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  • Blog > Applications, Exams (ACT, AP, SAT)

Last-Minute SAT Tips for December Test Takers

Picture of Madeleine Karydes

Madeleine Karydes

  • December 12, 2025

Happy December, students! If you are sitting for the SAT this month, welcome to the last official exam date of 2025: Saturday, December 6, 2025. [Already missed the December 6 boat? Don’t panic. You can still register for the first SAT date in 2026, which lands on Saturday, March 14, 2026.]

But why would you plan your SAT over winter break in the first place?

Usually, December testing shows up for two reasons: for seniors, a late decision to apply with scores, or for juniors, a plan to lock a baseline before spring testing. While it may not seem ideal, there are silver linings to this choice, too. A December sitting gives seniors one more score before the last January deadlines, and gives juniors a clean benchmark before spring activities ramp up in other areas of life.

Now, the really good news. Digital SAT strategy rewards smart decisions more than last-minute cramming. This guide covers test-week logistics first, then on-screen moves for test day, so you aren’t left out in the cold. Let’s start now and achieve your best score yet!

Leading up to the test

From zero to hero, here’s what you need to know now about taking a last-minute December SAT exam.

Digital testing:

What exactly are you supposed to be completing? The digital SAT has two sections of questions organized by subject: Reading and Writing, plus Math. The total testing time is 2 hours and 14 minutes, with a 10-minute break between sections.

Each of the two sections is made up of two timed modules. You can move around within a module, then return to marked questions until the time ends. Then, once a module ends, the module locks.

Quick skill check: The testing software, Bluebook, includes a built-in Desmos calculator for the SAT. Use the College Board’s practice tests or try exploring the tools in test mode for a similar layout. Spend at least a few minutes before test day practicing Desmos basics: graphing, table input, and intersections. Those tools reduce algebra slip-ups under time pressure if you know how to use them.

3-day countdown: 

Only have a few days? This emergency prep plan will cover the basics. 

  • Day 1: Take a full-length Bluebook practice test. Review your mistakes by category (timing vs. content).
  • Day 2: Drill high-yield skills you identified weaknesses in yesterday (like punctuation, transitions, data tables, algebraic setup, or common vocab traps).
  • Day 3: Review Desmos basics, write out your checklist of what to bring, and do 1-2 timed modules. Then, rest.

Arrival and location:

It’s best to show up earlier than the test is actually scheduled to begin. Plan to arrive by 7:45 a.m. because that’s when most test centers open their doors. Be aware that the testing center must close their doors at 8:00 a.m. sharp, unless your admission ticket lists a different time. Late entry after testing starts does not happen.

If you’re borrowing a College Board loaner device, arrive earlier. Testing staff guidance lists 7:15 a.m. for students using a loaned device to make sure you’re set up properly.

Last, but not least, confirm the test center address and timing on the admission ticket the night before.

High school student studying for the SAT test with study tips

What to bring (and what to leave at home):

Bring:

  • Fully charged device with Bluebook installed, exam setup completed
  • College Board username + password
  • Admission ticket (printed preferred)
  • Acceptable physical photo ID (no digital photos)
  • Pencils or pens for scratch work
  • Charger or portable battery, snack and drink for the break
  • Watch without an audible alarm (optional)

Leave:

  • Smartwatches, earbuds, Bluetooth devices, separate timers, or other unapproved technology.
  • Phone note: presenting the admission ticket on a phone is allowed during check-in (then the phone must be collected or stored away from desks).

Test day: do your best

So, you made it! How can you increase your confidence and boost your scores, day-of?

Tip 1: two-pass attack (choose your own adventure)

Bluebook allows moving back and forth inside a module, so the question order does not control your pacing.

  • Your move:
    • Pass 1 (fast): answer every question with a clear path in 30 to 45 seconds. Flag anything with long reading, messy algebra, or multi-step setup, and move on.
    • Pass 2 (steady): return to marked questions after grabbing quick points.

Tip 2: use every second well

Bluebook times each module separately, so use all the time you have to check your work. Avoid easy mistakes.

