<p>I was born in US but soon afterwards my parents and I returned to Poland. I've been living there since 1996. We communicate in polish language. I attend polish high school (bilingual - with doubled english classes, but it's still mostly in polish). I'm on the second year (out of three). I'm taking the SAT in January 2013 and planning to apply for college for fall 2014. I have american citizenship but I'm not sure if I need to take the TOEFL in this case or not? Thanks for your responses in advance :D</p>
<p>Each college and university sets its own policy about this. You have to check every website separately.</p>
<p>Ok, but can anyone tell me what are the chances that college won’t required TOEFL exam from me?</p>
<p>Most colleges and universities will require that you take the TOEFL, IELTS, or another examination because you live in a country where English is not the primary language, and your school is not a school where English is the primary language of instruction. </p>
<p>Some colleges and universities will not require an English exam if you have a high enough score on the ACT or SAT exam. Again, each place makes its own rules about this, so you have to check every website separately. </p>
<p>One good resource for you is the local office of <a href=“http://educationusa.state.gov/[/url]”>http://educationusa.state.gov/</a> There are two in Poland: [EducationUSA</a> | Find an Advising Center](<a href=“http://www.educationusa.info/Poland]EducationUSA”>http://www.educationusa.info/Poland) Contact the counselors there, and ask for their help with this. If none of them have worked with a US citizen recently, they have colleagues in other offices who have. EducationUSA is a not-for-profit organization and the counselors offer unbiased accurate information. If there are any charges for their services, those fees will be well within a student’s budget. I used to work in the office in Caracas. If the people in Poland are like my former colleagues, you are in good hands.</p>
<p>Wishing you all the best!</p>