How to study for the SAT: tricks and tools for test day

Spending four hours staring at a book while you're distracted is way less effective than a focused 30-minute SAT practice session. If you're looking for a real jump in your SAT score, you need to stop just reviewing and start actually training.

Acely — How to study for the SAT: tricks and tools for test day

Top-scoring students don't just put in more hours; they use high-efficiency tools to keep their brains sharp and their motivation high. Here is how you can replicate that success with your own SAT prep.

The high-performance study toolkit

1. Active recall: the blurting method

Passive reading is one of the least effective ways to learn. Your brain needs to be forced to retrieve information to make it stick.

  • The hack: Pick a topic (like Circle Formulas or Punctuation Rules) and put your notes away. Take a blank sheet of paper and blurt out everything you can remember.
  • The result: Compare your blurt to your notes. The stuff you forgot is exactly what you need to study tonight.

2. The Feynman technique (teach to learn)

You don't truly understand a concept until you can break it down and explain it to someone who doesn't know anything about the concept.

  • The hack: If you are stuck on math questions involving standard deviation or inference, try to explain the logic out loud to an imaginary 5th grader.
  • Why it works: Simplification forces you to understand the core logic rather than just memorizing fancy words.

3. The pomodoro timer (focus sprints)

Your brain isn't built to focus for two hours straight. Instead of fighting your attention span, work with it.

  • The hack: Set a timer for 25 minutes of deep focus (phone in another room). When it dings, take a 5-minute break to stretch. Try to avoid any screens during your break.
  • The result: Using these sprints prevents the burnout that comes from long, sluggish test prep sessions.

In practice: the 1390 to 1570 blueprint

Theory is great, but here is what it actually looks like in practice. We looked at one of our Acely students who got a 1570 (after starting at a 1390) and how they bridged the gap. Their secret wasn't a secret at all; it was a data-driven study schedule.

The daily sprint strategy

Most students think they need to study for 4 hours every Saturday. That usually leads to burnout by week two.

  • The 1570 move: “I studied for 15–30 minutes a day, every day. That's it.”
  • Why it works: It's easier to focus intensely for 20 minutes on one specific type of question or topic (like trigonometry) than to slog through a three-hour general review. Consistent, small bites lead to massive long-term retention.

The data-driven mindset

You can't fix what you don't measure.

  • The 1570 move: “Every time I took a practice SAT test, I logged my score. I didn't just look at the total; I looked at the trend.”
  • The tool: Take time to review each score report after a practice test and make sure to review your mistakes. Use your Acely study plan (which automatically adjusts after each practice session) to find the next step in your roadmap.

The visualization hack

It sounds cheesy, but it is scientifically backed. Confidence directly affects your cognitive performance.

  • The 1570 move: “My first score was a 1390. It hurt. But instead of letting it tear me down, I visualized that 1570 on the screen every time I sat down to practice.”
  • The reality: If you walk in thinking “I'm bad at this,” your brain releases cortisol, which inhibits your ability to recall facts. If you walk in thinking “I've done this 100 times,” you access your full memory.

Biohacking your test-day nerves

Test anxiety is just biology, and you can hack your body to fix your brain before you walk into the testing room.

  • The “Power Pose”: Before you walk into the test center, find a private spot and stand like a superhero (hands on hips, chest out) for two minutes. This physically lowers stress hormones and boosts your confidence. To see it in action, watch this power pose tutorial video.
  • The Musical Anchor: Find one specific song that makes you feel focused. Listen to it before every study session. On test day, play that same song right before you walk in to cue your brain into “focus mode.”

Ready to start your training?

Now that you have mastered these study methods, it is time to put them into a schedule. Don't guess what to do each day; follow a plan that has been proven to work.

Follow our 1-month or 3-month study schedule, or dive into our strategy guide to learn the specific tricks and traps the College Board uses to hide the right answers.

FAQs

It is never too late, but starting early allows you to avoid cramming and gives you good luck through better preparation!

The College Board provides eight full-length practice tests through the Bluebook app. However, many students can quickly run through those during their SAT prep, especially if they retake the SAT. We recommend combining Bluebook and Acely practice tests, so you have enough to take one per week for 6 months. Both platforms offer the same digital, adaptive testing experience complete with Desmos, answer elimination, highlights, and more.

Aim for one at least every two weeks leading up to your test dates. This helps you build the stamina needed for the digital SAT. In between practice tests, make sure to do practice questions and review not only your missed questions, but your correct answers. This will help make sure you are solid on all question difficulties and aware of your strengths and weaknesses.

A "good" score completely depends on your college list and goals. Read more in our SAT Score guide to find out what the right goal score is for you.

Yes, the PSAT uses the same digital interface and question types, making it excellent practice for the digital SAT. High school students who start taking the PSAT in 9th grade will be more familiar with the adaptive format by the time they take the SAT.