June SAT Scores 2026 Release Date: What Time Scores Come Out and What If Delayed

If you took the SAT on June 6, 2026, your score will be released on Friday, June 19, 2026. Scores are released in two batches — one around 8 AM Eastern Time and another around 8 PM Eastern Time — so do not panic if your friend sees their score before you do. If you opted for free score sends, colleges will typically receive your scores within 10 days, by approximately June 26, 2026.

If you sat for the SAT this June, the wait is almost over.

Students who take the SAT on June 6 will receive their scores on June 19. If you applied and opted to use the four free score reports that are sent directly to colleges, they will receive the scores by June 26, 2026.

This guide covers exactly when to check, what time scores actually go live, why some students see their results before others, and what to do if your score has not appeared yet.

June 2026 SAT — Test to Score Timeline

When Do June SAT Scores Release

The June 2026 SAT was administered on Saturday, June 6. Score release follows the standard Digital SAT timeline.

Spring 2026 confirmed release dates show a clear pattern: March 14 test scores released March 27, May 2 test scores released May 15, and June 6 test scores release June 19. That is consistently 13 days after each test date.

Most SAT scores are released about two to three weeks after test day. College Board’s official guidance is that weekend scores are available 2 to 4 weeks after you test, but in practice the Digital SAT has shortened that window — recent administrations have posted scores in roughly 13 to 16 days.

Also Read: CPA Exam Sample Questions 2026 

What Time Do SAT Scores Actually Drop

This is the part most students get wrong while refreshing their dashboard at midnight.

According to College Board, the exact time depends on whether you took the SAT on a weekend or a school day. Score distribution happens in two waves — around 8 AM ET and 8 PM ET — due to the volume of student activity accessing results at once.

Scores do not all drop at the same second. To prevent the website from crashing, the College Board staggers the release throughout the day. This explains why you might see your friends posting their results on social media in the morning while your dashboard still shows “Pending.” This staggered approach is a standard part of the process — it does not mean there is a problem with your test.

Scores most often post in the morning, US Eastern Time, on the release date — not at midnight. Some students do see them the night before, but there is no guaranteed exact hour.

The practical takeaway: if you are on the West Coast and it is still early morning where you are, your East Coast friends may already have their scores. This is normal. Check back periodically through the day rather than assuming something is wrong.


How to Check Your June SAT Score

Here is the exact process once results are live:

  1. Go to studentscores.collegeboard.org or log into your regular College Board account
  2. Sign in using the same credentials you used to register for the test
  3. Navigate to your “My SAT” dashboard
  4. Click “View Details” next to your June 6 test date
  5. Review your total score, section scores, and detailed performance breakdown

You will receive an email notification when your scores are available in your College Board account. However, do not rely solely on the email — no email notification is guaranteed for every student, so check your account directly on release day rather than waiting for a message.


When Will Colleges Receive Your Score

Getting your own score is only the first step. If you are applying to colleges, the next question is when admissions offices will actually see it.

Students who chose to have their scores sent directly to schools will have them received by the colleges’ admissions offices within 10 days of the date you receive your scores. This means colleges will get your score report within 23 days of taking the test, according to College Board.

For the June 6 test date, that works out to:

Milestone Date
Test Day Saturday, June 6, 2026
Your Score Available Friday, June 19, 2026
Colleges Receive Score By approximately June 26, 2026

 

You can send scores for free to up to four colleges when you register for the SAT. After that, each additional score send costs $14. You can request additional score sends through your College Board account at any time after your scores release.

If your application deadline falls close to your test date, send your scores to colleges as early as possible. Most colleges understand standard processing timelines, but it is safer not to cut it close.

Also Read: New York Regents Exam June 2026 date

Common Reasons for Score Delays

Most students get their scores exactly on schedule. But a small percentage experience delays. Understanding the difference between a normal staggered release and an actual delay will save you unnecessary stress.

About 5 percent of scores release later than the general cohort, usually because of score review, identity verification, or School Day batching.

