Top 10 SAT Mistakes That Cost Students Points (2026)

Written by an admissions expert10 min readKey TakeawaysMistake 1: Starting preparation too lateMistake 2: Using outdated or low-quality prep materialsMistake 3: Taking practice tests without reviewing themMistake 4: Not practising in the real Digital formatMistake 5: Ignoring weak areas in favour of comfortable topicsMistake 6: Panicking when Module 2 feels hardTop 10 SAT Mistakes That…

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By Adam Girsault

Updated on June 21, 2026

Written by an admissions expert
10 min read

Key Takeaways

  • Mistake 1: Starting preparation too late
  • Mistake 2: Using outdated or low-quality prep materials
  • Mistake 3: Taking practice tests without reviewing them
  • Mistake 4: Not practising in the real Digital format
  • Mistake 5: Ignoring weak areas in favour of comfortable topics
  • Mistake 6: Panicking when Module 2 feels hard

Top 10 SAT Mistakes That Cost Students Points (2026)

Every year, thousands of students lose 50–100 SAT points — or more — to mistakes that are completely avoidable. These aren’t content errors from material they didn’t study. They’re strategy, preparation, and execution errors. The good news: once you know what the common mistakes are, most of them are easy to avoid with a bit of discipline. This article walks through the ten most common SAT mistakes, with specific advice on how to prevent each.

The most expensive mistakes

Most score-draining mistakes are strategy errors, not knowledge errors. You can fix them without learning any new content.


Mistake 1: Starting preparation too late

The most common and most expensive mistake. Students who plan to “study for a month” before the SAT almost always underperform relative to what they could achieve with 3–4 months of preparation.

Why it’s costly:

  • Real score improvement takes sustained practice, not cramming
  • Last-minute prep creates anxiety and hurts test-day performance
  • Compressed timelines don’t leave room for retakes if the first attempt disappoints

The fix:

  • Start preparing at least 3 months before your planned test date
  • Build a weekly schedule with consistent hours
  • Even 30–45 minutes daily produces better results than multi-hour weekend marathons

Mistake 2: Using outdated or low-quality prep materials

The Digital SAT changed significantly from the paper SAT in 2024. Many older prep books and online resources still target the paper format, which doesn’t match what you’ll face on test day.

Why it’s costly:

  • Outdated materials don’t reflect the current question style
  • Practice on the wrong format builds wrong habits
  • Low-quality resources can teach you incorrect strategies

The fix:

  • Use the official Bluebook app for practice tests
  • Rely on Khan Academy as your primary free resource
  • Only buy prep books explicitly published for the Digital SAT (2024 or later)
  • Ignore older “classic” prep resources that haven’t been updated

Mistake 3: Taking practice tests without reviewing them

This is perhaps the single most common mistake. Students take practice tests, score them, note their score, and move on — without reviewing their mistakes in detail.

Why it’s costly:

  • The value of a practice test is in the review, not the test itself
  • Repeated mistakes compound if you don’t identify patterns
  • You miss the opportunity to close specific gaps

The fix:

  • Budget 2–4 hours for review after every full practice test
  • Categorise mistakes (content gap, careless, timing, misread)
  • Keep a mistake journal you review weekly
  • Find 3–5 similar questions to each mistake and redo them

Mistake 4: Not practising in the real Digital format

Students who practise only with paper-based materials arrive on test day unfamiliar with the Bluebook interface, the digital timer, the flag-for-review system, and the built-in Desmos calculator.

Why it’s costly:

  • Digital-specific tools can save or cost you minutes per section
  • Unfamiliarity creates stress during the test
  • The adaptive format is hard to simulate on paper

The fix:

  • Take all your full-length practice tests in Bluebook
  • Familiarise yourself with flags, the built-in timer, and the Desmos calculator
  • Practise on the same device you’ll use for the real test

Mistake 5: Ignoring weak areas in favour of comfortable topics

Students naturally gravitate toward topics where they do well because it feels good to practise them. But improvement comes from working on weaknesses, not strengths.

Why it’s costly:

  • Your weakest areas are where the biggest score gains hide
  • Comfortable practice doesn’t move your score
  • You’re essentially building up parts of your game that are already strong

The fix:

  • After each practice test, identify your 2–3 weakest question types
  • Dedicate at least 60% of practice time to weak areas
  • Only practise strengths for maintenance
  • Check after 4 weeks to see whether weaknesses have improved

Mistake 6: Panicking when Module 2 feels hard

The Digital SAT’s adaptive format means Module 2 is harder if you did well on Module 1. Students often panic when they hit this harder module, lose focus, and make careless mistakes that drop their scores within the high-scoring range.

Why it’s costly:

  • Panicking creates additional errors on top of the difficulty increase
  • Self-doubt interferes with reasoning
  • Rushed answers compound the problem

The fix:

  • Remember that a hard Module 2 is a good sign — it means you’re in the top-scoring range
  • Pace yourself the same as Module 1
  • Focus on the current question, not how hard the module feels
  • Trust your preparation

Mistake 7: Spending too long on difficult questions

Students often get stuck on a single hard question, spend 3–5 minutes on it, and then rush through the remaining easier questions.

