SAT Percentiles 2026 — Score Percentile Chart for Every SAT Score
SAT percentiles 2026: find what percentile any SAT score falls in. Full chart from 400–1600. 1400 SAT = 95th percentile, 1200 = 74th, 1000 = 40th.

Key SAT Score Percentiles

What SAT Score Percentiles Mean
Your SAT score percentile tells you what percentage of test-takers scored at or below your score. A 95th percentile score means you scored higher than 95% of test-takers — only 5% scored as high or higher. Percentile ranks are calculated nationally across all students who took the SAT in a given year, and they're published by College Board in the annual SAT suite report.
Two types of percentiles appear on your College Board score report: nationally representative percentiles and SAT user percentiles. The nationally representative score reflects the entire US student population (including students who don't take the SAT). SAT user percentiles reflect only students who actually took the SAT. For college admissions purposes, SAT user percentiles are more relevant — colleges compare you against the pool of actual test-takers, not the broader theoretical population. Most published percentile charts use the SAT user percentile.
Percentile rank is more meaningful than raw score for admissions context because it accounts for test difficulty variation across years. A 1400 SAT in one year may correspond to a slightly different raw score in another year, but the percentile rank stays stable — both consistently represent approximately the 95th percentile. When colleges publish their middle 50% SAT ranges, those ranges are expressed in raw scores but you can compare them to percentile ranks to understand your competitive position.
The national average SAT score is approximately 1060, corresponding to roughly the 50th percentile. This means a 1060 is a median performance — half of all test-takers score above it, half below. For context: the average at highly selective universities (Ivy League, MIT, Stanford) is 1500+, which is approximately the 96th–99th percentile. The average at a broad-access state university might be 1100–1200, corresponding to the 55th–74th percentile. Knowing where your score falls on this spectrum helps calibrate your college list accurately.
Improving your percentile by 10 points is easier at the lower end of the score range and harder at the top. Moving from the 40th to 50th percentile requires gaining about 80–100 raw score points (roughly 1000 to 1060). Moving from the 95th to 99th percentile requires gaining 120+ raw score points (roughly 1500 to 1580). This is because the score distribution has a long tail at the top — fewer students occupy each percentile point near the perfect score. A student at 1480 who wants to reach the 99th percentile needs to close a much smaller raw score gap than a student at 1100 who wants to reach the 75th percentile, but the competition is correspondingly fiercer.
For a hands-on way to measure your current percentile, take a full-length timed practice test under real conditions. Our sat test section has complete Digital SAT practice tests. After getting a score, use the percentile chart below to find your rank and identify your improvement target. For structured preparation to reach your target percentile, see khan academy sat prep — the official College Board-partnered free prep program. For the full formula reference needed for Math section prep, see sat formula sheet. To understand your score in the context of what top colleges expect, see what is a good sat score and ivy league sat scores for top-school benchmarks. The highest sat score guide explains what a perfect 1600 means and how rare it is.
How to Improve Your SAT Percentile
The most common mistake students make with SAT percentile targeting is fixating on a round number like 1400 rather than identifying the precise score needed at each specific target school. The right approach is to look up the actual percentile requirements at each school on your list, then choose a prep target accordingly. The most common mistake is choosing an arbitrary score goal (like "1400") without understanding what percentile it represents at specific colleges. A 1400 SAT is the 92nd percentile nationally — strong by most measures — but it falls below the 25th percentile at MIT, Harvard, and Stanford. The same score sits above the 75th percentile at dozens of respected state schools. The right target score isn't "as high as possible" — it's the score that puts you at or above the 75th percentile at your target school with enough buffer to be comfortable. Once you know that number, working backwards to identify the prep time and effort required gives you a concrete roadmap rather than an open-ended goal.
Score percentile also interacts with test-optional policy in important ways. If you are applying test-optional to a school where your score would fall below the 25th percentile, submitting that score typically hurts your application — the school treats the absence of a score as neutral but treats a below-25th-percentile score as a negative signal. If your score would be above the school's 50th percentile, submitting it helps. If you're in the 25th–50th percentile range at a given school, the decision depends on how strong the rest of your application is. The boston college average sat guide has middle 50% ranges for 30+ universities to help you make this calculation school by school. If you want to understand what percentile range corresponds to a competitive score nationally, our is 1200 a good sat score guide breaks down specific score tiers in detail. For score checking and release timelines after your test, see when do sat scores come out.
Moving from one percentile band to the next requires understanding exactly which question types and skill areas are holding your score back. Your College Board score report includes question-level detail — after each test, review every question you missed and categorize them by skill type (Heart of Algebra, Problem Solving, Command of Evidence, etc.). Students who improve most between retakes are those who target their two or three highest-miss skill areas specifically, rather than doing general review.
Percentile improvement is a mathematical function of score improvement. If your goal is to reach the 90th percentile from the 75th (approximately 1200 to 1340), you need to gain 140 points. At an average improvement rate of 10–30 points per month of focused prep, that's a 5-14 month timeline for most students. If your goal is more modest — moving from 80th to 90th percentile (approximately 1260 to 1340) — 80 raw points in 3-8 months is achievable with consistent weekly practice. Setting a specific target percentile that corresponds to a real college's 50th or 75th percentile score gives your prep a concrete goal rather than an abstract score.
Test-taking strategy also affects percentile. The Digital SAT's adaptive format means Module 2 adjusts to your Module 1 performance — scoring well in Module 1 unlocks harder (but higher-value) questions in Module 2. Students who are sloppy in Module 1 end up with an easier but less score-differentiated Module 2, capping their possible percentile. Focusing on accuracy (not just speed) in Module 1 of each section is disproportionately important. For timing strategy guidance, see how long is the sat for the full test timeline and our time-per-question breakdown. For structured prep options beyond self-study, see sat prep courses for a comparison of leading programs. When you're ready to register for your target test date, our sat dates 2025 guide has the full schedule. Students checking scores after test day can follow our how to check sat scores step-by-step guide.
SAT Percentile Chart by Score Range
1600 SAT = 99th+ percentile
1580–1600 = 99th+ percentile
1560–1570 = 99th percentile
1540–1550 = 99th percentile
1520–1530 = 98th–99th percentile
1500–1510 = 97th–98th percentile
1480–1490 = 96th–97th percentile
1460–1470 = 95th–96th percentile
1440–1450 = 94th–95th percentile
1420–1430 = 93rd–94th percentile
1400–1410 = 92nd–93rd percentile
Scores in this range represent the top 7–8% of test-takers. These are the scores that make applicants competitive at highly selective universities. The 1500 threshold is approximately where the middle 50% of Ivy League enrolled students begins.

SAT Percentile Improvement Checklist
Nationally Representative vs. SAT User Percentiles
Your College Board score report shows two percentile columns. Nationally representative percentiles estimate where your score falls relative to all US students your age (including those who never took the SAT) — these tend to be slightly higher than user percentiles because many lower-performing students don't take the SAT. SAT user percentiles reflect only actual test-takers — this is the number most relevant to college admissions, since it shows where you rank among real applicants. When comparing your score to college-published middle 50% ranges, use the user percentile column. For comparing yourself to the national population broadly (e.g., for scholarship eligibility that requires top X% of students), use the nationally representative column. For detailed College Board score report navigation, see college board sat scores.
SAT 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.