SAT Calculator Policy 2026: Approved Calculators and Rules

SAT calculator policy: Desmos is built in for all Math questions. TI-84, scientific, and graphing calculators allowed. Full approved calculator list and rules.

SAT Calculator Policy 2026: Approved Calculators and Rules

SAT Calculator Policy Summary

📊Built-inDesmos Graphing CalculatorAvailable for all Math questions
AllowedTI-84, TI-Nspire (non-CAS)Most graphing calculators OK
BannedCAS CalculatorsTI-Nspire CAS, TI-89 not allowed
📱NeverPhones as CalculatorsNot permitted under any circumstances
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The Built-In Desmos Calculator on the Digital SAT

The Digital SAT includes a built-in Desmos graphing calculator available for all Math questions in both Math modules. This is the most important part of the SAT calculator policy to understand: every student, regardless of what physical calculator they bring, has access to a fully functional graphing calculator through the Bluebook testing interface. Students who do not bring any physical calculator are not at a disadvantage on the Digital SAT because of this built-in tool.

The Desmos tool available in Bluebook matches the standard Desmos graphing calculator at desmos.com — the same free tool students can practice with outside of school. It can graph functions, find intersections of curves, evaluate expressions, display tables of values, and use sliders to explore parameter changes. For the Digital SAT specifically, the highest-value Desmos uses are: graphing systems of equations to find intersection points (avoiding algebraic substitution), graphing quadratic functions to read the vertex directly, and verifying answers by checking that proposed solutions satisfy the original equation. For detailed strategies on using Desmos effectively, see our desmos sat guide. For understanding which Math topics these tools help most, see what about sat and our how many questions are on the sat breakdown.

The Desmos Scientific Calculator is also available within Bluebook, toggling between graphing and scientific modes. For simple arithmetic calculations — percentages, exponents, square roots, trigonometric functions — the scientific mode is faster than the graphing mode and avoids the overhead of setting up a graph. Students who are comfortable with the scientific calculator mode often switch between modes depending on whether the question needs computation (scientific) or visualization (graphing). For reference on which math formulas the test provides versus which you must memorize, see our sat reference sheet.

Practice with Desmos before test day is essential — the interface requires familiarity to use quickly under timed conditions. Entering equations incorrectly (forgetting ^ for exponents, omitting parentheses for fractions, using the wrong function names) produces incorrect graphs and wrong answers. Students who have never used Desmos before their test date and try to learn it during the exam lose significant time. Practice at desmos.com using the same interface as Bluebook — the two are identical in function. For timing strategy and how the calculator fits into the overall test time budget, see our how long does the sat take guide. For full-length Bluebook format practice, see our sat test library.

Approved Physical Calculators for the SAT

Students may bring their own approved physical calculator to the Digital SAT in addition to or instead of using the built-in Desmos. College Board maintains a list of approved calculators at collegeboard.org — this list is updated periodically and should be verified before test day. The general categories of approved physical calculators are: most graphing calculators (with exceptions noted below), all scientific calculators, and all four-function calculators. The most popular approved calculators are the TI-84 Plus, TI-84 Plus CE, TI-Nspire (non-CAS version), and Casio fx-9750 series.

The TI-84 Plus and TI-84 Plus CE are the most widely used graphing calculators in US high schools and are fully approved for the SAT. These calculators are permitted in all testing configurations. Students who use a TI-84 daily in their math classes and are highly comfortable with it may find it beneficial to bring it to the SAT as a backup or for calculations where physical keyboard input is faster than clicking on-screen buttons. The TI-Nspire (non-CAS version) is also approved — it is a more powerful graphing calculator than the TI-84 and includes more advanced graphing and statistical capabilities. The TI-Nspire CAS (Computer Algebra System) version, which can solve equations symbolically, is NOT allowed.

The reason CAS calculators are prohibited is that they can solve many SAT algebra problems automatically — factor polynomials, solve equations, simplify expressions — essentially automating the math the test is designed to assess. Bringing a CAS calculator would give an unfair advantage that the Desmos tool (which graphically displays solutions but does not symbolically solve algebraic equations) does not provide. Proctors are trained to check calculators before testing begins and will not allow CAS-capable calculators in the testing room. If you attempt to bring a prohibited calculator, it will be confiscated and you will be limited to Desmos only.

