A 1310 on the Digital SAT is in the 87th percentile among recent SAT users — a above average SAT score. An above-average SAT score that can fit the reported ranges at many four-year universities.
Compare this score with college target ranges →
Percentile source: College Board SAT-user percentiles.
Section scores are reported in 10-point increments. One valid, balanced planning split for a 1310 is:
You can model different section splits using the free Digital SAT score calculator.
Start by comparing a 1310 with the current published ranges for:
These are comparison starting points, not admission predictions. Testing policies and score ranges change, and colleges also consider grades, course rigor, essays, activities, and institutional priorities.
Lock down the medium-difficulty questions you are still missing and start breaking into harder content consistently.
Start by taking a full-length Digital SAT practice module and logging which question types you miss. Then drill those exact skills in the SAT question bank.
Priority: Push both sections into the hard-module range. This is the range where missed medium questions are expensive. Your job is to make the first module automatic enough that you reach the harder second module consistently.
| If your next report shows... | Do this before retesting |
|---|---|
| Math is lower than Reading and Writing by 40+ points | Run two Math domain drills, then a timed Math module. |
| Reading and Writing is lower by 40+ points | Split practice between Standard English Conventions and evidence/inference drills. |
| Both sections are balanced but below target | Alternate full timed modules with narrow review sets from the bank. |
| Most misses are careless or from rushing | Add a checkpoint plan and practice leaving two minutes for flagged questions. |
One valid balanced 1310 split is 650 in Reading & Writing and 660 in Math. Other combinations work if each section is a 10-point score between 200 and 800 and the two sections add to 1310.
College Board's current SAT-user table places a 1310 in the 87th percentile. SAT-user percentiles compare you with students who took the SAT in the most recent three graduating classes.
Use schools such as Penn State, Ohio State, Rutgers as starting points for checking current middle-50% score ranges. A 1310 alone cannot predict admission.
Lock down the medium-difficulty questions you are still missing and start breaking into harder content consistently.
A 1310 does not map to one fixed missed-question count. Digital SAT scoring depends on question difficulty, adaptive routing, and equating, so use the detailed score report for the actual test instead of estimating misses from the total.