Record High National Merit Scores Announced
Every year, the National Merit Scholarship Program honors approximately 17,000 students as National Merit Semifinalists based on junior year PSAT scores. Semifinalists can continue in the competition to become Finalists and, potentially, scholarship recipients. Current Semifinalists and future participants may want to read Compass’s National Merit Scholarship Program Explained for more information on the steps in the program. An additional 40,000 students are honored as Commended Students for having scores in the top 3% of all test takers. The recently confirmed cutoffs reveal that the Class of 2026 had the highest Semifinalist scores ever on the PSAT. Of the 12 largest states, 8 set new records and the other 4 tied their highest historical marks. Students in Massachusetts and New Jersey (225) would have needed to score at least a near-perfect 750 on the Reading & Writing (RW) and combine it with a 750 or 760 on Math.
The large jump points to a problem
The nearly universal increase in Selection Index cutoffs is most likely attributable to a flaw in scaling or test construction that produced higher scores on both Reading & Writing and Math. Since these sorts of scoring changes can also occur on the SAT, this post explores the implications for National Merit and college admission testing.
Scaling error best explains:
- Why there were changes across the entire score range
- Why there was a change in almost all states
- Why new records were reached in so many states, particularly the largest states
It’s the sort of shift we have seen before, but there are some added twists this time.
How cutoffs are determined
Qualifying scores (“cutoffs”) are not based on the total score for the PSAT (360-1520) but on the Selection Index, which is calculated by doubling the RW score, adding the Math score, and then dividing the sum by 10. The maximum Selection Index is 228. Students can find a historical set of cutoff data here or see how Semifinalist and Commended counts have changed state by state.
Semifinalists are allocated by state, and cutoffs are calculated by state. This means that students across the country face varying qualifying scores for Semifinalist status (the Commended level is set nationally). The cutoffs for the Class of 2026 range from 210 in New Mexico, North Dakota, West Virginia, and Wyoming to 225 in New Jersey and Massachusetts. If California is allocated 2,000 Semifinalists based on its population of high school graduates, then NMSC works down from a perfect 228 Selection Index until it gets as close as possible to that target. This year, California’s 224 included 2,172 students. A cutoff of 225 would have produced too few Semifinalists. A cutoff of 223 would have gone well over the allocation.
Below are this year’s cutoffs compared to those from prior years. The Class of 2026 figures are confirmed.
State | Class of 2026 (Actual) | Change | Class of 2025 (Actual) | Class of 2024 (Actual) | Semifinalists | Commended |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Alabama | 214 | 2 | 212 | 210 | 228 | 141 |
Alaska | 215 | 1 | 214 | 209 | 31 | 24 |
Arizona | 218 | 1 | 217 | 216 | 409 | 557 |
Arkansas | 215 | 2 | 213 | 210 | 141 | 106 |
California | 224 | 3 | 221 | 221 | 2172 | 6840 |
Colorado | 219 | 1 | 218 | 216 | 287 | 579 |
Connecticut | 223 | 2 | 221 | 221 | 193 | 709 |
Delaware | 220 | 1 | 219 | 219 | 47 | 84 |
Florida | 219 | 2 | 217 | 216 | 1008 | 1824 |
Georgia | 220 | 2 | 218 | 217 | 620 | 1243 |
Hawaii | 219 | 2 | 217 | 217 | 60 | 124 |
Idaho | 215 | 2 | 213 | 211 | 90 | 76 |
Illinois | 222 | 2 | 220 | 219 | 748 | 1888 |
Indiana | 218 | 1 | 217 | 216 | 333 | 531 |
Iowa | 214 | 2 | 212 | 210 | 138 | 77 |
Kansas | 216 | 1 | 215 | 214 | 136 | 113 |
Kentucky | 214 | 1 | 213 | 211 | 200 | 121 |
Louisiana | 216 | 2 | 214 | 214 | 220 | 219 |
Maine | 217 | 3 | 214 | 213 | 57 | 63 |
Maryland | 224 | 2 | 222 | 221 | 348 | 1290 |
Massachusetts | 225 | 2 | 223 | 222 | 282 | 1754 |
Michigan | 220 | 2 | 218 | 217 | 470 | 965 |
Minnesota | 219 | 2 | 217 | 216 | 266 | 438 |
Mississippi | 213 | 1 | 212 | 209 | 153 | 53 |
Missouri | 217 | 2 | 215 | 214 | 281 | 326 |
Montana | 213 | 4 | 209 | 209 | 48 | 8 |
Nebraska | 214 | 3 | 211 | 210 | 109 | 63 |
Nevada | 214 | 0 | 214 | 211 | 185 | 78 |
New Hampshire | 219 | 2 | 217 | 215 | 51 | 99 |
New Jersey | 225 | 2 | 223 | 223 | 511 | 3199 |
New Mexico | 210 | -1 | 211 | 207 | 111 | 0 |
New York | 223 | 3 | 220 | 220 | 992 | 3378 |