  • Your move:
    • Reserve the final 2 minutes of each module for:
      • re-reading the question stem for ā€œexceptā€ and ā€œmost nearlyā€
      • unit checks (percent vs decimal, degrees vs radians)
      • sign checks (negative slope, negative exponent)

Pro tip: Clocks don’t work for everyone. You can hide the on-screen timer if the countdown spikes your anxiety or starts to get distracting. Bluebook allows hiding the timer until 5 minutes remain, then the alert appears.

Tip 3: cross out the wrong answers first

Many wrong answers look ā€œkind of rightā€ because the test uses near-matches and scope shifts as traps! So slow down. You improve your odds of guessing correctly if you can eliminate even one answer choice you know is not correct before making a decision.

  • Your move:
    • For each option, hunt for one clear flaw:
      • too extreme (always, never)
      • wrong scope (too broad or too narrow)
      • wrong relationship (cause vs correlation, claim vs evidence)
    • Circle the last survivor only after three options fail.

Tip 4: vocab trap shield (break down words into parts)

Contrary to popular belief, you don’t have to memorize an infinite number of language flashcards to do well on the Reading and Writing section. Academic vocabulary often hides familiar roots, and traps rely on ā€œsounds fancyā€ choices that miss the sentence meaning.

  • Your move:
    • Split unfamiliar words into:
      • prefix (pre-, anti-, sub-, trans-)
      • root (bio, cred, dict, port, spect)
      • suffix (-tion, -ous, -ity, -ate)
    • Translate into a plain synonym, then reread the sentence with the synonym inserted.

Tip 5: guess like a pro (no blanks, no panic clicking)

College Board guidance favors answering every question. Why? Because the scores post from your work across all questions, so blank answers leave points on the table. And guessing beats leaving blanks.

  • Your move:
    • Eliminate 1 to 2 choices fast, then guess.
    • Special note: guess when needed, but do not slam Answer Choice D as a reflex.
    • Under stress, fast clicking causes misreads and mis-clicks. Pause, confirm the letter, then select.

Tip 6: self-care as a strategy (sleep, fuel, reset)

Guess what? Like many other parts of life, a steady brain beats a frantic brain when it comes to this test. Deep breaths.

  • Your move:
    • Two nights before: full sleep schedule. Night-before sleep often runs choppy.
    • Morning fuel: protein plus carbs, plus water. Save sugar bombs for after testing.
    • Micro-reset breathing: inhale 4, hold 2, exhale 6 before each module starts.

Your next steps

Now what? If you’re looking for other ways to spend your winter break after the test is out of the way, check out these tips from an Empowerly student:

When to expect scores from the December 2025 sitting

The College Board predicts most weekend SAT scores release about 2 to 4 weeks after test day. That means that for the December 6, 2025 SAT, many students see scores by late December, with some arriving closer to early January depending on processing.

Will colleges accept your December SAT scores? 

Many colleges will consider December scores for Regular Decision deadlines in early January (but not all)! So, it’s best policy to check each school’s official admissions page to confirm the latest acceptable test date. 

If your December scores arrive after a hard deadline, that score may only be used for waitlist or future appeals.

When to schedule the next retake in 2026

College Board lists these upcoming dates for spring 2026:

  • March 14, 2026 (registration deadline Feb. 27, 2026)
  • May 2, 2026 (registration deadline Apr. 17, 2026)
  • June 6, 2026 (registration deadline May 22, 2026)

Embark on your top university journey with Empowerly. Book your free consultation here.

Test preparation for the win!

December SAT success might look boring from the outside: early arrival, perfect setup, ruthless skipping, and calm guessing. But those steady, logical moves add up quickly.

If you want a plan built around your target colleges and your current score profile, book a consultation to learn about Empowerly’s counseling and test prep programs. After meeting with an expert college counselor or a test prep specialist, you can leave with a retake calendar, a practice plan, and a list of the exact question types worth training first. Don’t leave your scores up to chance!

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Madeleine Karydes

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