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Digital SAT Score Calculator
Estimate your Digital SAT score with our free SAT Scoring Calculator. The Digital SAT is composed of two sections: the Reading & Writing section and the Math section. Each section is split into two modules. Enter the number of correct answers you got on each module to see your projected total score out of 1600.
Please note: This calculator provides an estimate based on official SAT scoring tables. The actual adaptive nature of the test may cause slight variations.
Calculate Your SAT Score
Your Estimated SAT Score
How is the Digital SAT Scored?
The Digital SAT is scored on a scale of 400-1600. This total score is the sum of two section scores: Reading & Writing (200-800) and Math (200-800). Your score is based on the number of questions you answer correctly in each section. There is no penalty for wrong answers.
Module Structure and Adaptive Scoring
Each section is divided into two modules. The first module of each section is a mix of easy, medium, and hard questions. Your performance on this first module determines the difficulty level of your second module. This is called “multistage adaptive testing.”
Our calculator simplifies this by assuming an average adaptive path. It takes the total number of correct answers from both modules in a section and converts that “raw score” to a scaled score using official SAT concordance tables.
What Is a Good SAT Score?
A “good” SAT score depends on the colleges you are applying to. However, here are some general benchmarks based on national percentiles:
- 1200 and Above: This is a competitive score that will make you a strong applicant for many state universities and some private schools.
- 1350 and Above: This is an excellent score, placing you in the top 10% of test-takers. It makes you a competitive candidate for most selective universities.
- 1500 and Above: This is an outstanding score, putting you in the top 1-2% of test-takers and making you a highly competitive applicant for Ivy League and other top-tier schools.
Always research the average SAT scores of admitted students at your target colleges to set a realistic goal.
