Compass projects lower qualifying scores for the Class of 2027
The junior year PSAT is also the NMSQT — the National Merit Scholarship Qualifying Test. Each year, National Merit recognizes the top 57,000 test takers. In order to be included in that group, students need to be among the top 4% of the 1.4 million students who take the PSAT. Of that elite group, approximately 17,000 are recognized as Semifinalists for having the highest scores within their states. Semifinalists have the opportunity to continue in the program to become Finalists and, potentially, scholarship recipients. The remaining 40,000 students are recognized as Commended Students. More information can be found in our National Merit Explained post.
For the Class of 2027, the exact scores needed to qualify (“cutoffs”) will not be released until September 2026 (the Commended cutoff is likely to leak in April). In order to give students context for their test results, Compass has analyzed the scores from the October 2025 to produce estimates for the national Commended cutoff and the individual state cutoffs. We predict that the majority of state cutoffs will decline this year.
National Merit uses the Selection Index (SI), found on the PSAT score report, to rank students. The Selection Index can be calculated by doubling the Reading & Writing score (RW), adding the Math score (M), and dividing that sum by 10. For example, a student with a 720 RW and 700 M score has a Selection Index of 214 — (720 x 2 + 700)/10. The weighting of the index means that not all students with a 1420 Total Score have the same SI. A student with a 700 RW and 720 M has a Selection Index of 212. The highest SI a student can receive is 228 (760 RW and 760 M). Last year, the Commended cutoff was 210, and Semifinalist cutoffs ranged from 210 to 225 depending on the competitiveness of the state.
Why do we foresee lower cutoff scores?
College Board does not release any information about the distribution of Selection Indexes, but it does produce summaries of broad score ranges. The number of students in the 1400 – 1520 Total Score range has proved to be an excellent indicator of the Commended cutoff. The Class of 2027 saw 16% fewer top scores than did last year’s class. The 52,400 students at 1400 and above is closer to what we saw two years ago with the Class of 2025 and, going back further, similar to the results for the Classes of 2017 and 2021.
Most of the students who will qualify for National Merit recognition fall in the 1400 – 1520 band (or just outside it). With approximately 10,000 fewer students in the top band of scores this year, we expect the Commended level to drop to 208 or 209. The chart below shows the historical relationship between high scores and the Commended cutoff.
Explaining why last year’s cutoffs reached record levels
After examining this year’s numbers, we also have a better understanding of why Semifinalist cutoffs jumped to such extreme levels last year, and why it should not happen again. The 2024 PSAT saw an unprecedented 18% jump in the number of high Reading & Writing scores (700-760). The weighting of RW in the Selection Index magnified the impact of that change. The table below shows scores for the last three years and how results have fluctuated.
On the 2025 PSAT, the number of high RW scores dropped by 27%. In fact, the RW count for this year is even lower than it was two years ago. The decline in RW scores could even produce Selection Indexes lower than those in the Class of 2025 — at least in some states. The Commended cutoff may provide additional insight in the spring.
The ratio of 700+ M scores to 700+ RW scores reveals just how bizarre last year’s spike was. Traditionally, Math scores have higher distributions at the extremes. There are more very high Math scores on the PSAT and SAT, and there are more very low Math scores.
On the October 2024 PSAT, though, almost as many students scored 700-760 on RW as did on Math. The ratio of high Math scores to high RW scores was 1.02. This helps explain why some cutoffs went as high as 224 and 225 for the first time ever. Students achieved 750 and 760 RW scores in record numbers. In most years, there would be more students scoring 730 RW and 760 M (222 SI), for example, than scoring 760 RW and 730 M (225 SI). That was not true in the the Class of 2025, where there was a more equal distribution. It appears that scores for the Class of 2027 have returned to the traditional Math-heavy distribution. The ratio of high Math scores to high RW scores was 1.33 on the 2025 PSAT/NMSQT. For this reason, we don’t believe we will see a repeat of the 224 and 225 cutoffs seen last year.
Was last year a fluke, shift, or a trend?
The results from the Class of 2027 have answered one of the nagging questions from last year: Were the high cutoffs a fluke, shift, or trend? The answer appears to be fluke. More accurately, results could be labeled an error in test construction and scaling. There is no evidence that the Class of 2026 possessed special test-taking skills. As sophomores, that class performed in line with expectations on the 2023 PSAT. There is no evidence that the Class of 2027 has diminished skills. As sophomores, the class saw the same inflated scores as did the juniors on the 2024 PSAT. The best explanation is that College Board lost control of the scale. College Board dramatically shortened the PSAT when it switched from paper to digital. On the paper test, the Reading and Writing sections had 91 questions, and students were given 95 minutes. The RW on the digital PSAT is truncated to 54 questions over 64 minutes. And only 50 of the questions count toward a student’s score! A shorter exam means a less reliable exam. We saw the occasional wild ride on the paper PSAT, but the rides may get wilder and more frequent on the digital PSAT.
