Key Takeaways
- Format and timing
- What “adaptive” really means
- How it changes your prep
- Next steps
The SAT is now fully digital and adaptive, taken in College Board’s Bluebook app rather than on paper. If you last looked at the SAT a couple of years ago, almost everything about the test-day experience has changed — though the 1600 scale has not. Here is how the digital SAT actually works in 2026 and what the format means for your prep.
Format and timing
- Two sections: Reading & Writing, then Math — 98 questions in 2 hours 14 minutes, with a 10-minute break between them.
- Reading & Writing is 54 questions in 54 minutes; Math is 44 questions in 70 minutes.
- You take it in Bluebook, with a built-in Desmos graphing calculator allowed for all of Math, plus annotation, a timer, and the ability to flag and revisit questions within a module.
- Scoring feels familiar: 200–800 per section for a 400–1600 total.
What “adaptive” really means
Each section is split into two modules. The first module mixes easy, medium and hard questions, and everyone sees the same set. How you do on that first module decides whether your second module is the harder, higher-scoring one or the easier one — and you cannot return to a module once you leave it.
This matters for strategy in two ways. The first module of each section is disproportionately important, because it sets your ceiling, so early accuracy counts. And because the test uses item response theory, your score reflects the difficulty of the questions you answered correctly, not just how many — a clean run through the harder module can outscore a higher raw count on the easier path.
How it changes your prep
Practise in Bluebook. The four official practice tests in the app run the real adaptive engine; paper practice no longer reflects the experience.
Learn the built-in tools. The Desmos calculator graphs, solves and checks work fast — students who practise with it gain real time on Math.
Front-load accuracy. Since the first module gates the second, locking in your reliable points early beats rushing to the finish.
Expect short, dense passages. Reading & Writing now uses short single-paragraph texts with one question each, so there is nowhere to skim for easy marks.
Next steps
Still deciding between the SAT and the ACT? See SAT vs ACT: which test should you take. When you are ready to build a study plan, our SAT preparation guide walks through it, or contact us for a free discovery call.
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