How Many Hours Should I Study for the SAT?
Most students should study 40-100 total hours for the SAT, spread over 8-12 weeks (about 30-60 minutes per day, 5 days per week). Students starting around 1100 and aiming for 1300+ typically need 80-100 hours. Students starting at 1400+ aiming for 1500+ often need 100+ hours because the higher you go, the more time each point costs.
Quick answer by starting score
- 900-1050 → 1100-1200: 40-60 hours
- 1100-1200 → 1300: 60-80 hours
- 1200-1300 → 1400: 80-100 hours
- 1300-1400 → 1500+: 100-150 hours
- 1450+ → 1550+: 150+ hours (diminishing returns)
How to budget
- Content review (40% of time): brush up on math, grammar, reading skills. Khan Academy.
- Targeted drilling (40%): drill weak topics until automatic.
- Full practice tests (20%): 3-5 full timed tests, plus review time after each.
Daily breakdown
A realistic 8-week plan at 45 min/day, 5 days/week = 30 hours of focused work + 4-5 practice tests (~20 hours) = ~50 hours. Enough for most score targets up to ~1400.
When to start
- Spring junior-year SAT: start prep in January.
- Fall senior-year SAT: start prep in June.
- Early-action: finish prep by August of senior year.
Can I prep in less time?
- 2 weeks of cramming: 0-50 points
- 4 weeks of focused prep: 30-80 points
- 8 weeks consistent: 80-150 points
- 12 weeks consistent: 100-200 points
FAQ
Is 50 hours of SAT prep enough?
For a 100-point improvement, yes. For 200+ points, you’ll need 100+ hours.
Can I prep in 2 weeks?
Yes, but realistic gains are only 30-80 points.
How long should each session be?
30-60 minutes. Longer shows diminishing returns. Daily short sessions beat occasional long ones.
Does paying for a course replace hours?
No. Paid courses don’t shortcut the work — they just structure it. You still do 50-100 hours.