North Carolina | 220 | 2 | 218 | 217 | 523 | 1151 |
North Dakota | 210 | 0 | 210 | 207 | 26 | 0 |
Ohio | 219 | 2 | 217 | 216 | 490 | 999 |
Oklahoma | 212 | 1 | 211 | 208 | 214 | 39 |
Oregon | 219 | 3 | 216 | 216 | 188 | 318 |
Pennsylvania | 221 | 2 | 219 | 219 | 612 | 1511 |
Rhode Island | 219 | 2 | 217 | 215 | 50 | 96 |
South Carolina | 215 | 1 | 214 | 209 | 225 | 197 |
South Dakota | 211 | 3 | 208 | 209 | 46 | 6 |
Tennessee | 219 | 2 | 217 | 217 | 306 | 521 |
Texas | 222 | 3 | 219 | 219 | 1673 | 4653 |
Utah | 213 | 2 | 211 | 209 | 199 | 68 |
Vermont | 216 | 1 | 215 | 212 | 27 | 27 |
Virginia | 224 | 2 | 222 | 219 | 489 | 1912 |
Washington | 224 | 2 | 222 | 220 | 388 | 1295 |
West Virginia | 210 | 1 | 209 | 207 | 66 | 0 |
Wisconsin | 215 | 1 | 214 | 213 | 287 | 216 |
Wyoming | 210 | 1 | 209 | 207 | 20 | 0 |
District of Columbia | 225 | 2 | 223 | 223 | 37 | 230 |
Boarding Schools | 220-225 | 158 | 652 | |||
U.S. Territories | 210 | 2 | 208 | 207 | 43 | 0 |
Studying Abroad | 225 | 2 | 223 | 223 | 86 | 565 |
Commended | 210 | 2 | 208 | 207 |
What the PSAT tells us about the SAT
Analyzing the PSAT/NMSQT is about more than just explaining National Merit cutoffs. The PSAT also provides a unique window into the SAT program. National Merit results offer comparable year-over-year data that are more granular than what College Board provides for the SAT. The scoring anomalies we saw on the October 2024 PSAT are also likely occurring on the SAT; they’re just better disguised on the three-letter exam. Based on our historical review, scoring outliers crop up every 3 to 4 years with the PSAT. Projected across an SAT cycle, that’s potentially 2 problematic exam dates every year!
Cutoff changes
In total, 47 states saw higher cutoffs, as did the District of Columbia (225, a new record), U.S. territories and commonwealths (210), U.S. boarding schools (220-225, new records), and U.S. students abroad (225, a new record). Boarding school cutoffs are set at the highest state cutoff within the National Merit region. For students at day schools, eligibility is defined by the school’s location rather than the student’s home address.
State cutoffs always have some degree of fluctuation, especially in smaller states. The size and consistency of this year’s movements set them apart, and large states provide the best measuring stick. A 3-point increase in Maine’s cutoff might be considered unusual, but a 3-point rise in California’s cutoff demands an explanation.
The 12 largest states account for more than 10,000 Semifinalists. Their cutoffs went up an average of 2.25 points, a record change. Even the plunge in the Class of 2021, traced back to a flawed PSAT form, was more moderate.
Over the last dozen years, the majority of 2- and 3-point changes in large states’ cutoffs occurred just this year.
The bias is also seen when looking at all 50 states. The chart below shows how changes in the prior 11 years compare to the Class of 2026’s shifts. Historically, cutoffs remain unchanged approximately 30% of the time, and go up by 2 or more points only 15% of the time. This year, two-thirds of states saw increases of 2 or more points.
Was the PSAT fair? Was it wind-assisted?
In running events such as the 100m-dash, results do not qualify as world records if there is too much wind. The race results still stand; the gold, silver, and bronze medalists still finished first, second, and third. But the runners’ performances are not comparable to other races if they had a 15-mile per hour wind at their backs. While the October 2024 PSAT was likely wind-assisted, it was largely fair to those taking the test. The higher National Merit cutoffs did not alter the number of Commended Students or Semifinalists. Students were still ranked 1, 2, 3, etc.
Why the qualifier of “largely fair”?
On the digital PSAT, not all students answer the same questions. There is a pool of potential items. Nor is scaling done by a simple tally of right/wrong answers. As with the digital SAT, a specialized form of scoring called 3-parameter Item Response Theory (IRT) is used on the PSAT. IRT is a form of pattern scoring, where a student’s score is determined by which specific questions are answered correctly or incorrectly. If the parameters for questions were inaccurate and those questions only went to certain students, then the bias in scores may not have been uniform. A swirling wind could have helped some students and not others. The consistency of the upward bias, though, indicates that most students were boosted last October.
