US Trends

what is a good psat score for a junior

A good PSAT score for a junior is generally anything in the top 25% of test takers (around the mid‑1200s and up), and a very strong score is in the top 10% (around 1270–1360+). What counts as “good” also depends on your goals, like National Merit, target colleges, and how much you want to improve before the SAT.

Score ranges for juniors

  • Around 1010: Roughly average for 11th graders and typically enough for many less‑selective four‑year colleges.
  • Around 1160–1250: Often considered a good score, placing you around the 75th percentile or top 25% of juniors.
  • Around 1270–1360: Frequently labeled “good to very good” and usually in about the top 10% of test takers.
  • 1360–1450+: Typically “very good” to “excellent,” often 95th–99th percentile or higher, and competitive for strong colleges and National Merit conversations.

If you’re aiming for National Merit

  • National Merit cutoffs vary by state, but qualifying scores are usually in the very top percentiles (often in the high 1300s to 1400s+ for juniors).
  • If your goal is National Merit, you’re generally looking to be as close as possible to the upper end of the scale (1400–1520).

How to judge your score

  • Compare to percentiles: Top 50% is decent, top 25% is good, top 10% is very strong for a junior.
  • Compare to your college goals: More selective schools will expect scores closer to the very top ranges, while many solid schools admit students with scores in the 1100s–1200s.

Turning a “good” score into a great one

  • Use your PSAT score report to see which section (Math vs Reading & Writing) is dragging your total down and focus practice there.
  • Take at least a few full‑length SAT practice tests and treat your PSAT score as a baseline to beat, not a final verdict on your ability.

Bottom line: For a junior, mid‑1200s is commonly viewed as “good,” high‑1200s to mid‑1300s as “very good,” and 1400+ as excellent and competitive for top options and scholarships.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.