§ Tools — 01

Calculate your
Digital SAT score.

A precise, free score predictor built on the College Board’s 2026 adaptive scoring tables. Enter the correct-answer count for each module — read your scaled score, section split and where it places you for admissions.

Edition

2026

Authority

College Board official tables

§ 01 — Calculate

01Reading & WritingModule 1
scaled · 240
/ 27
02Reading & WritingModule 2 — adaptive
scaled · 190
/ 27
03MathematicsModule 1
scaled · 240
/ 22
04MathematicsModule 2 — adaptive
scaled · 190
/ 22

Method

Each module’s correct count converts to a scaled score using the College Board’s adaptive table — not a percentage. The two section totals (R&W and Math, each 200–800) sum to your composite score out of 1600.

§ Your score

Digital SAT

out of 1600·Below Average

Reading & Writing

0

/ 800

Mathematics

0

/ 800

01R&W Module 1240 · 14/27
02R&W Module 2190 · 14/27
03Math Module 1240 · 11/22
04Math Module 2190 · 11/22

Score range

400 — 1600

0

400+

851+

1051+

1251+

1451+

§ 02 — Plan

For early-stage learners

You’re starting at the right time.

A personal mentor will design a structured plan from foundation to target score — daily lessons, practice and review, all individually paced.

One-on-one mentoring · Trusted by 340+ students

§ 03 — Reference

On the calculator.

A free, accurate Digital SAT predictor built on the College Board’s official 2026 scoring tables. Unlike percentage-based shortcuts, this tool uses the same adaptive scaling the actual exam uses — so the score you see here mirrors the score you’d receive on test day. Enter the number of correct answers per module; the calculator handles the rest.

The scale

400 to 1600.

Two sections — Reading & Writing and Mathematics — each contribute 200–800 points. The composite is the sum, scaled.

Adaptive modules

Module 2 reacts to Module 1.

Each section is split in two. The difficulty of Module 2 adapts to your Module 1 performance — which is why two students with the same raw count can land on different scaled scores.

Reading & Writing

27 + 27

questions across two adaptive modules

Mathematics

22 + 22

questions across two adaptive modules

§ 04 — Bands

What the score buys you.

Score thresholds and their typical admissions read. Use as a directional guide; individual schools vary.

14511600

Excellent

Top 1–3% — Ivy League / MIT / Stanford candidacy.

12511450

Very Good

Top 10–25% — selective private and top state universities.

10511250

Good

Top 50% — solid for most four-year colleges and scholarships.

8511050

Average

Reachable for many colleges; strengthen application elsewhere.

400850

Below Average

Strong upside — focused prep can move the needle quickly.

§ 05 — Method

Move the score.
Move the outcome.

Reading & Writing

Wide reading is the foundation. Diverse texts — long-form journalism, literary fiction, science writing — train the comprehension reflexes the exam tests. Pair this with deliberate practice on grammar and rhetoric, and pace yourself at roughly 90 seconds a question.

  • 01Read across genres weekly. Track unfamiliar words.
  • 02Drill grammar and rhetoric in short, daily blocks.
  • 03Time yourself — ~90 seconds per question is the bar.

Mathematics

Coverage matters more than cleverness. Algebra, geometry and a sliver of trigonometry account for the majority of the section. Master the calculator (Desmos is built in), build mental-math fluency, and review every wrong answer until you can teach it back.

  • 01Solidify algebra and geometry; touch trigonometry.
  • 02Get fast in Desmos — it’s the test’s built-in calculator.
  • 03Review mistakes until you can re-derive the right method.

Personal mentoring

A mentor walks you through this — one to one.

Free 30-minute first session. No payment, no commitment.

Get started

§ 06 — Usage

Four steps.

01

Count correct answers

After a practice test, total your correct answers per module — Reading & Writing 1, Reading & Writing 2, Math 1, Math 2.

02

Enter the figures

Use the sliders or type directly into the number fields. Updates are instant.

03

Read the result

Composite, section split, module-level scaled scores, and where you fall on the score range.

04

Track over time

Recompute after every practice test. The score is the signal — its trajectory is the story.

§ 07 — Q & A

Common questions.

01What is a good SAT score?+
A composite of 1200+ is competitive for many four-year colleges; 1400+ is strong for selective schools; 1500+ is required for the most selective. Targets vary by program — the right score is the score that opens the doors you want.
02How accurate is this calculator?+
Highly. It uses official College Board scoring tables for the 2026 Digital SAT. Real test scores can vary by 10–20 points depending on the specific exam edition.
03Difference between Digital SAT and the old SAT?+
Shorter (2 hours vs. 3), adaptive modules, a built-in Desmos calculator across all math, and faster score reporting (days, not weeks).
04Can I improve with practice?+
Yes — students who take multiple official practice tests and review mistakes deliberately typically gain 100–200 points or more. Consistency compounds.
05How many times can I take the SAT?+
As often as you like. Most students take it 2–3 times. Many colleges superscore — they take your highest section scores across all sittings.

Still have questions about the SAT or your prep plan?

Talk to a mentor →

§ 08 — Begin

Reach your target
Digital SAT score.

Personal mentoring from tutors who’ve guided students into MIT, Stanford, UPenn and beyond. One mentor, one student, one plan — no batches, no shortcuts.