Scores provide needed insight
In the old world of paper PSATs, College Board shared select test forms with students, provided educators with performance data for questions, and released scales. None of that takes place with the digital PSAT. No items are released. No scoring parameters are provided. No performance data is shared. Students are not even told how many questions they got right or wrong. In short, visibility over the exam is available only by analyzing reported scores.
Those reported scores clearly show the upward bias. The number of students earning a 700-760 score on Reading & Writing increased from 62,000 to well over 74,000 (a 20% increase). The number of Math scores in that range went from 59,000 to approximately 78,000 (up more than 30%).
The changes at the very top were likely even more extreme. With the 223 cutoff seen in New Jersey for the Class of 2025, there were 12 score combinations that qualified a student for Semifinalist: 740RW / 750M, 740RW / 760M, etc. For the state’s 225 cutoff this year, there were only 6 combinations. It’s possible that the number of 750-760 scores went up by 50% or more.
So, the October 2024 test was easier than normal?
If easier is defined as more students able to achieve top marks, then the answer is “yes.” That doesn’t mean that the questions themselves were easier. The test’s scale is meant to adjust for differences. Somewhere along the line, things broke down.
Over the last two decades, the PSATs from 2011 (Class of 2013), 2016 (Class of 2018), 2019 (Class of 2021), and 2024 (Class of 2026) stand out as problematic. In those years, almost every state saw a change in cutoffs, and the direction and size of the change point to non-parallel forms (wind!). (The Class of 2014 also saw significant changes, but those were more of a bounce-back from the previous year.) The anomalous 2019 results could be traced back to a particularly mis-scaled form, which I wrote about at the time.
Implications for the SAT
The PSAT offers a snapshot of an entire class at a specific moment. In contrast, the SAT is administered on various dates and times, yet all results are reported as interchangeable. Some SAT takers may have wind at their backs, and some may be running directly into the wind. College Board’s goal is to prevent differing conditions or factor them out of the equation. Its objective is to ensure that the questions on each exam are nearly identical in content and difficulty (known as “parallel forms”), with any minor discrepancies accounted for through equating and scaling. However, PSAT results highlight the challenge of achieving this goal. Ultimately, some SAT administrations are going to yield higher or lower scores, just as observed with the PSAT.
Why aren’t you analyzing those SAT changes?
SAT data provided by College Board tend to obscure non-parallel results. Scores from individual test dates are not publicly shared. Even in the locked-down educator portals, scores are only reported in broad ranges. By the time College Board presents the results for a group of graduated students, the impact of non-parallel forms has been smoothed away, and College Board prefers it that way. If you can’t see scoring irregularities, did they really happen? The useful thing about the PSAT is that we can see them. National Merit cutoffs are far more granular than the 1400-1600 range that College Board reports annually for the SAT.
Non-parallel forms, norms, and student behavior
If test forms are not consistently parallel, then students have added incentive to repeat the SAT. As a test taker, why wouldn’t I want to stumble across an exam with an upward bias? The incentive is increased by the fact that superscoring locks in any upward bias and any positive error (see below) on each section of the test. Over time, the number of test dates taken by students applying to competitive colleges has increased, and testing calendars have shifted forward to allow for this. This may not be desired behavior, but it is rational behavior.
Due to upward shifts in SAT scores, traditional normative data like percentiles are insufficient for accurately measuring performance. PSAT students in the class of 2026 saw how tricky it can be comparing one’s performance to historical norms. The same problem arises on the SAT. Percentiles are provided for the three preceding class years. If there is an upward shift, it will not be fully reflected for more than three years. Unlike the ACT, College Board stopped reporting the number of students achieving each score nearly a decade ago and has never disclosed the impact of superscoring on score distribution. When assessing where an SAT score really ranks, students are not given the full picture.
In effect, College Board provides outdated track season averages for the SAT and expects them to be good enough to assess individual race results. Wind be darned.
Haven’t scores always been volatile?
Fluctuations at the individual level are different than those at the population level, although both can contribute to scoring uncertainty for students.
All tests contain inherent imprecision, known as the standard error of measurement (SEM) in psychometrics. SEM reflects that a single test can not accurately pin down a student’s “true score.” For this reason, College Board provides students with a score range, typically plus or minus 30 points, beneath their reported test scores.
Changes in the National Merit cutoffs can not be explained by SEM. Error in measurement is effectively random, and negative error and positive error cancel out when viewed over a large population. It doesn’t get much larger than the 1.5 million juniors who took the PSAT. SEM would not push scores upward.
The confidence intervals provided on student scores, however, assume parallel forms. Non-parallel forms are the likely cause of the increases on the October 2024 PSAT.
