SAT Math Practice Test
The Digital SAT Math section is 70 minutes total: two 35-minute adaptive modules of 22 questions each. Calculator is allowed throughout (built-in Desmos graphing calculator). About 75% of questions are multiple choice (A-D); the remaining ~25% are Student-Produced Response (grid-in) where you type the numeric answer.
Practice SAT Math in a digital interface modeled on the real College Board Digital SAT Bluebook app. Upload your own PDF or solve a published mock test, with instant AI scoring, grid-in support, and a built-in Desmos calculator on Math. Free for all students.
Exam format
44
questions
70
minutes
Fully digital (Bluebook app)
| Section | Questions | Time | Score weight |
|---|---|---|---|
Module 1: Math | 22 | 35 min | 50% |
Module 2: Math (adaptive) | 22 | 35 min | 50% |
Topics covered
- Algebra
- Advanced Math
- Problem-Solving and Data Analysis
- Geometry and Trigonometry
- Student-produced response (grid-in)
Source: College Board SAT Suite test specifications.
Published SAT Math practice exams
Loading…How AI scoring works
When you upload an SAT Math PDF without an answer key, our system uses Google Gemini to read the document, extract every multiple-choice question, and generate the correct answers. The first attempt seeds the answer key; later attempts use the saved key, so AI runs only once per exam.
Each question is scored against the stored key in real time. After you submit, you can review every wrong answer with an AI-written explanation that grounds the reasoning in the original PDF page.
AI-generated keys may have errors. Always cross-check answers against an official source for high-stakes review.
Math FAQ
- How long is the Digital SAT Math section?
- 70 minutes total: 2 modules of 35 minutes each, with 22 questions per module.
- Can I use a calculator on SAT Math?
- Yes — on every question. The Digital SAT includes a built-in Desmos graphing calculator and also lets you bring your own approved calculator.
- What are grid-in questions?
- Student-Produced Response questions ask you to type a numeric answer (fraction or decimal) instead of choosing A/B/C/D. About 25% of SAT Math questions are grid-in.