SAT Fee Waiver: How to Get Your SAT Test Fee Waived in 2026

SAT fee waivers eliminate the $68 registration cost for eligible low-income juniors and seniors. Who qualifies, how to get one, and what the waiver covers.

SAT Fee Waiver: How to Get Your SAT Test Fee Waived in 2026

SAT Fee Waiver Facts

šŸ’°$68SAT Registration FeeWaived for eligible students
šŸŽ“2Free SAT SittingsPer student with fee waiver
šŸ“š4Free Score SendsIncluded with each waiver use
šŸ“ŠFreeCollege Application Fee WaiversAutomatically sent to 2,000+ schools
Sat Fee Waiver - SAT - Scholastic Assessment Test certification study resource

What Is an SAT Fee Waiver?

An SAT fee waiver is a benefit provided by College Board that eliminates the standard SAT registration fee for eligible low-income students. The standard SAT registration fee is $68 (as of 2025-2026), and students with a fee waiver can register for the SAT at no cost. Each fee waiver covers one SAT registration, and eligible students can receive up to two fee waivers — meaning eligible students can take the SAT twice for free. Beyond the registration fee itself, fee waivers come with additional benefits that significantly reduce the overall financial burden of the SAT and college application process. The fee waiver program reflects College Board's goal of ensuring that financial barriers do not prevent low-income students from taking the SAT and accessing the college admission process.

The SAT is a significant cost for families with limited resources. In addition to the $68 registration fee, students may face costs for sat cost items like score reports, test prep materials, and late registration fees. Fee waivers remove the core registration cost and also unlock additional free benefits that normally cost extra. For students in the lowest income brackets, the fee waiver program means the SAT and its standard suite of reporting tools are entirely free, making the test accessible regardless of a family's financial situation.

College Board distributes SAT fee waivers through two primary channels: school counselors and College Board's direct eligibility program. Most students who qualify receive their fee waivers through their high school counselor during junior year, when most students first take the SAT. Counselors at Title I schools and schools with high proportions of low-income students often proactively identify eligible students and provide fee waivers automatically. Students at other schools may need to request a fee waiver from their counselor by demonstrating eligibility. College Board also distributes some fee waivers directly through partner programs. For a full overview of registration and score logistics, see college board sat scores.

Who Qualifies for an SAT Fee Waiver?

College Board defines eligibility for SAT fee waivers based on several criteria, and students who meet any one of the criteria qualify. The primary eligibility criteria are: (1) enrollment in or eligibility for the federal free or reduced-price lunch program; (2) family annual income at or below the USDA Food and Nutrition Service Income Eligibility Guidelines (approximately 185% of the federal poverty level); (3) enrollment in a federal, state, or local program that aids students from low-income families, such as federal TRIO programs including Upward Bound; (4) receiving public assistance; (5) living in federally subsidized public housing or a foster home; (6) being homeless, as defined under the McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance Act; (7) being a ward of the state. Students who receive an ACT fee waiver are also automatically eligible for an SAT fee waiver — the two programs have aligned eligibility standards.

Practically, the most common pathway to SAT fee waiver eligibility is through free or reduced-price school lunch program enrollment. If a student receives free or reduced lunch at school, they almost certainly qualify for an SAT fee waiver — this is the simplest and most direct indicator. Students who are unsure whether they qualify should speak with their school counselor, who can verify eligibility and provide the waiver documentation. Students do not need to complete extensive financial documentation themselves — their counselor confirms eligibility and provides or endorses the waiver. The process is designed to be low-friction for eligible students: if you qualify, your counselor should be the primary resource for obtaining and using the waiver.

The fee waiver program is designed for 11th and 12th grade students (juniors and seniors), as these are the most common years for taking the SAT for college applications. Sophomores and freshmen can take the SAT, but they do not receive fee waivers. Fee waivers must be used within a specific timeframe — they do not roll over indefinitely. Students should plan to use their two waiver-eligible sittings strategically: typically one in spring of junior year and one in fall of senior year, aligned with normal college application timelines. For information on test date options, see sat dates 2025.