Instead of random error, scores were biased upwards, at least at the highest levels. There is strong circumstantial evidence that the October 2024 PSAT was not parallel to the October 2023 PSAT. In other words, students saw volatility (College Board’s inability to equate each test to produce equivalent scores) layered on top of typical volatility (the fluctuation of individual student scores due to SEM). The same problem arises with the SAT, it is simply hidden from view.
Fluke, shift, or trend
Was the observed bias on the PSAT a fluke, shift, or trend? The change in score distribution could be attributable to something unique to the October 2024 PSAT. We saw this happen with the paper tests in the past. There were outlier years that we might consider “flukes.”
Alternatively, we could be seeing a permanent shift upward in scores. Instead of wind at the back, are we perhaps seeing a move to a new track surface that will permanently raise scores? Equating a new test format is difficult. Equating a new format that accounts for future student behavior is even harder. Is it simply coincidence that scores jumped in both 2016 and 2024, the years after the introduction of new PSAT designs? It’s difficult to disprove a shift at its very outset.
Could the change reflect even more than a shift? Could it be a trend that will push scores higher still? This seems like the least likely possibility. Previous examples of major score differences have fallen into the fluke or shift buckets.
Other theories about the change
There are other theories as to why PSAT scores increased. For example, is the increase in PSAT scores due to better preparation? It is unlikely. I have spent much of my professional life helping students improve their test scores, so it may seem odd that I discount learning improvements or test preparation as an explanation. Practice and preparation do raise scores at the individual level. The behavior of a testing population, however, rarely changes quickly or uniformly.
The cutoffs in the largest 12 states went up either 2 points or 3 points. We should not have seen that uniformity if preparation and technique were the primary causes.
It’s Desmos’ fault
Probably not. Desmos, the powerful online calculator available for the PSAT and SAT, was available in 2023, as well. Students may have become more adept with Desmos, but that doesn’t explain why we also saw an increase in Reading & Writing scores. Further, a Desmos-linked impact should be less prominent at the highest score levels, since students capable of scoring 740-760 are less likely to see the benefit versus those scoring, say, 650-700.
Are the cutoffs explainable by a change in testing population?
The number of students taking the PSAT can change from year-to-year. The score level of those students can also change. For example, if a state begins requiring all students to take the PSAT, the average score will go down, while the number of high scorers may move up (in previous years, we saw this in Illinois and Michigan). This is a poor fit for what we saw with the PSAT. Scores went up across virtually all states. There is strong evidence that there were forces that pushed Selection Indexes up by 2 points.
Is the change attributable to the adaptive nature of the exam?
The RW and Math PSAT each have two stages. A student receives an initial set of questions. Based on their performance on that first stage, the student receives a set of easier or harder problems in stage 2. An adaptive test can more quickly narrow down a student’s score, but there is always the chance of what is known as routing error. In other words, a student with an ultimate score of 640 probably should have been routed to the harder stage 2 problems rather than the easier ones. There may be less accuracy had the student been routed to the easier set of questions. However, routing error should be neutral for the population as a whole. Further, College Board research maintains that routing error has a minimal impact on scores. Most important, students scoring at the National Merit range would have been routed to the harder stage 2 with 99+% certainty.
IRT scoring may have been a factor. Item parameters are calculated beforehand through pre-testing, where the question is included as an unscored item on earlier exams. Inaccurate parameters can lead to inaccurate scores.
The digital PSAT and SAT are shorter than their paper ancestors, and this can contribute to score instability. An individual problem or two plays a greater role on a shorter exam. While this can be offset by the adaptive nature of the test, longer is always better when it comes to test reliability. The PSAT tries to place students on a 160 to 760 scale with only 40 scored Math questions and only 50 RW questions.
Could NMSC have changed how it calculates cutoffs?
Each year, some students are unable to take the PSAT because of illness or other extenuating circumstances. These students can apply to enter the scholarship program via Alternate Entry using an SAT score. The deadline for application is generally April 1 after the PSAT, although students can use SAT scores through the June test date. In the past, NMSC has only used PSAT scores to calculate cutoffs (with an exception made during the COVID-related cancellations in 2020). Because students can take the SAT on multiple dates, their scores skew higher than PSAT scores. If NMSC were to include them in the cutoff calculations, it would likely lead to cutoff inflation. Compass has not heard that any changes were made for the Class of 2026.
Did Compass see the changes coming?
Only in part. Once PSAT scores were available in November, we noted the uptick in 1400-1520 scores and projected that the Commended cutoff would move up 2 points to 210. While upward movement was expected nationally, we did not foresee the breadth of the changes. The table below shows that there were far more high scores in the Class of 2020. The class also saw a higher Commended of 212. Yet the highest Semifinalist cutoff only reached 223. Cutoffs as high as 225 were without any precedent.
