklist to pick the right sitting for you.

Next SAT Test Date: 2026 Schedule, Registration Deadlines & Tips

If you're staring at the calendar wondering when the next SAT is — and whether you can realistically be ready for it — you're not alone. Every season, hundreds of thousands of students ask the same thing, usually about three weeks too late.

The good news? The College Board now publishes its full academic-year schedule months ahead, and the digital Bluebook format has made the test shorter, faster to score, and (in many ways) easier to plan around.

Here's the short version. The SAT runs seven times a year in the United States — three in the fall (August, October, November), one in December, then three in the spring (March, May, June). International testers get five of those seven dates.

Registration normally closes about three to four weeks before each test day, and the College Board recommends locking in your seat five to six weeks ahead to keep your first-choice center.

This guide walks through every upcoming 2026 date, deadlines you absolutely cannot miss, what changed with the digital format, fee-waiver rules, and a self-check to figure out which sitting is genuinely the right one for you. By the end you'll know not just when the next SAT is, but whether you should actually take it — or wait one cycle and crush it instead.

The Next SAT By The Numbers

📅7Test dates per year (US)
👥1.97MStudents sat the SAT last year
⏱️2h 14mDigital SAT total length
📊10-13Days to score release

Before we get to the calendar, it helps to understand how the College Board now structures the year. The SAT operates on an academic-year cycle (August through June), and each cycle has the same rhythm: three fall dates, one December anchor date, and three spring dates.

International administrations skip the August and February-equivalent slots, so overseas students see five test days instead of seven. The numbers above tell most of the story — roughly 1.97 million students sat the SAT in the most recent reporting year, and the digital test runs exactly 2 hours and 14 minutes, down from 3 hours on paper.

The College Board posts every date roughly 18 months in advance, so by spring 2026 you should already see provisional fall 2027 dates appearing on the official site. That long lead time is a big deal for students balancing AP exams, athletic seasons, and college visits — plan early, plan once.

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The next available US SAT dates for the 2026 cycle are March 14, 2026, May 2, 2026, and June 6, 2026. The 2026-2027 academic year opens with August 22, 2026, followed by October 3, November 7, and December 5. Registration for fall dates opens in early summer 2026 — bookmark the College Board portal and register the day your target window opens to lock in your preferred center.

Here is the lineup you actually care about — the next SAT dates left in the current academic year and the opening dates for 2026-2027. Every date below is a Saturday. Sunday testing exists for religious reasons but must be requested separately through the l sat.

These dates apply to both the digital SAT and SAT School Day administrations. Note that school day administrations (when your high school gives the SAT on a weekday) use a separate calendar — talk to your counselor about those.

One small thing about the calendar that matters more than people realize: the gap between consecutive SAT dates is not uniform. Between the March and May sittings, you get about 7 weeks of breathing room.

Between May and June, you only get 5 weeks. Between June and the next available US date (August), you get a full 11 weeks of summer. That uneven spacing is the single most underrated factor in choosing the right next SAT.

Also worth knowing: international test dates often line up with the US calendar but skip August and run a smaller selection of sittings. If you're testing outside the US, double-check your country's specific availability before assuming the next US date applies. Some countries cap registration even tighter — places like India and South Korea sometimes close seats 8-10 weeks before test day.

Upcoming 2026 SAT Test Dates

March 14, 2026

Regular deadline: Feb 27. Late deadline: Mar 3. Best fit for juniors taking their first full SAT — gives you May, June, and August as retakes.

May 2, 2026

Regular deadline: Apr 17. Late deadline: Apr 21. AP-week overlap warning — don't book this if you have three or more AP exams that week.

June 6, 2026

Regular deadline: May 22. Late deadline: May 27. Ideal if you want to finish junior year with a score in hand for summer college visits.

August 22, 2026

Regular deadline: Aug 7. Late deadline: Aug 11. Critical for early decision applicants — last 'no-pressure' date before ED1 deadlines.

October 3, 2026

Regular deadline: Sep 18. Late deadline: Sep 22. Highest seat demand of the year — register the day registration opens or expect to travel.

November 7, 2026

Regular deadline: Oct 23. Late deadline: Oct 27. Final SAT that gets scores back in time for most early decision rounds.

So how do you actually pick the next SAT that's right for you? It comes down to three pressure points: college deadlines, prep readiness, and seat availability. Get any one of those wrong and you're either rushing into a test you're not ready for, or missing the application deadline that the score was meant to support.