What Does an SAT Fee Waiver Cover?

The SAT fee waiver covers more than just the registration fee.

What an SAT fee waiver covers:

āœ“ SAT registration fee ($68 per sitting, 2 free sittings)
āœ“ Late registration fee (waived if registering late)
āœ“ Standby testing fee (if applicable)
āœ“ 4 free score reports per sitting sent to colleges (normally $13 each after first 4)
āœ“ Automatic eligibility for application fee waivers at 2,000+ colleges
āœ“ Free SAT Question and Answer Service (QAS) — normally $18 — shows exact questions missed

College Board automatically flags fee-waiver students in their score report, which most colleges recognize and use to extend application fee waivers automatically. This means a fee waiver-eligible student can often apply to college for free as well.

Fee Waiver for the Sat - SAT - Scholastic Assessment Test certification study resource

How to Get an SAT Fee Waiver

The most reliable way to get an SAT fee waiver is to speak with your high school counselor. The process is straightforward: tell your counselor you believe you qualify based on your family's income or lunch program status, and ask them to verify eligibility and provide a fee waiver. School counselors are trained on the eligibility criteria and have access to the documentation needed to issue waivers. At many schools, counselors proactively distribute waivers to all eligible students during junior year without requiring students to ask — if you are on the free or reduced lunch program, your counselor may already have a waiver assigned to you.

When registering for the SAT on College Board's website, students with a fee waiver enter a waiver code provided by their counselor during the registration process. The fee waiver code is entered in the payment section, which reduces the registration fee to zero. Students who received their waiver through an Upward Bound program or other TRIO program may receive the code directly from their program coordinator rather than their school counselor. The code must be entered during registration — it cannot be applied retroactively after a registration is complete without counselor assistance.

Students who are homeschooled or enrolled in alternative programs without a traditional school counselor should contact College Board directly to verify eligibility and obtain a fee waiver. The process is slightly more involved without a counselor intermediary, but College Board provides a pathway for eligible students outside the traditional school system. These students should contact College Board customer service with documentation of their eligibility criteria before their planned registration date.

For students who qualify but whose school counselor is unaware of or unfamiliar with the fee waiver program, College Board's website provides detailed eligibility documentation that can be shared with the counselor. The counselor's signature or endorsement is generally required to validate a fee waiver — self-reported eligibility alone is insufficient. If there is any uncertainty about eligibility or how to obtain the waiver code, College Board's customer service can assist and has a dedicated pathway for low-income students. Planning ahead is important: fee waivers must be arranged before registration, and registration windows open several weeks before test dates. For the registration timeline relative to test dates, review sat dates 2025 to plan registration timing.

Once a student has used fee waivers for both allowed SAT sittings and is considering a third attempt, the standard registration fee of $68 applies. Students in this situation should assess whether an additional attempt is likely to improve their score meaningfully. If a student scored 1200 on their first attempt and 1300 on their second, a third attempt may yield further improvement — but the investment should be weighed against other application priorities. For students whose target schools superscore, a third sitting can only help if the student expects to improve at least one section above their previous best. See sat superscore for how to make this decision strategically. For free prep to prepare for a retake, khan academy sat preparation is the most comprehensive no-cost resource available, with personalized practice aligned to a student's specific weak areas and full-length official practice tests.

SAT Fee Waiver and College Applications

The SAT fee waiver program extends beyond test registration to the college application process. Students who use SAT fee waivers are automatically eligible for application fee waivers at over 2,000 colleges that participate in the College Board application fee waiver program. When colleges receive score reports from fee-waiver-eligible students, many automatically waive their own application fees, effectively making the entire college application process free for eligible students. This can save hundreds of dollars for students applying to 8-12 colleges (at $50-$90 per application). The free sat test practice resources through Khan Academy ensure that even preparation is free for eligible students. For understanding how scores compare nationally and setting realistic target score goals, see average sat score and what is a good sat score to calibrate target scores for specific college lists. For ACT fee waivers (a separate but aligned program), eligible students can compare both tests before deciding which to prepare for — see act test conversion to sat for score equivalency context.

SAT Fee Waiver 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.