Quick SAT question!

<p>When you pay the College Board $11 to send your scores to a college, are these scores from just one sitting (meaning you'll have to pay another $11 to send your SAT II's and another SAT from a different date to super score) or all the scores you want to send?</p>

<p>From my understanding all scores are sent. I am not sure if there is a distinction between subject tests and the reasoning test, but from my (possibly wrong) understanding every single score is sent. I am certain about the reasoning tests, just not how the subject tests tie in.</p>

<p>yaa, if you send a college your score the first time you take a Collegeboard test, then the next time you take one (whether SAT or subject tests), the scores are automatically sent for free unless you choose to not send them.</p>

<p>Alright, so no overlapping fees from sending multiple scores. The only other fee I’d have to worry about now is the CSS Profile Fee.</p>

<p>I got scared when I was computing the cost of applying to colleges and I really thought that the CB would charge separately, considering how they have milked dollars out of students for years…</p>

<p>I thought that if you took and sent the January Sat in 2013, it sends all sat scores before it ?. So if you take the SAT in October 2013 you would have to resend them ?</p>

<p>stman1111 is not correct - Solate, that is correct.</p>

<p>When you send scores, they send all existing scores at that time. If you take a test again later, they will only send those scores if you pay to send scores again (or use your free score reports).</p>

<p>When they send, they send everything in your file (all previous SAT I and SAT II scores) unless you use Score Choice, in which case you select which scores will be sent.</p>

<p>Gloogle - you would only need to pay “extra” fees if you have already sent scores to a school, but want to send later scores (like Solate’s example). From what I understand ACT charges per score sent, which may factor in to school not wanting to superscore ACT, because it would give an edge to those who can afford the extra fees to send multiple scores.</p>

<p>Thanks CTscoutmom! That cleared things up.</p>