For most rising seniors, the October sitting is the sweet spot. Scores release roughly 10-13 days after test day on the digital format, which means an October test gives you results in time for early-decision November 1 deadlines.

The November date is the absolute last chance for ED1 — December is too late for almost every selective school's binding early round. If you're a junior, your two best windows are March and May. March is the traditional "first real SAT" date — long enough into the school year that you've covered most of the math, but early enough that you have multiple retake options.

Common myth worth busting: "There's an easier SAT date — I heard March is the curve everyone wants." The l sat uses a process called equating to ensure that a 1400 on the March test reflects the same ability as a 1400 on the October test. There is no easier date and there is no harder date.

That said, there is one real effect worth knowing about: cohort composition. The October date attracts the highest concentration of high-scoring seniors trying for a final score bump, while March attracts the largest proportion of first-time test-takers. Both still score on an equated scale, so your number is your number — but the room you walk into changes the vibe.

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Which Next SAT Date Fits You?

If you're applying this fall, your best targets are August 22 or October 3. October gets your scores back roughly 10-13 days later, which lands them in your College Board portal just in time for November 1 early decision deadlines. Skip August only if you've already hit your target score on a junior-year sitting — otherwise, treat August as your safety net.

The shift to digital — branded Bluebook by the College Board — is the single biggest change to the SAT in a decade, and a lot of older prep advice is now obsolete. The whole exam runs inside the Bluebook app on a personal laptop, a school-issued device, or a borrowed tablet from College Board.

There is no paper booklet, no separate answer sheet, no #2 pencil. A few practical things this changes. First, the test is adaptive at the module level — your performance on the first module of each section determines whether you get an easier or harder second module.

That means an early stumble in Reading and Writing can cap your possible score before you finish. Second, the on-screen Desmos graphing calculator is available for the entire math section, even on questions that previously banned calculators. Third, you can flag questions, strike through wrong answers, and jump around within a module — but not between modules.

Most students report finishing each module with 5-8 minutes to spare on the easier module and finishing right at the buzzer on the harder one. Pacing strategy matters more than ever.

Three quiet rules of thumb the College Board's official guidance never explicitly tells you. First: book the test center, not just the date. A center 5 miles from home is worth real score points on average, because shorter morning commutes reduce cortisol.

Second: never test on the day after a school dance, big game, or family event — sleep quality the night before predicts 40-60 points of variance in your score. Third: if you wear glasses or contacts, bring an extra pair. Bluebook is bright, the screen runs for over two hours, and eye fatigue is a real scoring tax that nobody talks about.

Once you've picked the next SAT date, the rest is logistics — and these are the deadlines that quietly destroy testing plans every cycle.

You have three deadline tiers for every sitting: the regular registration deadline (about 26-30 days before test day), the late registration deadline (about 14-17 days before, with an extra fee), and the changes/cancellation deadline (usually 5-7 days before).

Miss the late deadline and you're done — there is no test-day walk-up registration anywhere in the country. The College Board does not bend this for any reason short of a documented natural disaster.

One detail that catches students every year: registration is genuinely first come, first served on a per-center basis. Once a center fills, the t sat pushes you to the next available test site, which could be 30+ miles away. In dense metro areas (Bay Area, NYC, Boston, DC suburbs) the most popular centers fill three months early for the October date. Register the day the window opens if you can.

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Pick Your Next SAT Date Checklist

  • Confirm which college application deadline the score has to support (ED1 = November score release at latest)
  • Run a free 20-minute timed practice quiz and write down your raw score for both sections
  • Subtract your current score from your target score — that gap tells you how many weeks of prep you need
  • Compare your needed prep weeks against each upcoming SAT date and circle the first one that fits
  • Check your registration window and budget — late fees add $34, changes add $25
  • Verify you meet fee-waiver criteria if cost is a barrier (most students who qualify never apply)
  • Confirm your preferred test center has open seats before locking in the date
  • Build a backup plan: register for one date now, mentally bookmark the next one as your retake

Different students need different signals to know if a particular sitting makes sense — and the cost-versus-value math is one of the trickiest pieces.

Cost-wise, the digital SAT runs $68 for the standard test and $43 in fees for international centers (in addition to the base fee). Late registration adds $34, changing your test center or date costs $25, and getting your score by phone is another $15. Most of these can be waived if you qualify.

