What Is the SAT Exam? 2026 Format, Sections, and Scoring Explained
What is the SAT exam? 2026 guide to the digital SAT format, Reading and Writing section, Math section, scoring (400-1600), who takes it, and how to register.

Digital SAT Format 2025
The 2025 SAT is a fully digital exam taken on a personal laptop, school-provided device, or tablet using the College Board's Bluebook app. Key differences from the old paper SAT:
- Shorter: 2 hours 14 minutes total (vs. 3 hours 15 minutes for the old SAT)
- Adaptive: The digital SAT is multistage adaptive — your performance on the first module of each section determines the difficulty level of the second module
- Built-in tools: Desmos graphing calculator is built into the Math section; you can also bring your own approved calculator
- Shorter reading passages: Each Reading and Writing question is paired with its own short passage (rather than long passages shared across multiple questions)
- Same score scale: Still 400–1600, with section scores of 200–800 for Reading and Writing and 200–800 for Math
The Bluebook app allows students to flag questions, navigate within a section, annotate passages, and use the built-in calculator and reference sheet. Students who need testing accommodations (extended time, large print, screen reader) take the same digital SAT with accommodations applied digitally.
SAT Sections
The 2025 digital SAT has two main sections:
Section 1: Reading and Writing (64 minutes)
- Two modules of 27 questions each (54 questions total)
- Content areas: Information and Ideas, Craft and Structure, Expression of Ideas, Standard English Conventions
- Each question is paired with its own short passage (50–150 words) — from literature, history, social studies, science, or humanities
- Question types: vocabulary in context, main idea/detail, author's purpose, rhetorical synthesis, grammar and usage, sentence structure
Section 2: Math (70 minutes)
- Two modules of 22 questions each (44 questions total)
- Content areas: Algebra, Advanced Math, Problem-Solving and Data Analysis, Geometry and Trigonometry
- Mix of multiple choice and student-produced response (grid-in) questions
- Desmos graphing calculator available for all Math questions; reference sheet with formulas provided
No essay: The SAT essay was eliminated in 2021. The 2025 SAT does not include an essay section.

Digital SAT 2025 at a Glance
- Format: Digital, taken on Bluebook app — adaptive
- Total time: 2 hours 14 minutes (+ breaks)
- Total questions: 98 questions (54 R&W + 44 Math)
- Calculator: Built-in Desmos + approved personal calculator
- Score range: 400–1600 composite (200–800 per section)
- Section scores: Reading & Writing: 200–800 | Math: 200–800
- Score release: Approximately 2 weeks after test day
- Average score: Approximately 1010 nationally (Class of 2024)
- Fee: $68 (fee waivers available for eligible students)
- Where: sat.collegeboard.org
- Test dates: 7 dates per year (August through June)
- Offered: Weekends at College Board test centers nationally
- Used for: College admissions, merit scholarships, state programs
- Test-optional: Many colleges are test-optional for 2025–26
- Score validity: 5 years from test date
- Superscoring: Many colleges superscore (best section scores across sittings)
How SAT Scoring Works
The SAT uses a scaled scoring system, not a simple percentage. Raw scores (number of correct answers) are converted to scaled scores through a process called equating — this accounts for slight differences in difficulty across test forms.
Score breakdown:
- Composite score: 400–1600 (sum of Reading & Writing + Math section scores)
- Reading and Writing section score: 200–800
- Math section score: 200–800
- No guessing penalty: Wrong answers don't deduct points — answer every question
- Adaptive scoring: Because the dSAT is adaptive, the second module questions are weighted differently depending on difficulty. A correct answer on the harder module is worth more than on the easier module
National averages (Class of 2024):
- Average composite: ~1010
- Average Reading and Writing: ~509
- Average Math: ~499
Superscoring: Most colleges that accept SAT scores will superscore — meaning they take your highest Math score and highest Reading & Writing score from different test sittings and combine them into the best possible composite. This rewards students who take the SAT more than once.
Who Takes the SAT — and Why
The SAT is primarily taken by high school juniors and seniors applying to four-year colleges and universities. Additional groups who take the SAT include:
- High school juniors: Most students first take the SAT in 11th grade (often March or May) to have time to retake it senior year if needed
- High school seniors: Take the SAT in August, October, or November of 12th grade for college applications due in fall/winter
- Sophomores: Some students take the PSAT/NMSQT in 10th grade as practice, and occasionally take the SAT early
- School day testers: Many states administer the SAT to all juniors during the school day for free as a state-sponsored assessment — students in these programs take the same digital SAT at no cost
What SAT scores are used for:
- College admissions: Colleges use SAT scores as one factor in admissions decisions. Most US colleges are test-optional as of 2025, meaning you can choose whether to submit scores
- Merit scholarships: Many colleges and state scholarship programs use SAT cutoff scores for merit aid eligibility — even at test-optional schools, strong scores can unlock scholarship consideration
- State scholarship programs: Some state scholarship programs (like HOPE in Georgia or Bright Futures in Florida) require minimum SAT scores
- National Merit: PSAT/NMSQT scores (not SAT scores directly) determine National Merit Scholarship eligibility — but SAT prep builds the skills tested on the PSAT
SAT vs ACT — Which Should You Take?
The SAT and ACT are both accepted by virtually all US colleges. Key differences:
- SAT Math: More algebra and data analysis; less trigonometry. ACT Math: broader coverage including more trig and some pre-calculus concepts.
- Reading: SAT passages are shorter with individual questions per passage. ACT Reading uses longer passages with multiple questions per passage and a time pressure component.
- Science section: ACT has a dedicated Science section (data interpretation); SAT does not.
- Time pressure: ACT is generally considered more time-pressured per question than the SAT.
- Recommendation: Take a free practice test for both (College Board Bluebook for SAT; ACT's free online practice for ACT) and compare your results. Go with the exam where your practice scores are stronger relative to national averages.
