University Entrance

SAT Digital Bluebook Guide 2026: Module-Adaptive Scoring, Pacing & Free Practice

May 26, 2026 9 min read By Wrexa Edge Team

The Digital SAT runs entirely on the College Board Bluebook app — module-adaptive, 2 hours 14 minutes, and very different from the paper test your older siblings took. Here is what changed and how to prep for free.

What is the Digital SAT?

The College Board fully retired the paper SAT in 2024. Every test-taker now sits a 2 hour 14 minute computer-based exam inside the Bluebook app, scored on the familiar 400 to 1600 scale but delivered as four shorter modules: two Reading & Writing and two Math.

Module-adaptive scoring — the part most students miss

The first module of each section is the same difficulty for everyone. Your performance on Module 1 selects whether Module 2 is the easier or harder routing. That second module decides the upper bound of your score, so a strong Module 1 is non-negotiable if you want 1500+.

Section timing and tools

How to practise on the real interface

Reading a PDF is not Bluebook practice. You need the same passage-on-left, choices-on-right layout, the same timer behaviour, and the same Desmos panel. Wrexa Edge mirrors the Bluebook UI pixel-for-pixel — 50 full-length variants, free to start.

Start with the SAT Bluebook full-length mock and follow it with module-style drills from the University Entrance catalog.

Score-improvement playbook

  1. Take one full mock cold to set a baseline.
  2. Drill the two lowest-scoring topics for one week.
  3. Re-test with a second variant. Repeat.

Most students gain 80 to 140 points in four weeks doing exactly this. Pair it with the Student Pro plan if you want unlimited variants and AI explanations.

Ready to practise on the real interface?

Free full-length mocks. 50 variants per exam. AI explanations.

Browse 1,300+ Exams →

More from the blog