We anticipate the majority of state Semifinalist cutoffs to decline for the Class of 2027. Knowing this overall trend, however, doesn’t tell us which states will be in that majority or how much lower scores will go. The table below provides a Most Likely cutoff score, but the more useful information is the Estimated Range. Almost all cutoffs should fall within that range.
State | Class of 2027 (Most Likely) | Class of 2027 (Est. Range) | Class of 2026 (Actual) | Class of 2025 (Actual) | Class of 2024 (Actual) | Avg NMSFs |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alabama | 213 | 210 - 216 | 214 | 212 | 210 | 250 |
| Alaska | 214 | 210 - 216 | 215 | 214 | 209 | 35 |
| Arizona | 218 | 215 - 220 | 218 | 217 | 216 | 398 |
| Arkansas | 213 | 210 - 216 | 215 | 213 | 210 | 143 |
| California | 223 | 220 - 224 | 224 | 221 | 221 | 2,115 |
| Colorado | 218 | 216 - 221 | 219 | 218 | 216 | 286 |
| Connecticut | 222 | 220 - 223 | 223 | 221 | 221 | 175 |
| Delaware | 219 | 218 - 221 | 220 | 219 | 219 | 44 |
| Florida | 217 | 216 - 220 | 219 | 217 | 216 | 999 |
| Georgia | 219 | 217 - 221 | 220 | 218 | 217 | 602 |
| Hawaii | 218 | 215 - 220 | 219 | 217 | 217 | 62 |
| Idaho | 214 | 211 - 217 | 215 | 213 | 211 | 96 |
| Illinois | 220 | 218 - 222 | 222 | 220 | 219 | 704 |
| Indiana | 217 | 214 - 219 | 218 | 217 | 216 | 313 |
| Iowa | 213 | 211 - 216 | 214 | 212 | 210 | 145 |
| Kansas | 216 | 213 - 219 | 216 | 215 | 214 | 144 |
| Kentucky | 214 | 211 - 217 | 214 | 213 | 211 | 201 |
| Louisiana | 215 | 212 - 218 | 216 | 214 | 214 | 222 |
| Maine | 215 | 212 - 217 | 217 | 214 | 213 | 55 |
| Maryland | 223 | 221 - 225 | 224 | 222 | 221 | 308 |
| Massachusetts | 223 | 221 - 225 | 225 | 223 | 222 | 318 |
| Michigan | 219 | 216 - 220 | 220 | 218 | 217 | 485 |
| Minnesota | 218 | 216 - 220 | 219 | 217 | 216 | 279 |
| Mississippi | 213 | 210 - 215 | 213 | 212 | 209 | 155 |
| Missouri | 216 | 213 - 218 | 217 | 215 | 214 | 289 |
| Montana | 211 | 208 - 214 | 213 | 209 | 209 | 47 |
| Nebraska | 213 | 210 - 216 | 214 | 211 | 210 | 105 |
| Nevada | 214 | 211 - 217 | 214 | 214 | 211 | 168 |
| New Hampshire | 217 | 214 - 219 | 219 | 217 | 215 | 60 |
| New Jersey | 223 | 222 - 225 | 225 | 223 | 223 | 451 |
| New Mexico | 211 | 208 - 214 | 210 | 211 | 207 | 104 |
| New York | 221 | 219 - 223 | 223 | 220 | 220 | 1,012 |
| North Carolina | 219 | 216 - 221 | 220 | 218 | 217 | 510 |
| North Dakota | 210 | 207 - 212 | 210 | 210 | 207 | 30 |
| Ohio | 218 | 215 - 220 | 219 | 217 | 216 | 538 |
| Oklahoma | 212 | 208 - 214 | 212 | 211 | 208 | 204 |
| Oregon | 218 | 215 - 220 | 219 | 216 | 216 | 188 |
| Pennsylvania | 220 | 217 - 222 | 221 | 219 | 219 | 596 |
| Rhode Island | 217 | 214 - 220 | 219 | 217 | 215 | 47 |
| South Carolina | 214 | 210 - 217 | 215 | 214 | 209 | 236 |
| South Dakota | 210 | 207 - 213 | 211 | 208 | 209 | 42 |
| Tennessee | 218 | 215 - 219 | 219 | 217 | 217 | 319 |
| Texas | 221 | 218 - 222 | 222 | 219 | 219 | 1,623 |
| Utah | 212 | 210 - 216 | 213 | 211 | 209 | 196 |
| Vermont | 215 | 211 - 217 | 216 | 215 | 212 | 28 |
| Virginia | 222 | 220 - 224 | 224 | 222 | 219 | 437 |
| Washington | 222 | 220 - 224 | 224 | 222 | 220 | 348 |
| West Virginia | 209 | 207 - 212 | 210 | 209 | 207 | 64 |
| Wisconsin | 214 | 213 - 217 | 215 | 214 | 213 | 292 |
| Wyoming | 209 | 207 - 212 | 210 | 209 | 207 | 24 |
| District of Columbia | 223 | 222 - 225 | 225 | 223 | 223 | 36 |
| Territories | 209 | 207 - 211 | 210 | 208 | 207 | 39 |
| Outside US | 223 | 222 - 225 | 225 | 223 | 223 | 86 |
| Commended | 209 | 207 - 210 | 210 | 208 | 207 |
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.
