Digital SAT Score Calculator
Use this tool to estimate your total score from your Reading and Writing score and Math score. It can help you check a practice test score, review your score range, and see how close you are to your target score. This tool is helpful for students preparing with a mock exam, full-length test, or Bluebook practice test. Your result is an estimate, not an official College Board score report.
Enter Your Scores
Use the sliders or type correct answers by module.
Score Benchmarks
| SAT Score | Percentile | Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| 1500-1600 | 98-99+ | Elite range |
| 1400-1490 | 94-97 | Highly competitive |
| 1200-1390 | 74-93 | Strong range |
| 1050-1190 | 49-73 | Around to above average |
| 900-1040 | 24-48 | Building range |
| 400-890 | Below 24 | Needs focused review |
Estimate your result
The score calculator gives you a quick way to turn your section performance into an estimated scaled score. Enter your correct answers or section details, and the tool will show your estimated result on the SAT scoring scale.
You can use it after a timed practice test, during test prep, or when planning your next study goal.
How to use the tool
Enter your score details for both SAT sections:
Reading and Writing
Math
The tool then estimates your section score for each part and combines them into your total score.
Basic formula:
Reading and Writing + Math = total SAT score
For example:
| Section | Example Score |
|---|---|
| Reading and Writing score | 620 |
| Math score | 650 |
| total score | 1270 |
This makes it easier to understand your current level and plan your next step.
What your result means
Your SAT result is shown on a 400–1600 total score scale. Each section is reported as a 200–800 section score.
A higher result usually means stronger performance across both sections. A lower result can help you find a weak area and improve your study plan before the next test.
Your result may also include a percentile estimate, target gap, or improvement range if those options are available in the tool.
Why the result is an estimate
The digital test uses adaptive scoring, which means your module performance and question difficulty can affect the final result. Because of this, the same number of correct responses may not always lead to the exact same scaled result.
This tool gives a useful estimate based on your inputs, but only the official College Board result is final.
Structure
The Digital SAT has 2 sections and 4 modules.
| Test Area | Questions | Time |
|---|---|---|
| Reading and Writing | 54 Reading and Writing questions | 64 minutes Reading and Writing |
| Math | 44 Math questions | 70 minutes Math |
| Full test | 98 total questions | 134 minutes total time |
Each section is split into module 1 and module 2. Reading and Writing has 27 questions per Reading and Writing module, and Math has 22 questions per Math module.
There is also a 10-minute break between the two sections.
How this can help your prep
After using the calculator, look at your section balance. If Math is much lower, focus more on algebra, advanced math, problem solving, and data analysis. If Reading and Writing is lower, review Reading questions, Writing questions, grammar skills, and reading comprehension.
You can also compare your estimate with your score goal for college admissions, scholarship planning, or a possible retake.
For extra practice, students often use Bluebook, Khan Academy, BigFuture, and official practice tests.
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FAQs
What does this calculator do?
It estimates your SAT result from your section performance. You can use it as an estimator, predictor, or simple score conversion tool after a practice test.
Is this for the Digital SAT?
Yes. This page is focused on the Digital SAT, including the current section format, modules, and scoring scale.
Is the estimate 100% accurate?
No. The result is a helpful estimate, but it is not an official score report. Digital scoring can depend on adaptive scoring, equating, and question difficulty.
What is the SAT score range?
The SAT uses a 400–1600 total score range. Each section is scored from 200–800 section score.
How many questions are on the SAT?
The test has 98 total questions. Reading and Writing has 54 questions, and Math has 44 questions.
What is a good SAT score?
A good score depends on your school list and goals. For many students, a 1200 score is a solid target, a 1400 score is strong, and a 1500 score is highly competitive. A 1600 perfect score is the highest possible result.
Can I use this after a Bluebook test?
Yes. After finishing a Bluebook practice test or another timed practice exam, enter your results to estimate your current performance.
Does module difficulty affect my score?
Yes. The digital test can send students to an easier or harder second module based on performance. This is why module performance and question difficulty matter.
How can I improve after checking my result?
Start with your lower section. Review your weak area, practice similar questions, and take another timed test after a few study sessions. This helps you track your improvement range over time.