SAT Signups: How to Register for the College Board SAT

SAT signups happen at studentportal.collegeboard.org. Step-by-step registration, $68 fee, deadlines, fee waivers, photo upload, and test center selection.

SAT Signups: How to Register for the College Board SAT

SAT signups happen entirely online through the College Board student portal at studentportal.collegeboard.org, and the process takes most students about 20 to 30 minutes — if you have your school code, photo, and payment card sitting next to you.

You will create or sign in to your College Board account, confirm your personal details, upload a recent head-and-shoulders photo, select a test date and a test center, and pay the registration fee. That is the whole flow. The digital SAT is now the only format offered, so signing up also means downloading the Bluebook app to your device before test day — but that step happens after registration is locked in.

Here is where most first-time test takers stumble. They wait until the week before the test to register, miss the regular deadline (which falls roughly five weeks before any given test date), and end up paying a $32 late fee on top of the $68 base price. International registrants add another $43 regional fee, pushing the all-in cost above $140 if they procrastinate. The good news — l sat offers two fee waivers per income-qualified student, and those waivers cover the registration fee, four score reports, and unlimited score sends to colleges. Worth checking eligibility before you pay anything.

This guide walks through the entire SAT signup process step by step: account creation, photo requirements, school code lookup, choosing a test center, deadline math, fee structure, and fee waiver qualification. Each section gives you the exact field name, the exact deadline, and the exact dollar figure you should expect to see on your screen — so you can knock out registration in one sitting instead of three.

SAT Registration by the Numbers

$68Base Registration Fee
+$43International Fee
+$32Late Registration
5 weeksRegular Deadline

Creating Your College Board Account

Every SAT signup starts with a College Board student account. If you took the PSAT in 8th, 9th, or 10th grade your account is already alive — log in with the same email and password rather than creating a duplicate, because duplicates can split your score history across two profiles and create real headaches when colleges request reports. Head to the College Board portal and click "Sign In" in the top right. Forgot the password? Use the recovery flow tied to your email, not the parent email — accounts are tied to the student, not the household.

New users click "Create Account" and select "Student" as the user type. The signup form asks for your legal first and last name (must match the ID you will bring on test day — no nicknames, no middle initials substituted for first names), date of birth, gender, email, and a password. After you verify the email link College Board sends, you will land on a profile page asking for grade level, high school, expected graduation year, ethnicity, and home address. Fill it out completely. Half-completed profiles get flagged later and block registration until the missing fields are filled in.

One field trips up a lot of students — the "Student Search Service" opt-in. Saying yes lets colleges and scholarship programs contact you based on your score range, intended major, and demographics. Most students benefit, especially if you are open to schools you have not researched yet. If your inbox is already overwhelmed you can opt out and revisit the choice later from the privacy settings.

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This is the single most common cause of students being turned away at the test center door. The first and last name you type into your College Board profile must match the photo ID you plan to bring on test day — passport, state-issued ID, school ID with photo, or driver license. No nicknames. No "Jr." dropped to save typing. No middle initial put where the first name belongs. If your account currently reads "Alex" but your passport reads "Alexander," update the account at least a week before the test or you will be sent home with no refund and no score.

Choosing a Test Date That Works for You

College Board offers seven SAT dates a year inside the United States — typically August, October, November, December, March, May, and June. International test centers run on a slimmer five-date calendar that skips November and June. Inside the signup portal, the test date dropdown shows every upcoming date plus the registration deadline and late-registration deadline next to each one, so you can see at a glance whether you still have time to sign up without the $32 penalty.

Picking the right date matters more than most students realize. If you are applying to colleges with Early Decision or Early Action deadlines on November 1, your last realistic sitting is the October SAT — December scores release too late for most ED rounds. For Regular Decision applicants with January 1 deadlines, December is your last shot. Spring juniors usually sit March or May, then bank a June retake if their first score lands below their target. The SAT retake policy allows unlimited attempts, but each one is $68, so most students cap at two or three sittings.

One detail worth flagging — Saturday morning is the default test day. Sunday administrations exist for students who cannot test on Saturday for religious reasons, but they require a religious observance form signed by a clergy member and submitted alongside your registration. Sunday dates are not available at every center, so build in a 30-mile radius search if you need that accommodation.

The Five Steps of SAT Registration

userStep 1: Sign In or Create Account

Log in to studentportal.collegeboard.org with your existing student account, or create one if you have never taken a College Board test. One account per student — never create duplicates.

editStep 2: Confirm Profile Details

Verify legal name, date of birth, school code, grade level, and graduation year. Update anything that does not match the photo ID you will bring on test day.

cameraStep 3: Upload Your Photo

Headshot from chest up, plain background, well-lit, recent (within six months). Hats and sunglasses rejected. Photo must match the person who shows up at check-in.

map-pinStep 4: Pick Date and Test Center

Select an SAT date that fits your application timeline, then search for centers within driving distance. Popular centers fill fast — register early to get your first choice.

credit-cardStep 5: Pay or Apply Fee Waiver

$68 base fee charged at checkout, or $0 if you have a valid fee waiver code. International fee and late fee added automatically based on your selections.