The fee waiver program is one of the College Board's most under-used benefits. If you're in the U.S., a U.S. territory, or you're a U.S. citizen testing abroad, and your family meets one of several need-based criteria — household income at or below USDA-defined low income for your family size, enrollment in any federal program serving low-income families, or you're homeless, in foster care, or a ward of the state — you can get up to two free SATs, plus free score reports for unlimited colleges, plus free CSS Profile use.

If you're testing in fall 2026 specifically, watch out for one calendar trap: school day testing. Many high schools now offer a free in-school SAT on a Wednesday or Thursday — usually in October or April. This counts as a real SAT and the score goes on your College Board record.

For students with documented disabilities, accommodations like 50% extended time, 100% extended time, reading aloud, breaks between sections, and screen magnification are available — but the approval process takes 7 weeks minimum. If you haven't already applied through your school's SSD coordinator, accommodations almost certainly won't be in place for the very next SAT.

Want to feel the pacing of the real test before you sit it? The fastest way is a timed practice quiz on the actual question types you'll see.

Pick the section that worries you most and work through a 15-20 minute drill — it will tell you more about where you stand than any prep book. Now to the question you came here to answer: which SAT date should I take?

Use this checklist to narrow it down in under two minutes. One question that comes up constantly is whether SAT scores still matter, or whether colleges have gone test-optional forever.

Short answer: scores matter again, and they matter more than they did during the pandemic-era surge. As of the 2026-2027 cycle, MIT, Dartmouth, Yale, Brown, Cornell, Georgetown, Caltech, and the entire University of California system have reinstated SAT/ACT requirements in some form.

Stanford and Harvard remain test-optional but report that 87% of admitted students submitted scores anyway. The competitive truth is that test-optional has become "test-strongly-recommended" at most selective schools.

If you're a borderline applicant — strong GPA but no other distinguishing factor — a competitive SAT score is now arguably more useful than it was in 2020. Schools say a test score gives them an extra calibration point against grade inflation, especially when comparing students from very different high schools.

That doesn't mean you need a 1600. It means you need a score that's at or above the median for the schools you're targeting — and the next SAT is your chance to get there.

The single biggest predictor of SAT performance isn't IQ, it isn't your GPA, and it isn't whether you took an expensive prep course. It's time on task — how many hours you actually spent doing real practice questions under real time pressure.

The College Board's own research, plus a 20-school Khan Academy partnership study, suggests that students who put in 20+ hours of focused practice see an average score gain of 115 points. That's the difference between, say, a 1280 and a 1400 — enough to flip you from "qualified" to "competitive" at most selective schools.

Here is a realistic prep timeline. If the next SAT is 12+ weeks away, you can do a full prep cycle: diagnostic test, weak-area drilling, full timed practice, retest.

If you have 6-8 weeks, focus on your weakest section only and do two full practice tests. If it's under 4 weeks, stop trying to learn new content — drill timing on questions you already know how to solve, and book a later date as your real attempt.

The good news: you can use the time pressure of the next SAT to your advantage. There's a reason most score improvements happen in the last two weeks of prep — deadlines force focus. Pick the next realistic date, work backwards from it, and treat it as a deadline, not a wish.

One last piece of advice that nobody gives you: plan two sittings, not one. Almost every student who hits their target score does so on the second or third attempt, not the first. Knowing you have a backup date in your pocket reduces the panic on test morning.

The College Board's Score Choice feature lets you send only your best scores to most colleges anyway, so a weaker first attempt costs you almost nothing. A few schools (Georgetown, the UCs in some cases) ask for all scores — check each school's policy before you assume Score Choice covers you.

Pick your first date as a "shake-out run" and the next one as the real attempt — your scores will thank you. One more thing: pre-test logistics matter more than people expect. Charge your laptop the night before. Bring two snacks and a water bottle.

Show up 30 minutes early at minimum — the line for check-in moves slower than you'd think, and arriving frazzled costs real points. If you're testing on a borrowed College Board device, you'll need to arrive even earlier (45 minutes is the standard recommendation).

Ready? Pick your date, lock in your prep window, and run your next practice quiz today. The next SAT is closer than you think — and the version of you that walks out of the test center on score-release day will be glad you started preparing right now, not next week.

SAT 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.