SOL Pass: Complete Guide to Passing Virginia's Standards of Learning Tests

Everything about passing Virginia's SOL tests: score requirements, study resources, practice tests, and what happens if you don't pass.

SOL Pass: Complete Guide to Passing Virginia's Standards of Learning Tests
SOL Pass at a Glance: Passing score varies by test — typically 400 on a 0–600 scale | End-of-Course (EOC) tests required for high school graduation | Students who fail can retake | SOLpass.org offers free practice tests aligned to Virginia Standards | Spring is primary testing window | Remediation required for students who don't pass

SOL Pass: What Students Need to Know About Passing Virginia's SOL Tests

Virginia's Standards of Learning (SOL) assessment program is the state's K-12 testing system, measuring student proficiency across reading, writing, math, science, and history/social studies. The phrase "SOL pass" refers to the requirement that students demonstrate proficiency on SOL assessments — a requirement that carries real academic and graduation consequences in Virginia public schools. Understanding what constitutes a passing score, which tests are required for graduation, and what resources are available to help students prepare is essential for both students and parents navigating Virginia's public school system.

SOL scores are reported on a 0–600 scale with a passing threshold at 400. However, Virginia uses two performance levels within passing: Pass/Proficient (score 400–499) and Pass/Advanced (score 500–600). Students who score 400–499 have demonstrated grade-level proficiency in the tested standards. Students scoring 500 or higher have demonstrated advanced proficiency. For graduation purposes, passing is passing — the distinction between Proficient and Advanced affects academic recognition and course placement decisions but doesn't create different diploma pathways at the basic level.

Not all SOL tests carry equal weight for graduation. The critical tests for high school diploma eligibility are the End-of-Course (EOC) assessments in Reading, Writing, and five additional tested areas. Virginia requires students to pass a minimum number of verified credits — units of credit earned by passing the relevant SOL test — as part of Standard and Advanced diploma requirements. Reading and Writing are always required. The additional five EOC credits must come from mathematics, laboratory science, history/social science, computer science/career/technical education, and a student's choice combination of the remaining areas. For detailed information about pass score thresholds across different grade levels, the full sol pass score reference breaks down exactly what score each SOL test requires.

The SOL testing program is administered primarily in spring, with a smaller fall testing window available for students who need to retake specific assessments. The spring window typically runs from late April through mid-June. End-of-Course exams are taken at the end of the course, meaning students take them when they complete the relevant class rather than at a fixed grade level. Most eighth graders take pre-algebra or algebra SOL tests; most ninth graders take the Reading EOC after completing their first high school English course. The pacing varies based on which courses a student is enrolled in, making course selection an important factor in SOL scheduling. The overall virginia sol preparation guide covers all grade bands and testing windows in detail for students who want a comprehensive overview.

SOLpass.org is one of the most widely used free resources for SOL test preparation. The site provides practice tests, instructional modules, and standards-aligned review material across all tested subject areas and grade levels, organized by Virginia's specific SOL standards rather than general content. Many Virginia teachers recommend or assign SOLpass.org activities as supplemental practice leading up to testing windows. The site's strength is its alignment to Virginia's specific standards — unlike generic practice test platforms, SOLpass material reflects exactly the content Virginia includes in its released test questions and SOL blueprints. Students who use the site regularly throughout the school year rather than only in the final weeks before testing report better preparation outcomes because the platform builds sustained standards familiarity rather than last-minute test anxiety relief.

Solar System - SOL - Standards of Learning certification study resource
  • Pass/Proficient: Score of 400–499 (0–600 scale)
  • Pass/Advanced: Score of 500–600
  • Fail: Score below 400
  • Graduation requirement: Students must earn verified credits by passing EOC tests in Reading, Writing, and additional subject areas
  • Standard Diploma: Requires 6 verified credits from SOL passage
  • Advanced Studies Diploma: Requires 9 verified credits from SOL passage
Effective SOL Preparation Strategies

Reading SOL Preparation

Mathematics SOL Preparation

Solo Leveling - SOL - Standards of Learning certification study resource

What Happens If a Student Doesn't Pass the SOL?

