Guides / SAT Scores
Colleges for a 1600 SAT Score
Move the slider to your real score. Every college is re-scored live as a Reach, Target, or Likely — with national percentile, merit-aid signals, your ACT equivalent, and earnings and net-price data from College Scorecard.
A 1600 SAT is the 99+th percentile — top 0.5% of test-takers nationally — and concords to about a 36 ACT.
50 of 139 schools shown
What a 1600 SAT Score Really Means
A 1600 SAT sits in roughly the 99+th percentile of test-takers nationally, the top 0.5% of everyone who sits the exam, based on College Board / ACT national norms. On the official concordance it lines up with about a 36 ACT, so you can compare offers and admissions data across both scales.
Against a school's admitted-student profile, a 1600 SAT clears the 75th-percentile bar at most selective colleges, where it reads as a Likely on the academic axis. Each college on this page is tagged Likely, Target, or Reach depending on where 1600 falls relative to its 25th- and 75th-percentile range, so you can separate the safe bets from the stretch schools at a glance. On this page, a 1600 is in range at 50 colleges.
Beyond admission, a score above a college's 75th percentile is one of the strongest predictors of a non-need merit scholarship. Because most colleges superscore (combining your best section results across dates) and hundreds are test-optional, a 1600 rarely hurts: submit it where it's at or above the median, and weigh withholding it where it sits below the 25th percentile. At 1600 you're at the SAT ceiling. There's no academic reason to retake; put that energy into essays and recommendations.
Frequently asked questions
Is a 1600 SAT a good score?
A 1600 SAT is a strong score. It places you in roughly the 99+th percentile nationally, the top 0.5% of test-takers. It's competitive at the selective colleges on this page and clears the 75th-percentile mark at several of them.
What is a 1600 SAT equivalent to on the ACT?
A 1600 SAT concords to about a 36 ACT using the official College Board / ACT concordance. Use the SAT⇄ACT toggle above to switch this whole page between scales.
What colleges can I get into with a 1600 SAT?
This page lists 50 colleges where a 1600 SAT is in range. Each school is tagged Likely, Target, or Reach based on where 1600 falls in its middle-50% range. Move the slider to see the list re-sort in real time.
Can I get into a top-20 or Ivy League school with a 1600 SAT?
A 1600 is within the testing range of every Ivy and most top-20s. But schools admitting under 10% are flagged "ultra-selective" here because a strong score only clears the academic bar. Essays, course rigor, recommendations, and extracurriculars decide the outcome from there.
Will a 1600 SAT qualify me for merit scholarships?
Frequently, yes. At colleges that award non-need merit aid, scoring above their 75th percentile is one of the strongest predictors of a scholarship offer. Those schools carry a "Merit aid likely" badge above. Note that most Ivies and many elite liberal-arts colleges award need-based aid only, so a high score there improves admission odds but not price.
Is it worth retaking after a 1600 SAT?
A 1600 is the maximum SAT score, so there's no academic reason to retake. Focus your energy on essays, recommendations, and the rest of your application.
Do colleges superscore the SAT, and does test-optional change things?
Many colleges superscore, meaning they combine your best section scores across test dates, so retaking rarely hurts. Hundreds of colleges are also test-optional, meaning a 1600 that's at or above a school's median strengthens your file, while you can withhold it where it sits below the 25th percentile. The Likely/Target/Reach tags above are a quick read on which way that goes for each school.
Percentile and concordance figures use College Board / ACT national norms. Verify each school's current merit policy before relying on it.