What Is a Good SAT Score? 2026 Score Ranges Guide
What is a good SAT score in 2026? SAT score ranges by college, average scores, percentiles, competitive benchmarks, and how colleges evaluate SAT scores.

SAT Score Scale
The SAT is scored on a scale of 400 to 1600 — the sum of two section scores: Reading and Writing (200–800) and Math (200–800). A perfect SAT score is 1600. There is no penalty for incorrect answers, so students should attempt every question. The College Board uses a process called equating to ensure that scores from different test dates are comparable, even when test forms differ in difficulty.
Understanding Your SAT Score Report
Your SAT score report includes: Total Score (400–1600) — the sum of your two section scores; Section Scores — Reading and Writing (200–800) and Math (200–800); Subscores — more granular scores within each section (e.g., Heart of Algebra, Reading comprehension) on a scale of 1–15; Cross-Test Scores — scores for Analysis in History/Social Studies and Analysis in Science, drawn from questions across both sections. For most admissions purposes, the total score (400–1600) is the primary number colleges review. Subscores help identify specific strengths and weaknesses for targeted practice.
SAT Benchmarks
The College Board publishes College and Career Readiness Benchmarks — minimum scores associated with a 75% probability of earning a C or better in a college-level course: Reading and Writing Benchmark: 480. Math Benchmark: 530. Combined benchmark: approximately 1010. Students scoring at or above both benchmarks are considered college-ready by College Board standards. These benchmarks represent a minimum floor — many competitive colleges expect scores significantly higher than the readiness benchmark.

Average SAT Scores
The national average SAT score for high school students is approximately 1010 to 1060. This varies year to year based on the population of test-takers. Understanding where you fall relative to the average helps contextualize your score.
Average SAT Scores by Student Group
All U.S. test-takers (approximate): Total average: 1020–1060; Reading and Writing average: 510–530; Math average: 510–530. Average scores vary significantly by demographic factors including family income, parental education level, and high school resources — these disparities are the subject of ongoing policy discussion in college admissions. State averages: states where most students take the SAT (like Connecticut, Delaware, and Idaho) tend to have lower average scores than states where only high-achieving college-bound students opt in to take the test (like North Dakota or Wyoming, where most students take the ACT instead). Students evaluating their scores should compare to the average for their specific peer group and target colleges rather than national averages alone.
SAT Score Distributions
Approximately 7% of students score 1400 or above. Approximately 4% of students score 1500 or above. Fewer than 1% of students score 1550 or above. A score of 1200 places a student at approximately the 74th percentile — meaning they scored higher than 74% of test-takers. A score of 1100 is at approximately the 58th percentile. A score of 1000 is at approximately the 40th percentile.

SAT Scores by College Type
What constitutes a good SAT score depends entirely on the colleges you're applying to. A score that is competitive at one institution may be well below the median at another. The most useful benchmark is the middle 50% range — the 25th to 75th percentile SAT scores for admitted students at your target college.
SAT Scores for Different College Tiers
Community colleges and open-enrollment institutions — most do not use SAT scores for admission; the SAT may be used for placement only. No competitive SAT score is required. Less selective 4-year colleges (acceptance rates above 50%) — admitted students typically score in the 900–1150 range. A score of 1000 is competitive at many of these institutions. Moderately selective colleges (acceptance rates 30%–50%) — admitted students typically score in the 1100–1300 range. A score of 1150–1200 is a solid baseline for these schools. Selective colleges and major state flagship universities (acceptance rates 20%–40%) — admitted students typically score in the 1200–1400 range. A score of 1250–1300 is competitive for many flagship state universities. Highly selective private colleges (acceptance rates 10%–20%) — admitted students typically score in the 1400–1500 range. Scores below 1350 are below the 25th percentile at these schools. Most selective colleges (acceptance rates under 10%) — Ivy League, MIT, Caltech, Stanford. Admitted students typically score 1500–1580. Even a score of 1500 may fall at or below the 25th percentile at the most selective institutions.
Using the Middle 50% Range
Every year, colleges publish the middle 50% SAT score range for their admitted class (the 25th and 75th percentile scores). A useful target: aim to score at or above the 75th percentile of your target school's admitted class. Scoring below the 25th percentile does not disqualify you, but it means your score is below average for admitted students — other parts of your application need to be very strong.
SAT Percentiles
SAT percentiles show what percentage of test-takers scored at or below a given score. Percentile rankings are useful for understanding how a score compares nationally. The College Board publishes annual percentile tables for the SAT.
SAT Score to Percentile Conversion (Approximate)
1600 (perfect): 99th+ percentile; 1550: approximately 99th percentile; 1500: approximately 98th percentile; 1450: approximately 96th percentile; 1400: approximately 94th percentile; 1350: approximately 91st percentile; 1300: approximately 87th percentile; 1250: approximately 81st percentile; 1200: approximately 74th percentile; 1150: approximately 66th percentile; 1100: approximately 58th percentile; 1050: approximately 49th percentile; 1000: approximately 40th percentile; 950: approximately 31st percentile; 900: approximately 23rd percentile. These percentile values are approximations based on recent score distributions. The official College Board percentile tables should be consulted for precise values, as distributions shift slightly each year.
Section Percentiles
Reading and Writing — a score of 600 is approximately the 78th percentile; 700 is approximately the 95th percentile; 800 (perfect) is the 99th+ percentile. Math — a score of 600 is approximately the 76th percentile; 700 is approximately the 93rd percentile; 800 (perfect) is the 99th+ percentile. Strong math performance (750–800) is particularly valuable for engineering, computer science, and other STEM programs, where math section scores receive special attention in admissions review.

Improving Your SAT Score
Most students who take the SAT more than once improve their scores. The average score increase between the first and second attempt is approximately 20 to 30 points. However, students who prepare systematically between attempts see significantly larger gains — sometimes 100 points or more.
High-Impact Improvement Strategies
Identify your specific weak areas: your score report shows subscores and cross-test scores. Focus prep time on the question types where you lose the most points — not on reviewing areas where you already perform well. Use Official SAT Prep on Khan Academy: the free official prep partnership between College Board and Khan Academy is the highest-quality resource. Students who practice 20+ hours on Khan Academy SAT Prep average a 115-point score improvement. Practice full-length tests in Bluebook: taking complete digital SAT practice tests in the Bluebook app builds the stamina and familiarity needed for the real exam. Review every mistake: after each practice test, review every incorrect answer and understand why the correct answer is right. Learning from mistakes drives more improvement than simply doing more practice questions. Target math fundamentals: algebra and advanced math (quadratics, exponentials, polynomials) are heavily tested. Filling gaps in foundational math concepts produces the largest math score gains. Vocabulary in context: for Reading and Writing, practice determining word meaning from surrounding context — this is directly tested in Words in Context questions.
Superscoring: Many Colleges Take Your Best Section Scores
About the Author
Educational Psychologist & Academic Test Preparation Expert
Columbia University Teachers CollegeDr. Lisa Patel holds a Doctorate in Education from Columbia University Teachers College and has spent 17 years researching standardized test design and academic assessment. She has developed preparation programs for SAT, ACT, GRE, LSAT, UCAT, and numerous professional licensing exams, helping students of all backgrounds achieve their target scores.