Deadlines, Fees, and How Late Registration Works

The regular SAT registration deadline closes about five weeks before each test date. Miss that and you enter the late window, which runs roughly two more weeks until about three weeks before test day. Late registration tacks $32 onto the base fee, and a small percentage of test centers refuse late registrants even with the fee paid — so the practical advice is to lock your spot in the regular window if you can possibly manage it.

Here is the full fee stack as it appears on the checkout screen. Base SAT fee is $68 for any U.S. test center. Add $43 for international centers — that surcharge applies whether you live abroad year-round or you happen to be sitting the test on a study-abroad semester. Add the $32 late fee if you registered inside the late window. Add $25 if you change your test date or test center after the registration window closes.

Add $25 again if you switch from a standby waitlist to a confirmed seat. Score reports beyond the four free ones cost $14 per college per test administration. None of those add-ons are billed until you actually trigger them, so the typical first-time registrant sees just the base $68 (or $0 with a fee waiver) at checkout.

Refunds — partial and conditional. College Board refunds about $5 if you cancel before the regular deadline and a slightly larger amount if you cancel inside the late window. Cancel after the late deadline and you forfeit the fee entirely, though you can transfer to a later date for the $25 change fee. Fee waiver users do not receive cash refunds because no cash was paid in.

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Fee Structure at a Glance

Base fee: $68 charged at checkout for any test center inside the United States or U.S. territories.

What is included: One SAT sitting, four free score reports sent to colleges of your choice (must be requested within 9 days of the test), and access to your detailed score report inside your College Board account.

Late fee: +$32 if you register after the regular deadline. Late window stays open about 2 weeks beyond the regular cutoff.

Photo Upload and School Code Lookup

The photo step trips up more students than any other part of registration. Requirements are strict: you must be the only person in the photo, your head and shoulders must be clearly visible, your face cannot be obscured by hats, sunglasses, or hair, the background should be plain, and the lighting needs to be even enough that a proctor can match your face to the image during check-in.

College Board recommends a passport-style photo taken within the last six months. JPEG or PNG, between 640×480 and 2400×1800 pixels, file size under 5 MB. Selfies work fine as long as they meet the framing rules — but a school yearbook shot tends to be the cleanest option if you have one available.

The school code field is another quick stumble. Every U.S. high school has a six-digit College Board code (often called a CEEB code), and you need it for accurate score reporting and to qualify for any state or school-based reporting tools. Inside the signup portal you can search by school name and zip code — the dropdown will autocomplete with the official school name plus the code.

Homeschooled students use the standardized homeschool code 970000. If your school recently changed names or you attend a charter network, double-check the code with your school counselor before submitting. Wrong codes do not block registration, but they will block your scores from appearing in your school's aggregate report.

One last note on the profile — if you accidentally upload the wrong photo, you can replace it any time before the photo upload deadline, which closes about three days before the test. After that the photo is locked. The same holds for SAT eligibility details: change anything important before that deadline or live with it.

How to Choose the Right Test Center

Once your date is locked, the portal shows you a list of test centers within a configurable radius of your home address. Default search is 25 miles, but you can stretch it to 75 miles if your zip code returns slim pickings. Each center shows the seats remaining, the address, the school name, and a star rating that other students have left in past administrations. Popular suburban centers fill up roughly two weeks before the regular deadline closes — urban centers and small towns tend to keep seats open longer.

What actually matters when picking a center? Three things. First, distance — pick the closest center you can reach by 7:45 AM without driving in the dark on unfamiliar roads. Second, the facility itself. Schools with newer buildings and reliable wifi tend to have fewer Bluebook app sync issues than older campuses with thin networks. Third, ask older students or your counselor for direct experience — a center with friendly proctors who start on time is worth a 10-mile detour over one that runs 45 minutes late and lets phones beep through the test.

If your first-choice center fills before you can register, the portal offers a standby option at $0 extra at signup, plus $25 if you are actually admitted on test day. Standby is a gamble — show up at 7:30 AM, wait for the no-shows to clear, and hope a seat opens.

About half of standby registrants get seated. The smarter move is to widen your radius and pick a confirmed center the first time. You can change your center later for the $25 change fee if a closer one opens up, though changes need to happen before the registration deadline closes.

