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The ACT Score Predictor estimates your likely ACT composite score based on practice test performance, study hours, and current academic standing. The ACT (American College Testing) is a standardized college admissions exam covering four sections — English, Math, Reading, and Science — each scored 1-36. The composite score is the average of the four section scores, rounded to the nearest whole number. Accepted by all US colleges, the ACT is taken by approximately 1.4 million students annually and serves as a critical factor in admissions decisions and merit scholarship eligibility. This predictor uses historical correlations between practice test scores, preparation intensity, and actual ACT outcomes to generate a score range.
ACT Composite = (English + Math + Reading + Science) / 4, rounded to nearest whole number
- 1Enter your most recent practice test scores for each of the four sections: English, Math, Reading, and Science (each 1-36).
- 2Indicate the number of weeks you plan to study and the approximate hours per week dedicated to ACT preparation.
- 3The predictor estimates a score improvement based on study intensity — research shows an average 2.9-point composite gain with 40+ hours of focused preparation.
- 4Optional: enter your current GPA and course rigor (AP/Honors) as additional predictive factors correlated with ACT performance.
- 5The four predicted section scores are averaged to produce the composite score.
- 6A score range (predicted score +/- 1-2 points) is displayed to account for test-day variability.
- 7The result includes percentile ranking, college competitiveness tier, and scholarship threshold comparisons.
Practice composite: (22+23+21+22)/4 = 22. With 40 hours of prep, historical data suggests a 2-3 point improvement, yielding a predicted 24. This places the student around the 74th percentile nationally.
Practice composite: (31+29+30+28)/4 = 29.5, rounds to 30. Intensive 96 hours of preparation with focus on weaker sections (Science, Math) can yield 2-3 points of improvement. A 32 is 98th percentile and competitive for top-tier universities.
Practice composite: (18+17+19+18)/4 = 18. Only 6 hours of preparation yields minimal improvement (0-1 points). A 19 is approximately the 42nd percentile. Additional preparation time would significantly improve this score.
Targeting the weakest section (Science) with 60 hours of focused study can yield a 3-5 point section improvement. If Science rises from 23 to 27, the new composite becomes (28+27+27+27)/4 = 27.25, rounded to 27, with potential for 28-30 given additional improvement across sections.
High school juniors and seniors planning their testing timeline and preparation strategy for college admissions.
College admissions officers evaluating applicant readiness — the ACT composite is a primary factor alongside GPA.
Scholarship committees setting minimum score thresholds — many merit scholarships require a 28+ or 30+ composite.
School counselors identifying students who could benefit from test prep resources to improve college options.
State education departments using ACT data (11 states mandate the ACT for all juniors) to assess school and district performance.
Test-Optional Admissions
Since 2020, over 1,800 US colleges have adopted test-optional policies, meaning ACT/SAT scores are not required. However, submitting a strong ACT score can still strengthen an application and unlock merit scholarships. The general advice is: submit your scores if they fall at or above the school's 25th percentile for admitted students.
Accommodations and Extended Time
Students with documented disabilities (ADHD, dyslexia, etc.) may receive accommodations including extended time (typically 50% more), extra breaks, or a separate testing room. Scores earned with accommodations are not flagged to colleges. Applications must be submitted to ACT at least 7 weeks before the test date.
State-Mandated ACT Testing
Eleven US states (including Illinois, Colorado, Wyoming, and Montana) require all public school juniors to take the ACT, often at no cost to the student. State-mandated testing tends to lower the state's average score because all students — not just college-bound ones — take the exam.
| Composite Score | Percentile Rank | College Competitiveness |
|---|---|---|
| 36 | 99th+ | Ivy League, Stanford, MIT |
| 34-35 | 99th | Top 10 national universities |
| 31-33 | 95th-98th | Top 25 universities, full-ride scholarships |
| 28-30 | 88th-94th | Competitive state flagships, merit aid |
| 25-27 | 75th-87th | Most four-year universities |
| 22-24 | 60th-74th | Many state universities, some merit aid |
| 19-21 | 42nd-58th | National average range |
| 16-18 | 25th-40th | Community colleges, less selective 4-year schools |
| 13-15 | 10th-23rd | Academic support programs may be required |
| 1-12 | 1st-9th | Significant remediation likely needed |
What is a good ACT score?
The national average composite is approximately 19.5. A score of 24+ puts you in the top 25%, 30+ is top 5%, and 34+ is top 1%. For competitive universities, aim for the 25th-75th percentile range of accepted students at your target schools.
ACT or SAT — which should I take?
All US colleges accept both equally. The ACT favors students who are strong in science reasoning and comfortable with faster pacing. The SAT favors students strong in evidence-based analysis with more time per question. Take a practice test of each and go with the one where you score higher.
How many times should I take the ACT?
Most students improve by 1-3 points on a retake with preparation. Two to three attempts is common. Beyond three, improvements diminish. ACT offers 'superscoring' at many colleges, which takes your highest score from each section across all test dates.
Does the ACT have a penalty for wrong answers?
No. There is no penalty for guessing on the ACT — you should answer every question even if you are unsure. Random guessing on a 4-choice question gives you a 25% chance of being correct.
How long does ACT prep typically take?
Research shows that 40-80 hours of structured preparation (over 8-12 weeks) yields the best results, with an average 2.9-point composite improvement. Cramming in the final week provides minimal benefit compared to sustained practice.
Is the ACT Writing section required?
The Writing section (a 40-minute essay) is optional and scored separately on a 2-12 scale. Most colleges no longer require or recommend it, but a few still do. Check your target schools' requirements before deciding.
Proffstips
The ACT Science section requires almost no science knowledge — it is a data interpretation test. Practice reading graphs, tables, and experimental setups quickly. Students who treat it as a 'reading comprehension for charts' section often see the biggest score gains here.
Visste du?
The ACT was created in 1959 by E.F. Lindquist at the University of Iowa as an alternative to the SAT, which was seen as biased toward Northeastern students. For decades the SAT dominated the coasts while the ACT was the test of the Midwest and South — today they are accepted equally nationwide.