The Secondary School Admissions Test (SSAT) is used by over 1,000 private and independent schools for grades 3–11. Offered at Elementary, Middle, and Upper levels, it tests verbal reasoning, reading comprehension, and quantitative math. Unlike the ISEE, the SSAT penalizes wrong answers (−1/4 point), making omission strategy critical.
Quick Facts
Exam Structure
Five sections in a fixed order. Three sections are scored; Writing and Experimental are unscored. Remember: a wrong answer costs you ¼ point — omit questions you cannot confidently narrow down.
Full Content Outline
Every question type your child will encounter, with what it tests and how to practice. Click each section to expand the full detail.
Prep Timeline
30–45 minutes per day, 5 days per week. The SSAT is heavily vocabulary-dependent — front-load words in weeks 1 and 2, then shift to full practice by week 4.
Free SSAT practice questions covering verbal, quantitative, and reading. No signup required.
Score Interpretation
SSAT scores are reported in three formats. Percentile among test-takers is the most useful number for school applications.
Scaled Score (440–710)
Separate scaled score per section. Total score = sum of the 3 scored sections (Verbal + Q1 + Q2 + Reading). Used for raw comparison across test dates.
440–499
Low range
500–599
Mid range
600–710
Top range
Percentile Among Test-Takers
Compared to all students who took the SSAT in the last 3 years. More useful than scaled score for school applications — this is what schools compare.
50th pct ≠ average
SSAT takers are a self-selected competitive group
SSAT Score vs. School Median
Most schools publish their median SSAT scores. Aim to score at or above the median for your target schools. A score 10–20 percentile points above the median is a strong competitive position.
Research each school's published median
Available on SSAT Board's school profiles
Study Materials
Handpicked study guides. Affiliate links — we earn a small commission at no extra cost to you.
Princeton Review SSAT & ISEE Prep
Comprehensive prep for both admissions tests with full-length practice tests and detailed strategy guides.
Barron's SSAT/ISEE High School Admissions
Thorough content review, vocabulary lists, and multiple practice tests for the Upper Level SSAT.
Common Questions
The Secondary School Admissions Test (SSAT) is a standardized test used by over 1,000 private and independent schools in the U.S. and internationally. It measures verbal reasoning (synonyms and analogies), reading comprehension, and quantitative math skills, and is used as one factor in the admissions process.
The key difference is the guessing penalty: the SSAT deducts ¼ point for each wrong answer, while the ISEE has no penalty. The SSAT also tests analogies, which the ISEE does not. Both are accepted by most private schools — check your target schools' preferences.
For each wrong answer, ¼ point is deducted from your raw score. Correct answers add 1 point; omissions add 0. Statistically, random guessing from 5 choices breaks even, but in practice, omitting questions you cannot narrow down to 2–3 choices reduces risk.
"Good" depends entirely on your target schools. Research the published median SSAT scores for each school you're applying to. Scoring at or above a school's median gives you a competitive application. Most top boarding schools see medians in the 85th–95th percentile range.
Start 6–8 weeks before the test date. The SSAT's heavy vocabulary component rewards consistent daily word study over cramming. Students who study 20–30 minutes per day for 8 weeks typically outperform those who do intensive prep in the final 2 weeks.