Here are the specific reasons a score can be delayed beyond the normal release window:

Irregular answer patterns. If an answer pattern triggers review — for example, statistically unusual answer-change patterns — College Board pauses the score pending review. Most pass through within a few days.

Technical issues during testing. If your Bluebook session had a sync issue, College Board may need additional time to reconstruct your responses before releasing your score.

Identity or eligibility verification. Missing ID paperwork, a photo mismatch, or a name discrepancy at check-in can delay the release of your individual score.

School Day processing backlog. If you took the SAT through your school during the school day rather than a weekend administration, your score may take longer due to how schools batch-submit results. School Day SAT scores typically release several weeks later than weekend scores because of answer-submission batching.

Administrative review. If your status says “Pending” or “Coming Soon,” it simply means you are likely in the afternoon batch. However, if your score is actually withheld, the College Board will typically send you an email notification stating that your file is under “Administrative Review.” Withheld scores are often due to testing irregularities, such as a technical glitch at the center or invalid personal information on your answer sheet.


What to Do If Your Score Has Not Appeared

First, check whether you are simply in the later release batch. If June 19 has not fully passed yet, wait until the evening release window before assuming there is a problem.

If a full day has passed and you still see nothing, check your email and your College Board account inbox for any notification about Administrative Review. If you receive a notification that your scores are being reviewed, follow the instructions in the email immediately.

If your scores are still missing several days after the release date, contact College Board customer service. You can reach College Board Customer Service at 866-756-7346.

In rare situations, scores can be cancelled entirely rather than delayed. In rare cases, scores may be cancelled entirely if the College Board suspects cheating or misconduct. If this occurs, your scores will not be released to you or any colleges, you will be notified of the cancellation, and the test fee is typically not refunded. This is uncommon and applies only when there is a specific concern flagged during or after the test administration.


Frequently Asked Questions

When do June 6 SAT scores come out in 2026?

Students who took the SAT on June 6 will receive their scores on June 19, 2026.

What time do SAT scores release on June 19?

Score distribution happens in two waves — around 8 AM Eastern Time and 8 PM Eastern Time. There is no single guaranteed hour, so check periodically through the day rather than only at one specific time.

Why does my friend have their SAT score but I do not?

Scores do not all drop at the same second. The College Board staggers the release throughout the day to prevent the website from crashing. Whether you are in the morning batch or evening batch is essentially random. This is normal and does not indicate a problem with your score.

How will I know when my SAT score is ready?

You will typically receive an email notification, but this is not guaranteed for every student. The most reliable method is to log directly into your College Board account at studentscores.collegeboard.org and check your “My SAT” dashboard on release day.

When will colleges receive my June SAT score?

Colleges will receive your score report within 10 days of your score being released to you, which means by approximately June 26, 2026 for the June 6 test administration.

My SAT score is delayed — what should I do?

First, confirm whether the full release day has passed, since scores release in two separate batches. If a few days pass with no score and no communication, check your College Board inbox for an Administrative Review notice. If there is still no update after about a week, contact College Board customer service at 866-756-7346.

Can SAT scores be cancelled instead of delayed?

Yes, though this is rare. In rare cases, scores may be cancelled entirely if College Board suspects cheating or misconduct. If this happens, scores are not released to the student or any colleges, the student is notified of the cancellation, and the test fee is typically not refunded.

Do School Day SAT scores release at the same time as weekend scores?

No. School Day SAT scores typically release several weeks later than weekend scores because of answer-submission batching at the school level. If you took the SAT through your school rather than on a weekend, expect a longer wait than the June 19 date listed for weekend test-takers.


Bottom Line

If you took the SAT on June 6, mark June 19 on your calendar. Scores release in two batches throughout the day — morning and evening Eastern Time — so do not panic if classmates post their results before you see yours.

Check your College Board account directly rather than waiting for an email. If your score is genuinely delayed beyond a few days with no communication from College Board, that is when it is time to call customer service rather than continuing to wait.

For most students, this entire process runs exactly on schedule. The 13-day digital turnaround has made SAT score delays far less common than they were under the old paper-based test.


Official Resources:


Last Updated: June 13, 2026. 

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