Not passing an SOL test doesn't mean automatic failure of a course, but it does have academic consequences that vary by grade level. For elementary and middle school tests, SOL failure typically triggers placement in remediation programs and may affect course recommendations, but it doesn't directly prevent promotion to the next grade in most districts. The stakes escalate significantly at the high school level, where EOC passage is required for verified graduation credits and ultimately for diploma eligibility.

When a student fails an EOC test, Virginia law requires the school to provide a remediation plan before the student retakes the assessment. Remediation content varies by school and district but typically includes targeted instruction on the specific standards the student struggled with, based on performance report data. Some schools offer summer school programs specifically for SOL remediation. Students who fail the writing EOC must complete specific remediation activities that address their identified weakness areas before their retake. The school counselor and student's teacher are the primary sources for guidance on the specific remediation pathway your child's school follows. The full range of writing-specific assessment requirements and what's tested in the writing EOC is covered in the sol test format guide.

Virginia also has an expedited retake option for students who were close to passing. Students who score in the 375–399 range (just below passing) can access expedited retake procedures that allow for additional retake attempts with targeted support. This provision recognizes that students who are close to the passing threshold may benefit from a different remediation approach than students who scored significantly below passing. Schools handle the logistics of expedited retakes, and parents should ask specifically about this option if their student scored in the 370–399 range.

SOL scores are reported to parents with performance level descriptors and a numeric scale score. The performance report also includes strand-level subscores showing relative performance across the different content areas tested on that assessment. For example, a Reading SOL score report might show that a student performed well on literary text questions but scored lower on informational text analysis — actionable information for focused summer practice. Scores from previously released tests on the Virginia Department of Education website (education.virginia.gov) provide the most accurate representation of what the current exam tests and at what difficulty level. Reviewing the sol test materials on VDOE alongside SOLpass.org practice gives students the most realistic preparation experience available outside of the official test administration.

For students who are approaching graduation and need verified credits, understanding the difference between a course credit and a verified credit is essential. A course credit is earned by passing the class. A verified credit is earned by passing both the class and the corresponding SOL test. Standard Diploma candidates need 22 course credits with 6 of those verified; Advanced Studies Diploma candidates need 26 course credits with 9 verified. Students who pass all their classes but fail multiple SOL tests can accumulate the course credits needed for diploma count but fall short of the verified credit requirement. Planning ahead — knowing which verified credits are already earned and which still need SOL passage — prevents graduation surprises. The pass score breakdown and verified credit requirements by test and diploma track are in the sol pass org reference guide on this site.

Pros
  • +SOL passage provides a statewide academic benchmark that's consistent across all Virginia public schools
  • +Multiple retake opportunities allow students to demonstrate proficiency without a single test determining outcomes
  • +Free preparation resources available through SOLpass.org, VDOE released tests, and most school libraries
  • +SOL performance reports include strand-level data that parents can use to guide targeted summer practice
  • +Advanced Studies Diploma pathway rewards students who pass SOLs at higher proficiency levels
Cons
  • Required SOL passage for graduation adds pressure beyond classroom performance — passing a class alone isn't sufficient
  • Students who struggle with standardized testing format may perform below their actual classroom knowledge level
  • EOC tests taken at end of each course create multiple high-stakes testing moments throughout high school
  • Remediation requirements for failing students can affect scheduling flexibility and course selection
  • Students who pass all courses but fail SOL tests need deliberate planning to ensure they earn required verified credits
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Throughout the Year: Build Standards Mastery

Regular classroom instruction is the foundation — use SOLpass.org for supplemental practice organized by the specific standards your teacher covers
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6–8 Weeks Before: Focused Review

Review the SOL blueprint for your test, identify weakest content areas using practice test data, focus study time on highest-weight standards
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2–3 Weeks Before: Practice Tests

Complete full-length released SOL tests under timed conditions, review every wrong answer to understand the reasoning behind the correct choice

Test Day

Read questions carefully, pace yourself across the full test, flag uncertain questions and return — don't leave any question unanswered
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Results and Next Steps

Pass: verified credit earned | Score 400–499: explore options for improving to Advanced | Score below 400: access remediation support and schedule retake

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.