Why it’s costly:

  • You lose time for 2–3 other questions by spending too long on one
  • Easy questions you miss by rushing are worth the same as hard questions
  • The score penalty compounds

The fix:

  • If a question takes more than 90 seconds on Reading/Writing or 2 minutes on Math, flag and move on
  • Return to flagged questions at the end of the module
  • Accept that some questions will be hard and you won’t get them all right

Mistake 8: Leaving questions blank

There is no penalty for wrong answers on the Digital SAT. Every blank question is a guaranteed miss; every guess has a 25% chance of being right.

Why it’s costly:

  • A blank is worth zero; a random guess is worth 0.25 expected points
  • Leaving 4 blanks loses you 1 expected point for no reason

The fix:

  • Answer every question, even if you have to guess
  • Eliminate wrong answers first to improve your guessing odds
  • In the final minute of each module, quickly guess on anything unanswered

Mistake 9: Misreading questions

Students often know how to solve a problem but answer the wrong question. “What is the value of 2x?” is not the same as “What is the value of x?”

Why it’s costly:

  • You get a wrong answer on questions you actually understand
  • These are easy points you should be getting
  • The pattern compounds across the section

The fix:

  • Read every question carefully — twice if needed
  • Underline or highlight what the question is asking for
  • Before selecting an answer, confirm it matches the question
  • Slow down for 3 seconds before picking an answer to verify

Mistake 10: Not managing test-day logistics

Students who neglect the practical side of test day — rest, travel time, device setup, snacks — often underperform because they’re tired, stressed, or hungry.

Why it’s costly:

  • Mental fatigue hurts reasoning
  • Rushing to the test centre creates pre-test stress
  • Technical issues can derail your test

The fix:

  • Sleep well for 2–3 nights before the test
  • Eat a proper breakfast on test day
  • Arrive 30 minutes early
  • Bring water, snacks, your ID, your device, and your charger
  • Check your Bluebook setup the day before

Bonus mistake: Obsessing over the test

Some students make the SAT the centre of their lives for months, studying for hours every day and neglecting their schoolwork, extracurriculars, and mental health.

Why it’s costly:

  • Diminishing returns kick in after 10–15 hours per week of SAT prep
  • Burnout actively hurts test performance
  • Other application components matter just as much as your SAT score

The fix:

  • Cap SAT prep at 12–15 hours per week
  • Continue school, extracurriculars, and sleep normally
  • Take rest days
  • Remember that the SAT is one factor in your application, not the whole application

Common mistake patterns by section

Reading and Writing mistakes:

  • Picking the “trap” answer that sounds right but isn’t
  • Bringing outside knowledge into the answer
  • Reading passages too slowly
  • Changing first-instinct answers
  • Missing subtle differences between similar answer choices

Math mistakes:

  • Arithmetic errors under time pressure
  • Answering the wrong part of the question
  • Forgetting units
  • Not using Desmos when it would be faster
  • Misinterpreting graphs and charts

How to diagnose your own mistakes

After each practice test, ask yourself:

  1. Which questions did I get wrong?
  2. Why did I get them wrong? (content gap / careless / timing / misread / trap answer)
  3. Is there a pattern across my wrong answers?
  4. What specific skill or strategy would have helped?
  5. What can I practise this week to address this?

Keeping a mistake journal and reviewing it weekly is the single most effective practice for reducing avoidable errors.


FAQ

Are these mistakes really common?

Very. Every student makes at least some of them. Students who are aware of the patterns make fewer.

What’s the single most impactful mistake to avoid?

Starting preparation too late (Mistake 1) or not reviewing practice tests (Mistake 3) — both have huge impact on score improvement.

Can I avoid all of these?

No single student avoids all of them. Even strong test-takers make mistakes. The goal is to reduce the number and severity.

Which mistakes matter most for the Digital SAT specifically?

Not practising in Bluebook (Mistake 4), panicking on adaptive Module 2 (Mistake 6), and not learning Desmos (part of Mistake 4) are especially important for the new format.

How do I know if I’m making a particular mistake?

Review your practice tests carefully and categorise each wrong answer. Patterns will emerge.


Your anti-mistake checklist

  • [ ] Started preparation at least 3 months before test date
  • [ ] Using official and up-to-date materials only
  • [ ] Reviewing every practice test in detail
  • [ ] Practising in the Bluebook app
  • [ ] Focusing on weak areas, not just strengths
  • [ ] Mentally prepared for the adaptive Module 2
  • [ ] Set a max time per question and will flag past it
  • [ ] Will answer every question (no blanks)
  • [ ] Carefully reading every question before solving
  • [ ] Logistics planned: rest, food, travel, device, ID

Need help identifying your specific mistake patterns? Book a free strategy call and we’ll review your practice test history and design a plan to eliminate avoidable errors.

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Adam Girsault Author
About Adam Girsault

With a Bachelor's (LLB) from UCL and Assas, and the Grande Ecole program at HEC Paris, Adam has over 10 years of experience in education and student mentoring. Passionate about helping students achieve their academic dreams, he co-founded Your Dream School to guide students through university admissions and interview preparation for top global institutions.

Our Quality CommitmentThis article is written and fact-checked by our team of admissions consultants, graduates of HEC Paris, UCL, and other top institutions. All information is verified against official university sources.
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