What about expectations for the Class of 2027 and beyond?
More than ever, PSAT students have to be aware that “past performance is no guarantee of future results.” In November, Compass will report on the scoring of the October 2025 exam and provide our range projections. We won’t know what future cutoffs will be, but the PSAT scores may provide clues on the question of fluke, shift, or trend.
Why does each state have its own Semifinalist cutoff if the program is NATIONAL Merit?
This is always a hot button question. NMSC allocates the approximately 17,000 Semifinalists among states based on the number of high school graduates. That way, students across the nation are represented. It also means that there are very different qualifying standards from state to state. A Massachusetts student with a 220 might miss out on being a Semifinalist. If she lived 10 miles away in New Hampshire, she would qualify.
NMSC sets a target number of Semifinalists for a state. For example, California sees about 2,000 Semifinalists every year, Michigan 500, and Wyoming 25. In each state, NMSC determines the Selection Index that comes closest to matching its target number of Semifinalists. If 1,900 California students score 222 and higher and 2,050 score 221 or higher, then the Semifinalist cutoff would be 221 (this assumes that the target is exactly 2,000). Because score levels can get crowded, it is easy for cutoffs to move up or down a point even when there is minimal change in testing behavior or performance.
No Semifinalist cutoff can be lower than the national Commended level. Cutoffs for the District of Columbia and for U.S. students studying abroad are set at the highest state cutoff (typically New Jersey). The cutoff for students in U.S. territories and possessions falls at the Commended level each year. Boarding schools are grouped by region. The cutoff for a given region is the highest state cutoff within the region.
When are National Merit Semifinalists announced for the next class?
The Commended cutoff will become unofficially known by the end of April 2026. The lists of Semifinalists will not be distributed to high schools until the end of August 2026. With the exception of homeschoolers, students do not receive direct notification. NMSC asks that schools not share the results publicly until the end of the press embargo in mid-September, but schools are allowed to notify students privately before that date. NMSC does not send Commended Student letters to high schools until mid-September. Compass will keep students updated on developments as the dates approach.
Do state and national percentiles indicate whether a student will be a National Merit Semifinalist?
No! Approximately 1% of test takers qualify as Semifinalists each year, so it is tempting to view a 99th percentile score as indicating a high enough score — especially now that College Board provides students with percentiles by state. There are any number of flaws that rule out using percentiles as a quick way of determining National Merit status.
- Percentiles are based on section scores or total score, not Selection Index
- Percentiles are rounded. There is a large difference, from a National Merit perspective, between the top 0.51% and the top 1.49%
- Percentiles reveal the percentage of students at or below a certain score, but the “at” part is important when NMSC is determining cutoffs.
- The number of Semifinalists is based on the number of high school graduates in a state, not the number of PSAT takers. Percentiles are based on PSAT takers. States have widely varying participation rates.
- Most definitive of all: Percentiles do not reflect the current year’s scores! They are based on the prior 3 years’ performance. They are set even before the test is given. And if you are going to use prior history, why not use the record of prior National Merit cutoffs rather than the highly suspect percentiles?
Entry requirements for National Merit versus qualifying for National Merit.
Your PSAT/NMSQT score report tells you whether you meet the eligibility requirements for the NMSP. In general, juniors taking the October PSAT are eligible. If you have an asterisk next to your Selection Index, it means that your answers to the entrance questions have made you ineligible. Your answers are conveniently noted on your score report. If you think there is an error, you will also find instructions on how to contact NMSC. Meeting the eligibility requirements simply means that your score will be considered. Approximately 1.4 million students enter the competition each year. Only about 55,000 students will be named as Commended Students, Semifinalists, Finalists, or Scholars. See National Merit Explained for more information.
My son’s school announced today. RI is 219 with his friend confirmed at 218 not getting it. School has 10+ NMSFs, a new record, though not surprising as top public school in the state.
Great to get confirmation from Rhode Island. Congratulations to your son!
Mr. Sawyer,
If our school still does not notified us tomorrow, will we be able to find the official cutoffs anywhere?
Thanks
Frank,
Here, I hope. 😉
NMSC’s history on publishing cutoffs on the day of the release is mixed. You can check the Press Release page and see if they have updated the Guide to the Merit Program to the 2025 version.
The press release doesn’t really contain any useful info, IMO. I thought it would have more dada (total, number by state, etc.)
https://www.nationalmerit.org/s/1758/images/gid2/editor_documents/guide_to_the_national_merit_scholarship_program.pdf?gid=2&pgid=61&sessionid=201962f4-5ae9-4a13-9dab-a5434299483c&cc=1
thank you!
