Introduction
For high school students planning college applications, the SAT is not just a test date on a calendar. It is a timing decision. Pick the right SAT date, and you give yourself enough space to prepare, receive your score, decide whether to retake and still meet college deadlines. Pick the wrong date and even a strong score can arrive too late to help your application.
The College Board has officially opened registration for the fall 2026 SAT testing cycle, with test dates running from August through December. This window is especially important for students applying for Early Action, Early Decision and Regular Decision admissions.
Official SAT Test Dates and Deadlines for Fall 2026
The fall SAT cycle begins in August 2026 and continues through December 2026. There is no July SAT date, so students should not wait until the summer ends to start planning.
| SAT Test Date | Regular Registration Deadline | Deadline / Registration Change | Expected Score Release |
| August 22, 2026 | August 7, 2026 | August 11, 2026 | September 4, 2026 |
| September 12, 2026 | August 28, 2026 | September 1, 2026 | September 25, 2026 |
| October 3, 2026 | September 18, 2026 | September 22, 2026 | October 16, 2026 |
| November 7, 2026 | October 23, 2026 | October 27, 2026 | November 20, 2026 |
| December 5, 2026 | November 20, 2026 | November 24, 2026 | December 18, 2026 |
Source: College Board
All deadlines expire at 11:59 p.m. Eastern Time, so international students should be especially careful with the time-zone difference. For students in India, waiting until the “last day” can easily become confusing because the deadline follows the U.S. Eastern Time, not Indian Standard Time.
1. Why the August SAT Is the Best Bet for Most Students in Class 12
For students, the biggest advantage is timing. Students can prepare during the summer, when schoolwork, board exam pressure, extracurricular deadlines and college essays are not all happening at once. By the time school reopens properly, the test is already done. The August score is expected on September 4, which gives students enough time to make a practical decision: keep the score, retake in September or October (if required) or shift focus completely to applications.
2. September and October: The Early Action and Early Decision Window (Class 12/11)
The September 12 and October 3 SAT dates are extremely important for students targeting Early Action or Early Decision. Most EA and ED deadlines fall around November 1. The October 3 SAT score is expected on October 16, which means it can still arrive in time for many early applications. However, this is also where students need to be careful. “Arriving in time” does not always mean “stress-free.” That is why October should be treated as the last safe attempt for most early applicants, not the first serious attempt.
3. November and December: Best for Regular Decision and Class 11 Students
The November 7 and December 5 SAT dates are better suited for two types of students. The first group is seniors applying mostly through Regular Decision. Since many Regular Decision deadlines fall in January, November and December scores can still be useful. The December score is expected on December 18, which gives students time before many January deadlines. These dates are a smart way to get an early baseline score. Instead of waiting until senior year to discover weak areas, juniors can use the fall SAT to understand where they stand, then prepare more seriously for spring or summer attempts.
How Much Does the SAT Cost in 2026?
For the digital SAT, the base registration fee is $68 (≅ INR 6500/-). For international students, there is an additional $43 (≅ INR 4100/-) international fee, bringing the total to $111 (≅ INR 10,600/-) before any extra charges.
Students should also keep extra fees in mind. Late registration costs $38 (≅ INR 3600/-), and changing a test center costs $34 (≅ INR 3200/-). These charges are avoidable if students plan early, register before the deadline and choose their test center carefully.
Conclusion
If you have not yet chosen an SAT date, start by identifying your college application deadlines and create a simple roadmap. Register for your preferred test date before seats begin filling up, select a convenient test centre and schedule regular practice tests to track progress. Once scores are released, check your target colleges and decide immediately whether a retake is necessary. Having a primary test date and a backup test date planned in advance can prevent last-minute stress and ensure that score reporting timelines do not interfere with application deadlines.
All the best!