Digital SAT Math: Format, Adaptive Sections, and Pacing
How the Digital SAT Math section is structured — two adaptive modules, 44 questions in 70 minutes, calculator throughout, embedded Desmos. The format strategy that protects your score before you solve a single problem.
The Digital SAT Math section is shorter, smarter, and adaptive — 44 questions in 70 minutes, calculator allowed throughout, with an embedded Desmos graphing tool. Knowing the format is the first 50 points.
The post-March 2024 format at a glance
The Digital SAT replaced the paper SAT in March 2024. The Math section is split into two modules of 22 questions each, taken back-to-back inside the Bluebook app. You get 35 minutes per module — about 1.6 minutes per question — and a calculator (handheld or the built-in Desmos) is allowed on every problem.
- 44 questions total (33 multiple-choice, 11 student-produced response "grid-in")
- 70 minutes total — 35 per module
- Calculator + Desmos allowed throughout
- Reference sheet with formulas is built in
- Score range: 200–800
How the adaptive routing works
Module 1 is the routing module. Your accuracy on Module 1 decides whether Module 2 serves you the harder or easier set. Only the harder Module 2 can unlock the highest score band — which means every Module 1 question matters disproportionately.
What's tested: the four domains
Pacing strategy
You have ≈1.6 minutes per question, but easy questions take 30 seconds and hard ones can swallow 3+ minutes. The Bluebook app lets you mark and review within a module — use it.
The Desmos advantage
The built-in Desmos calculator is the single biggest difference from the old paper SAT. You can graph any equation, find intersections, solve systems visually, and check answer choices by plugging them in. For roughly 1 in 4 questions, Desmos turns a 2-minute algebra problem into a 20-second visual check.
Practice Desmos before test day. Learn how to type fractions, exponents, and inequalities, and how to find the point of intersection between two curves. The shortcut keys save real seconds.
Grid-in (student-produced response) questions
About 11 of the 44 Math questions are grid-ins — no multiple-choice. You type your numerical answer directly. Rules to memorize:
- Answers can be positive, negative, fractional, or decimal — but no mixed numbers (write 11/4, not 2 3/4)
- If the answer is a decimal that doesn't fit (like 1/3), enter as many digits as fit: 0.333 or .3333
- If the answer is a fraction, you can leave it unreduced — 6/8 is graded same as 3/4
- For multiple correct answers (e.g., "find a value of x"), enter any one
A four-week prep arc
Common mistakes
- Spending 4+ minutes on a single Module 1 question — then rushing the last 5
- Ignoring Desmos because "I can do this by hand"
- Forgetting the built-in reference sheet has area, volume, and special-triangle formulas
- Leaving grid-in answers blank — partial credit doesn't exist, but there's no penalty either
- Treating Module 1 like Module 2 doesn't matter — the adaptive system rewards Module 1 effort disproportionately