My daughter is at a 215 in KY and I checked with the school just this morning and they have not been notified or received anything.
Congratulations to your daughter! The mail sometimes gets delayed. They can contact National Merit to see if they can get online access to their list.
Hey! My school sent out an email this morning saying I qualified. 215 from SC. I’m like 90% sure it’s correct, although my school has been known to be disorganized/not know what they’re talking about. Thanks for all the updates, I’ve been checking this page a lot over the past week or so.
It’s correct. Congratulations!
Alabama 214, Alaska 215, Arizona 218, Arkansas 215, California 224, Colorado 219, Connecticut 223, Delaware 220, Florida 219, Georgia 220, Hawaii 219, Idaho 215, Illinois 222, Indiana 218, Iowa 214, Kansas 216, Kentucky 214, Louisiana 216, Maine 217, Maryland 224, Massachusetts 225, Michigan 220, Minnesota 219, Mississippi 213, Missouri 217, Montana 213, Nebraska 214, Nevada 214, New Hampshire 219, New Jersey 225, New Mexico 210, New York 223, North Carolina 220, North Dakota 210, Ohio 219, Oklahoma 212, Oregon 219, Pennsylvania 221, Rhode Island 219, South Carolina 215, South Dakota 211, Tennessee 219, Texas 222, Utah 213, Vermont 216, Virginia 224, Washington 224, West Virginia 210, Wisconsin 215, Wyoming 210, District of Columbia 225, U.S. boarding schools ***, U.S. territories 210, Outside the U.S. 225
Thank you, Alex!
PA cutoff is 221
Thank you, JK.
My daughter did not qualify in Georgia at 219. I don’t know the cutoff, but at least >219. I’m devastated but thankfully she was like “oh well” and went on about her day. I really thought at 219 (730/730), she would qualify. Probably came down to 1-2 questions. If only she had had her 760 in RW from her sophomore year, I’m sure she would have qualified in GA even with this year’s wacky scores. Looking forward to your postmortem . Thanks for keeping us all informed.
I’m sorry that your daughter missed the cutoff (220). She should still be proud of her score!
I look forward to your analysis . Very curious also how many states broke records and by how many points . As a parent, this is my first year learning about all this. We had the highest index our state had previously seen and a corporate scholarship potential so it is disappointing to have the state break records by 2 points . I am also curious how within the states the socioeconomic representation is…. Not sure if your analysis will touch on this or if anything is ever published about this ? Especially with the large states that have pockets of wealth
11 states set new records (12 if you exclude Maryland’s COVID year). All of those records were in high-scoring states. The forces that had kept changes muted in the 220+ states for 20 years suddenly let loose.
NMSC doesn’t report any socioeconomic details. When I’ve looked at the city by city data in the past, they confirm what we know about high scores generally — they correlate with parental education and income.
Hi Art,
Well the late Tuesday Ohio info on Reddit was accurate about the cut off being 219! Phew! My daughter did make it with her 220, as you correctly predicted quite some time ago. In fact, despite the crazy scoring in some of the states, your forecasted range was correct for 42 states, with your “likely” being exactly correct in 1/3 of them at 14.
Thanks again for your informative site and commentary!
Thank you, Chas!
Looks like Montana (a low-scoring state, historically) might have set a new record, too – 4pts up from last year and 3pts higher than your “Likely” (which you continue to nail with a high degree of accuracy across all states, by the way). I wonder if this reflects demographic shifts into Montana over the last 4 years. My kid scored 213, so we’re waiting to hear from the school (since NMSC sends names to media but not to, ya know, “the names” themselves). Thanks for your work here.
CoachW,
In a normal year, there is always a Montana, a small state with a surprise. What made this year so unusual was that surprises extended to the largest states and to the highest scoring states.
Demographic changes could be playing a role, although we do see small states have unusual years occasionally. Montana has fewer than 50 Semifinalists each year, so it doesn’t take much to shift the cutoff. A couple of high schools offering the PSAT for the first time. The presence of some math items that aligned well with Montana’s standards, etc. Some of it just boils down to luck. Those 50 students range from 213 to 228 (last year from 209 to 228), so at some of those indexes, there were very few students.
Or, it’s all about “Yellowstone.” 😉
You should hear soon. If you want your student to do something more productive than waiting, I posted the essay prompt (which never changes).
Art, one thing that’s become apparent over the past two years is that you serve as an important distributor of information about this entire process. Any Google search in the past two weeks quickly led right to this blog. Other blogs use you as their yardstick too.
Given how difficult it is to get information passed through the media, I am wondering if you’ve ever inquired about getting a media credential from NMSC based on this blog. so that you can also receive yhe press releases. I am sure you would reach a wide audience, and it would serve a great public good. There would be concerns about preferntial treatment towards a consultant, but I suspect there is a way through that.
