When to Take the SAT 2026 — Best Grade and Test Date by College Plan
When do you take the SAT? Most students take it in spring of junior year. Full grade-by-grade guide, best test dates by application type, and timing strategy.

SAT Timing at a Glance

When Do Most Students Take the SAT?
The most common time to take the SAT for the first time is spring of 11th grade (junior year), with March, May, and June being the most popular test dates. This timing gives students the advantage of having completed most of their high school math coursework (Algebra II and often pre-calculus or beyond), which directly covers a large portion of SAT Math content. Taking the SAT in junior year also leaves maximum time to retake in the fall of senior year if the score needs improvement.
According to College Board data, the majority of SAT test-takers are juniors and seniors. The split between when students take the test has shifted over time — the Digital SAT and the growth of School Day testing in states like Illinois, Colorado, and Michigan means a growing proportion of students take their first official SAT during a school-administered weekday test in 11th grade, whether they planned to or not. If you are in a state with mandatory School Day SAT, you may already have an official score without having registered for a test date yourself.
Taking the SAT earlier than junior year is less common but can be worthwhile for specific situations. Some students who are academically advanced, participating in talent identification programs like Duke TIP or Johns Hopkins CTY, or applying to selective summer programs take the SAT in 8th or 9th grade as a diagnostic measure. These early scores are typically not submitted to colleges — they serve a different purpose (identifying academic strengths and program eligibility). For standard college admissions purposes, the relevant window is junior spring through early senior fall.
The optimal first SAT date within junior year depends on your academic trajectory. Students who have completed Algebra II by the end of sophomore year and feel strong in math are often ready for a March or May junior SAT. Students who are still in Algebra II as juniors may benefit from waiting until May or June, after the course concludes. Reading and Writing readiness is less course-dependent — it comes from reading volume and grammar practice — and tends to be more stable across junior year than math readiness, which has a direct course dependency.
For students who missed the junior year window and are now seniors: the August/September SAT is your first practical opportunity for college applications. This test date provides scores before most October EA/ED deadlines. The October SAT is your primary retake option. If you are targeting schools with regular decision December deadlines, October is the last reliable date — November SAT scores arrive close to December 1 and can create timing stress. Understanding the full test date schedule is covered in our sat dates 2025 guide, and registration details are in our sat registration guide. For School Day testing and September SAT specifics, see our september sat guide.
How to Plan Your SAT Prep Timeline
Regardless of which test date you choose, effective SAT preparation requires a minimum of 6-8 weeks of focused study to see meaningful score improvement. Students who register and then start studying the week before their test date rarely improve significantly from their baseline. The preparation-to-test ratio matters: schedule your test date first, then work backwards to identify when prep should begin. If you are targeting a March SAT, begin structured prep in early January at the latest. For a May SAT, start in late February or early March.
The most effective prep strategy is targeted rather than comprehensive. After taking a full-length practice test (use Bluebook, the official College Board platform), review every question you missed and categorize the errors by skill type. You will typically find that 60-70% of your errors cluster in 2-3 skill areas rather than being evenly distributed. Spending 80% of your prep time on those specific weak areas — not doing equal review across all topics — produces faster score gains. Many students discover through this process that their reading score is dragging down their composite more than they realized, or that a specific math skill type (like nonlinear functions or geometry) accounts for a disproportionate share of their math misses.
For students who have already taken the SAT once and are preparing to retake: the score report from your previous test is the most valuable prep resource you have. The question-by-question detail shows exactly which questions you missed, with categorization by skill type. Use this data to construct a targeted prep plan for the retake rather than starting from scratch with general review. Students who retake with targeted preparation on identified weak areas improve at a much higher rate than students who simply take the test again with no structural change in their preparation approach. The sat formula sheet is a core resource for math prep review, and how many questions are on the sat covers the exact test structure so you know what to expect.
When to Retake the SAT
The retake decision has two components: (1) whether to retake at all, and (2) which test date to choose for the retake. On the first question: retake if your current score is meaningfully below the 25th percentile of enrolled students at any school on your target list AND you have sufficient time (6+ weeks) to prep before the retake. Retaking without prep rarely produces significant improvement. The national average improvement on a SAT retake is approximately 20-40 points — modest unless focused prep targets specific skill weaknesses identified from your score report.
On which test date to choose: the primary constraint is application deadlines. For seniors applying Early Decision or Early Action with November 1-15 deadlines, the September test is the last first-attempt option and October is the last retake option. For Regular Decision with January 1-15 deadlines, October or November test dates provide reliable score delivery. December scores are available for January 15 deadlines at most schools but create more risk if scores are delayed or lower than expected.
For students with strong first scores (above the 50th percentile at their target schools), retaking is optional. Many students retake out of anxiety rather than strategic necessity — their score is already competitive for their target schools, and spending 60-80 hours on SAT prep instead of strengthening essays or extracurriculars is not the best use of time. Use your target school list and their published middle 50% SAT ranges to make this decision objectively. Our what is a good sat score guide helps you calibrate whether your score is competitive. For percentile ranking context, see sat percentiles. Students improving toward top school targets can use khan academy sat prep for structured free prep and sat prep courses for guided programs. For understanding what scores top schools expect, see ivy league sat scores and stanford sat requirements. After each test, track your progress via how to check sat scores on the College Board portal. Our free sat test section has full-length practice tests to benchmark readiness before each attempt.
A final note on timing flexibility: the College Board policy allows unlimited SAT retakes with no official cap on the number of times you can take the test. While colleges generally do not penalize students for taking the SAT three or even four times, there is a practical diminishing returns curve. Students who have taken the test five or more times without improvement may face implicit skepticism in holistic review at selective schools. The strategic maximum is 3-4 attempts for most students — enough to show improvement and identify your true performance ceiling without appearing to rely disproportionately on standardized testing to make your case. If your score plateaus after three attempts, redirecting prep time toward application essays, extracurricular leadership, and recommendation letter cultivation is typically the higher-leverage use of time in the months before applications are due.
SAT Timing by Grade Level
Optional: Talent Search Testing
PSAT/NMSQT — Practice Run
First Official SAT — March, May, or June
PSAT/NMSQT — National Merit Qualifier
Senior Year Retakes — September, October, November

SAT Timing by Application Type
Last first-attempt date: September SAT
Last retake date: October SAT
EA/ED applicants must have their final scores ready by October at the latest. September scores are released in mid-September — before most November EA/ED deadlines. October scores are released in late October or early November — typically just before EA/ED deadlines but timing is tight.
If you are applying EA/ED to any school, take your first SAT no later than the preceding June (junior spring). This ensures you have scores before the EA/ED window opens and time for one retake if needed.
The 2-Attempt Rule: Why It Works
Most college admissions advisors recommend a target of 2 SAT attempts — one in junior spring and one in early senior fall if needed. The logic: one attempt gives you real data but no room to improve. Three or more attempts can signal to some highly selective schools that you were unable to achieve your target score with effort (though most schools don't penalize multiple attempts explicitly). Two attempts balance data collection with improvement opportunity while keeping your testing footprint reasonable. At test-optional schools, you control which scores to submit regardless of how many times you tested. For students using College Board's Score Choice, you can designate which sittings to report — giving you flexibility even if you take the test 3-4 times. For details on Score Choice and official score sending, 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.