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SAT Registration Checklist

  • Confirm your legal name exactly matches the photo ID you plan to bring on test day
  • Look up your high school's six-digit CEEB code (or use 970000 for homeschool)
  • Have a recent head-and-shoulders photo ready in JPEG or PNG, under 5 MB
  • Pick a test date at least five weeks ahead to avoid the $32 late fee
  • Search test centers within 25 miles first, expand to 75 if seats are full
  • Check fee waiver eligibility with your counselor before paying out of pocket
  • Budget $68 for U.S. centers, $111 for international centers at standard pricing
  • Save the registration confirmation email — it doubles as your admission ticket
  • Download the Bluebook app to your test device the week of the exam
  • Set a reminder to upload your photo within 72 hours of finishing the form

Fee Waivers: Who Qualifies and How to Use Them

SAT fee waivers cover the entire $68 base fee, the $43 international surcharge if it applies, four free score reports per test, and unlimited score sends to colleges. Each eligible student receives two waivers, so you can sit the SAT twice at zero cost. Waivers are not a discount code you find online — your high school counselor issues them after confirming you meet at least one eligibility criterion.

The most common qualifier is enrollment in the federal free or reduced-price lunch program. Other paths include household income within USDA Food and Nutrition Service guidelines (about 185% of the federal poverty level), participation in a federal TRIO program like Upward Bound, being a ward of the state, living in federally subsidized public housing, or being homeless.

How to actually claim a waiver — meet with your counselor before you start the online registration. They will enter your eligibility into the College Board fee waiver system, which automatically links the waiver to your student account. When you reach the payment screen during signup, the portal recognizes your eligibility and substitutes a "Fee Waiver" option for the credit card field. No code typing required. If your counselor is hard to reach, fee waivers can also be requested directly through your College Board resources page once eligibility is confirmed by the school.

Beyond the SAT itself, fee waiver students also get application fee waivers at participating colleges (most major universities accept them), two free CSS Profile submissions for financial aid, and reduced or free AP exam fees. Worth checking eligibility even if you think you are borderline — the cumulative savings across testing and applications easily clears $500 for a typical senior year.

Registering Early vs. Waiting Until Late

Pros
  • +Save $32 by avoiding the late registration penalty fee
  • +First pick of nearby test centers before popular ones fill up
  • +More time to upload a quality photo and double-check profile details
  • +Confirmed seat reduces test-day stress — no standby gamble
  • +Window to switch test dates without paying the $25 change fee
  • +Time to research and apply for an SAT fee waiver if eligible
Cons
  • Commits you to a date months ahead — life events may force a change
  • Some students prefer the pressure of a close deadline to drive prep urgency
  • If your prep stalls, you cannot delay without paying the $25 reschedule fee
  • Score release timing locks in too — you cannot move the test for a college deadline shift
  • Cancellation refund is only about $5 if you bail before the regular deadline
  • Photo deadline still applies — registering early does not push it back

What Happens After You Click Submit

The moment you complete payment, College Board sends a confirmation email to the address on file. That email contains your admission ticket — a one-page PDF showing your name, photo, test date, test center address, and a barcode the proctor will scan at check-in. Print the ticket or save it to your phone, but do not rely solely on showing it on your phone — some centers require a printed copy. Inside your College Board account the same ticket appears under "My SAT" and stays accessible until test day.

Within 48 hours of registration you should also receive a follow-up email with Bluebook app download instructions. Bluebook is the testing platform used for every digital SAT — it runs on Mac, Windows, iPad, and managed Chromebook devices. Install it on whatever device you plan to bring to the test center (you must bring your own device unless your center specifically loans them). Open the app at least once before test day to run the "Exam Setup" wizard — this pre-loads test materials and saves 10 minutes of fumbling at check-in.

If you do not see the confirmation email within an hour of payment, check spam, then log back into your College Board account. The "My SAT" dashboard should show "Registered" with a green checkmark next to your test date. If it shows "Pending" or "Incomplete," something failed during checkout — call College Board support at (866) 756-7346 to resolve it before the registration deadline closes. After the deadline closes you cannot fix a botched registration without paying the late fee.

Common SAT Signup Mistakes (and How to Avoid Them)

A handful of small errors derail registrations and test days every year. The biggest is the name mismatch we flagged earlier — your account name must match your ID exactly. The second is forgetting that the photo upload deadline is separate from the registration deadline and closes about 72 hours before test day. The third is not researching test-optional college policies before registering. If every school on your list is firmly test-optional, you might decide to redirect that $68 and three weeks of prep time elsewhere.

Another quiet pitfall — registering for a date when scores release too late for your application deadlines. Scores drop roughly 13 days after the test for most administrations. A December SAT releases scores in late December or early January, which is too late for most Early Decision deadlines (November 1) and a tight squeeze for Regular Decision deadlines (January 1). If you are aiming at Early Action or Early Decision, your last realistic SAT sitting is October. Map out your application calendar before you pick a date.

One more — do not register for back-to-back tests assuming you can prep meaningfully in three weeks. The data is clear: students who improve scores in retakes spend at least six weeks of focused practice between sittings. If your first score lands below target, pick a retake date that gives you a full prep cycle rather than the immediate next sitting. A free SAT math diagnostic can tell you where to focus that prep time once you have a baseline. Use the gap between sittings deliberately.

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.