As an example of what is NOT working: NMSC gave me the names of 3 media outlets in my state that they release information to. I had already written two of these – neither has ever released any news about the NMS process. They simply don’t understand it and are not interested.
Matt,
Thank you for the kind words. I suppose that I could ask you for a recommendation letter to NMSC.
A media credential would take away one of the things that I value — the ability to talk openly about the entire process. I don’t want an NDA, I want NMSC to disclose more. Instead, it went in the other direction this year and locked things down even harder. I think the current notification process is unnecessarily cruel. Let’s make students wait 11 months and then dribble out notifications in a haphazard manner. The process that worked 50 years ago needs to be updated. What college still uses the “fat envelope in US Mail” style of admission notification? It’s especially true because, as you point out, media organizations are no longer in a position to carry part of the burden.
I’m a big supporter of National Merit, and NMSC does an amazing job on so many things. It’s a wonderful organization that I want to see thrive. The Semifinalist process needs to be improved.
Any news on NC besides a 220 cut off? My son school has heard and received nothing and multiple other posters on Reddit saying the same. Also can’t find any press releases.
Linda,
That’s not unusual. The notification process is…dated. Now that the results have been released, you should be able to call NMSC to get your son’s status confirmed. He’ll still need the letter from the school within login information to the OSA (Online Scholarship Application), but there is really no rush. Other than the essay, the application will take an hour (if he types really slowly) to fill out. The essay prompt is the same that NM always uses, so he can get started on that, too. It’s so general that one of his college essays can be quickly tailored.
To help the reviewers get to know you, describe an experience you have had, a person who has influenced you, or an obstacle you have overcome. Explain why this is meaningful to you. Use your own words and limit your response to the space below.
I think students find that they can fit about 600 words. Good luck with Finalist!
My daughter is at a 228 in NJ and I have not been notified any from school yet. Should I contact the school?
Yes, I would start there, because the letter from the school has the login information needed for the next stage. Check out the post that should be right above yours for the essay topic.
Glad Maryland is not the crazy 226!
Yes, the 225s were crazy enough!
Mr. Sawyer,
What is a high enough confirming score? Here are the tests I have taken:
ACT #1:
35E 31R 32M 33S (33 composite)
ACT #2:
34E 35R 32M 28 S (32 composite)
Test 2 would result in a high confirming score, however, it is not my highest composite score, and I believe they do not superscore (my superscore is a 34 if that matters). Would they take Test 2 or Test 1? Do my scores look high enough to advance to finalist?
Thanks!
Frank,
Short answer: Submit test 2 and you are good to go!
Long answer:
NMSC doesn’t use your composite school when evaluating your standing for Finalist or Scholar. The confirming score requirement is strictly pass/fail, and you pass. Your combined E+R is 69 and that concords to a 740 RW. Your 32M would be a 730 M. That gives you an SAT Selection Index of 221, and you should be good with 210 or higher (NMSC generally sets things at the Commended level). I know it seems odd to send your “lower” score, but science is completely ignored. No superscoring with National Merit.
Hi Art,
I just wanted to thank you for your incredible work. I’ve left several messages for this entire process, and you were always there to reply in a timely manner. The effort that you put in, cycle after cycle, is really admirable. Please keep being an incredible resource!
Thank you, Janet! Every year I hit a lull in June/July where I wonder whether I’ll have the energy for Aug/Sep. And then each year I get excited to help.
Art,
This might be a bit early, but given the way that things ultimately unfolded this year, what do you think is going to happen with next year’s national merit competition? Cutoffs, scaling, notification process, etc.
Veron,
I think the most important takeaway from this year is that high-scoring states are no longer immune from the disruption seen in the past at the Commended+ range. Has College Board lost hold of the scale or is this just a fluke from a bad test date? I don’t think we can know definitively, but either way we now know to expect the unexpected.
NMSC had more than its share of fumbles this year, so maybe it will get them thinking about modifications in the future. I don’t expect those changes to happen for the class of 2027. The glass half full view is that at least we know how the process works!
Magnet school in Texas just announced and said the cutoff was 223 this year for Texas.
Austin,
My guess is that they didn’t have any students at 222 and assumed the cutoff was 223. The Texas cutoff has been confirmed as 222 by National Merit. Thank you!
