SAT practice test
Upload your SAT prep notes, a review book chapter, class handouts or the practice sets from your tutor, and the AI writes unlimited digital-SAT-style practice questions with an answer key and explanations in seconds. Drill Reading and Writing and Math on the material you are actually studying, instead of reworking a booklet whose answers you already remember.
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In short: to build SAT practice questions, upload your prep notes, review book pages or practice materials and the AI writes questions with an answer key and explanations in seconds. The digital SAT has two sections, Reading and Writing (54 questions) and Math (44 questions), for 98 questions across 2 hours and 14 minutes. Each section is split into two modules and is section-adaptive: how you do on the first module decides whether the second is harder or easier. The test is scored 400 to 1600, the national average is around 1050, and a built-in Desmos calculator is allowed on every math question in the Bluebook app.
Last updated July 2026
Test yourself on your own prep material, not a booklet you have memorized
SAT prep hits the same wall every student runs into: you buy one review book, work its practice questions once, and on the second pass you recognize the answers instead of solving the problems. Your score on that booklet rises while your real skill stalls. This tool changes where the questions come from. Upload the material you are actually studying, a grammar and punctuation summary, a page of worked algebra problems, a reading passage with your notes on it, and the AI works as a generate practice questions from a PDF tool that writes fresh items every time. A miss points straight back at the skill to review, and the next set is one upload away.
Upload a grammar and conventions summary, algebra and advanced-math worked examples, or reading passages you have annotated. If the file explains the material, the generator can build questions on it.
Losing points on Math or on the Reading and Writing questions? Upload the notes for that area alone and drill it, instead of grinding full tests that keep re-testing what you already have down.
Generate a new set each time so you are testing the skill, not recall of a specific question. Repeated retrieval on unseen items is what actually raises an SAT score, and it is the one thing a re-worked practice book cannot give you.
The SAT has two sections, each split into two modules that adapt to your performance. The table below shows how the test is built. Confirm the details for your test date on collegeboard.org.
The part of the digital SAT that trips up newcomers is the adaptive design. Each section has two modules, and the first module of each is a broad mix of easy, medium and hard questions. How you do on that first module decides whether your second module is harder or easier, and only the harder second module unlocks the top of the score range. The two sections adapt independently, so a strong Reading and Writing performance does not affect your Math routing. In Reading and Writing, every question is tied to its own short passage with one question each, so there is no long passage to slog through. In Math, about a quarter of the questions are student-produced responses where you type the answer instead of choosing one. Practicing short, focused sets on your weak domains is the fastest way to make the first module go well.
How to make SAT practice questions in 4 steps
The digital SAT tests a fairly narrow set of skills again and again: reading a short passage for a specific point, spotting a grammar or punctuation error, working an algebra or data problem under time. You raise a score by getting faster and more reliable on the exact question types that keep costing you, not by cramming new content. That takes reps, and reps run out fast when your only practice questions live in one book you have already finished.
Generating questions from your own notes fixes the supply problem. Your prep notes are the distilled version of what you have decided is worth reviewing: the comma and semicolon rules, the exponent laws, the steps for a linear-equation word problem. Turning those pages into fresh questions forces you to retrieve the skill rather than reread it, and retrieval is what moves the number. Because the questions come from your file, a miss is instantly traceable: you know exactly which note to revisit, and you can generate a tighter set on that one weak spot.
The loop suits a packed junior or senior year: upload a domain's notes, drill a short timed set, miss a few, read the two lines that explain the miss, then generate again on the same weak area tomorrow. Work Standard English Conventions one week and Problem-Solving and Data Analysis the next, and the gaps close in the order you choose. It will not replace the official Bluebook practice tests, which you still need for the real adaptive interface and full-length timing, but it turns your own notes into an endless, self-scoring question bank, which is exactly what steady score gains require.
Juniors and seniors prepping on their own timeline. Upload your review notes for a section and drill a short set tonight, without waiting on a tutor or burning through a limited practice book.
Already sat the SAT and want more points for scholarships or admissions? Upload the notes for the section that held your score back and drill it until the misses stop, instead of re-taking full tests you have already seen.
Turn a student's own class notes or a textbook chapter into targeted question sets in seconds, with an answer key and explanations, so every session works on exactly what that student needs next.
Comparing the admissions tests or looking ahead to graduate school? Build sets with the ACT practice test generator, and for graduate exams drill the GRE practice test generator or the GMAT practice test generator. Preparing for a licensing or professional exam instead? Use the certification exam question generator.
Upload your prep notes, a review book chapter or a practice set and generate digital-SAT-style questions in under a minute. Keep generating fresh sets until the misses stop clustering and your pacing holds up on questions you have never seen.