For students who want to use their physical calculator alongside Desmos: this is allowed. There is no rule against having both a physical calculator on your desk and using Desmos on screen. Many students use the physical calculator for quick numeric calculations (avoiding the Desmos interface overhead) and switch to Desmos for graphing tasks. This dual-calculator approach is particularly useful for students who are very fast with their physical calculator's numeric keypad but also want Desmos available for visualization. For planning your test date and making sure you have time to order an approved calculator before the test, see sat dates 2025 and sat registration. For understanding how score results after the test compare to national benchmarks, see what is a good sat score and khan academy sat preparation for how to improve before a retake.

SAT Calculator Strategy: What to Use and When

The most effective approach to SAT calculator strategy is not choosing between Desmos and a physical calculator — it is developing a clear sense of which question types benefit from any calculator and which are faster solved mentally. Students who open their calculator for every question, including simple linear equations and basic arithmetic, lose more time than they save. A student who reaches for Desmos every time they see a variable is using the tool in a way that slows them down. Strategic calculator use is a skill that needs to be practiced, not assumed.

The clearest signals to reach for Desmos on the Digital SAT: the question involves two or more equations and asks for an intersection or solution point; the question asks about the vertex, maximum, minimum, or zeros of a quadratic or polynomial; the question gives you a graph and asks you to find approximate values; or you have tried an algebraic approach and are stuck after 60 seconds. These are the scenarios where Desmos can turn a two-minute struggle into a fifteen-second click. Everything else — one-variable linear equations, percentage calculations, unit conversions, simple proportion problems — is generally faster without opening the calculator at all.

For students who are choosing between taking the SAT with only Desmos versus bringing a physical calculator, the decision matters most for the numerical computation questions that appear throughout the Math section. Ratio and proportion word problems, statistical calculations, and multi-step percentage questions are common in the Problem Solving and Data Analysis domain (about 15% of Math questions). For these, a physical calculator's numeric keypad can be faster than navigating Desmos' on-screen interface. If you have a TI-84 available and are comfortable with it, practicing both Desmos and TI-84 in your prep and bringing both on test day is the safest strategy — use whichever feels faster in the moment. For building comfort with the Digital SAT environment before test day, take full-length practice tests in Bluebook using Desmos only first, then take another session with both tools, to understand the difference in your speed and accuracy under both conditions. For timing details, see how long does the sat take. For when to time your test to maximize preparation, see when should you take the sat.

SAT Calculator Rules: Allowed vs Not Allowed

What is and is not permitted as a calculator on the Digital SAT.

Calculators permitted on the Digital SAT:

Built-in Desmos (always available) — graphing and scientific modes
TI-84 Plus / TI-84 Plus CE ✓
TI-Nspire (non-CAS) ✓
TI-83 Plus ✓
Casio fx-9750GII / fx-9860 series ✓
HP Prime (non-CAS mode) ✓
All scientific calculators (TI-30, Casio fx-300, etc.) ✓
All four-function calculators ✓

Rule of thumb: if your calculator does not have CAS capability, no QWERTY keyboard, and can run on battery or solar (no power cords), it is almost certainly allowed. Verify on collegeboard.org before your test date.

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Is the TI-84 Allowed on the SAT?

Yes — the TI-84 Plus and TI-84 Plus CE are both fully approved for the Digital SAT. They are among the most popular physical calculators used by SAT test-takers. However, most students find the built-in Desmos graphing calculator in Bluebook equally or more powerful for SAT-specific question types, particularly for graphing and finding intersections. If you have spent years using a TI-84 and are extremely comfortable with it, bringing it can help. If you are equally comfortable with Desmos, there is no advantage to bringing a physical calculator — Desmos covers everything the SAT requires. For dedicated Desmos strategy, see our desmos sat guide covering when to use Desmos vs mental math and when to use the physical calculator.

SAT Calculator Policy 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.