Thanks for posting the state data link above. Is there anyway to find out the district or school data for a state? I am just curious as I am trying to understand the TN data. This year the cut off for TN jumped 2 points to 219. I know this was possible since it has happened before but not likely (I have followed your projections closely). Our district is a very high performing district. When you look at last year’s data, the cut off of TN was 217 that resulted in 319 semifinalists statewide of those 88 were from our district (27.9%). This year even though the cut off was raised to 219, I’d expect to see our district perform similar to last year. The state number for semifinalists was 306 (at the 219 cut off so fewer than last year which would be expected); however; our district only had 60 semifinalist (down to 19.6% of the state semifinalists). This tells me either a lot of students improved tremendously (outside of our district), maybe a school was added that skewed the numbers, perhaps our students did not improve proportionally with the state improvement, or maybe we just have a lot of students that scored at the 218 index? I like for the math to make sense, but I cannot get it to so I’d love to know what happened. Yes my daughter scored 218 and did not make the cut. So is more data available. Just curious. Thanks for all the information you provide.
Amy,
National Merit does not provide any information below the state level. College Board makes some school and district data available, but only to the school and districts. And District X doesn’t have access to District Y.
The odd thing about this year is that the 2-point rise was what we would “expect” from Tennessee. Twenty-five of fifty states went up by exactly 2 points, and thirty-two went up by 2 or more points. The extent of the increase makes me believe that the change is attributable more to College Board than anything at the student level. Tests are not always scaled perfectly, and this year’s PSAT is evidence of that.
So why did the number of Semifinalists in your district go down? You’ve outlined the leading theories. We sometimes see that level of shift at top schools that might have do – 80 NMSFs. We are, after all, only talking about a shift in 28 students. I don’t know if you’ve gone back further and seen how consistent the NMSF numbers are for your district. In the “old days” of paper testing, I would have tried to investigate whether different forms of the PSAT performed differently. We saw, at times, where the Wed test produced highly dissimilar results to the Saturday test (and not simply due to differing pools). The digital PSAT is scaled such that all of that information is invisible to us. The questions used, the parameters of those questions, the score distributions, etc. are all hidden away. Did your district’s students take a test that produced an anomalous result versus the majority of other districts? We saw that arise sometimes on the paper test.
My daughter’s counselor said school still did not recieved any yet and she thinks it will be later in the month! But I see so many other schools posted their semi-finalists already. Does it come by email? or package to school?- NJ
JK,
The information comes via snail mail. In the past, NMSC mailed everything at once — a school’s list and a larger master list. This year NMSC only mailed the basic list and told schools that everything else would come later. The counselor should be able to call NMSC and usher things along if they are willing to do that. You can call NMSC to confirm that your daughter qualified. If she did, then really all you need to do is have your daughter start on the essay (prompt is in our NM FAQ), make sure that she has the confirming SAT/ACT score, and remind the school that they’ll need to follow up. The school’s most important role is getting your daughter the login information and then submitting her completed application along with a recommendation. That’s not until October. NMSC wants students to participate and will make it happen. It’s just not great about making it happen all at once.
I’m sure she is qualified since she got a perfect score, 1520. Thank you for your info
Mr. Sawyer, what is the percentage of PSAT test takers that qualified as Commended from the Class of 2026?
Petra,
Almost 41,000 qualified as Commended this year from a pool of 1,445,000 test takers. That’s about 2.8%.
Mr. Sawyer,
what is the expected cutoff for finalist? I am in GA and my SAT NMSC index will be 223.
Thanks
AG
AG,
The confirming score cutoff is set nationally rather than by state. In the past, the cutoff has been at the Commended level, so I expect 210 to be sufficient. 223 certainly is!
Thank you. any other insights into what is required to make it to the 15000 finalist list? I am assuming SAT NMSC Index is just 1 factor. If there is anything else I can focus on my application, then please let me know. Thanks again!
AG,
For good or bad, much of it is out of your hands at this point. Your grades definitely matter! You’ll need a recommendation from the school (they are usually happy to do it). And your own essay, of course, although I believe that’s used more at the scholarship stage than the Finalist stage. Handle those things and you’re likely to be a Finalist.
Hi Art,
Thank you for the great write-up and analysis and keeping us anxious parents/students posted through the entire process. As we keep moving on with this process with our current senior, we will keep monitoring your blog and be back in a year with our current sophomore going through this again!
Ely,
Glad that I can help. I look forward to having you as a returning visitor!
Art,
Have you ever seen a student make NMSF when they were not on the original press release? Our school announced a student who wasn’t on the National Merit list for the state originally. Is there an appeal process for NMSF or a lower cutoff for students with testing accommodations? Just seems odd…
Thanks for all you do!
It’s not that uncommon. It definitely does not represent a different standard — the student must meet the same cutoff. NMSC deals with tens of thousands of students, many of whom are on the move — either geographically or between class years — so things can fall through the cracks. Sometimes students list the wrong thing such as class year on the registration form, and no one catches the mistake until it’s too late to get on the printed list. [I’ll bet that there are more than a few students dealing with that situation right now!] Some alternate entry students can also lag behind.
I don’t think it’s any of those things, but thank you for super quick response!! I don’t know how you do it!