We estimate that the Semifinalist cutoffs will range from 209 to 223. Semifinalists are allocated by state, and cutoffs are calculated by state. If Florida is allocated 1,000 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. Last year, 1,008 students scored at or above the cutoff of 219. A cutoff of 220 would have produced too few Semifinalists. A cutoff of 218 would have gone over the allocation. 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.
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.
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.
Change is always the theme
Over the last two decades, at least half of the state cutoffs have changed each year. In some years, as many as 49 states saw ups or downs, usually because of questionable test forms. In addition to last year’s exam, the PSATs from 2011 (Class of 2013), 2016 (Class of 2018), and 2019 stand out as problematic. The anomalous 2019 results could be traced back to a particularly mis-scaled form, which I wrote about at the time. The Class of 2014 also saw significant changes, but those were more of a bounce-back from the previous year. The question for the Class of 2027 is how much of a bounce-back will be seen this year.
Cutoffs are particularly bumpy in states with smaller pools of test takers and National Merit Semifinalists. Over the last dozen years, cutoffs in the 12 largest states have remain unchanged 36% of the time, while the cutoffs in the smallest states have remain unchanged only 1 time out of every 5. No large state’s cutoff has jumped by more than 3 points in a year, whereas 6-point changes have occurred in the pool of smaller states.
When are National Merit Semifinalists announced?
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 principal (Texas school) got a letter saying no students received semifinalist from our school. There is a student with a 220 index, is there any possible chance of a mistake or is Texas just guaranteed at least 221?
Martin,
I don’t have confirmation on Texas yet, but I have received reports and seen reports on Reddit that the cutoff moved to 222. I’m trying to nail this down ASAP.
Does 221 in Texas qualify?
Paige,
I’m trying to nail this down. I have received reports and seen reports on Reddit that the cutoff is 222 this year. Don’t abandon hope just yet!
I have seen posts on reddit about a glitch. How true is this news?
True. There have been some anomalies with the lists. That’s why I’ve triple-checked Florida (confirmed) and am awaiting a triple-check in Texas.
What kind of anomalies?
Students listed for the wrong schools, for example.
With so many states slanting higher in the predicted ranges, and the commended sitting at 210, what can we infer from the states we haven’t heard much about? Just curious if most cutoffs bumped up., (With several considerably higher) would that have also changed the commended to a higher score as well? Sitting at a 216 in SC, biting my nails & hoping we still have a shot.
SC,
If the numbers coming out of CA, TX, FL, and IL hold up (I’m confident in FL), then the year is looking much more like the class years of 2018 – 2020. In those 3 years, SC had cutoffs of 215, 216, and 217. So right on the bubble!
Hi Art,
Just letting you know that I made semifinalist with a 212 in Oklahoma. I believe it is the cutoff for anyone in Oklahoma that is wondering.
Congratulations! Thank you for sharing. Did you hear of a 211 student not qualifying or receive word from your school on the cutoff?
Yes I heard that a 211 student did not qualify
Thank you!
I’m also another Oklahoma student who got a 212. If this is true, this is probably the best news I’ve received all year. Congrats Raj!!
How does a student come to know if he made the cut – through the school or through personal snail mail? Thanks!
Students receive notification from schools. Schools receive notification via snail mail. Only homeschoolers get letters at home, because school = home. Good luck!
Hi. So has it been confirmed that California is higher than 222 this year?
Multiple reports. I’m not calling it confirmed just yet.
Are the reports not reliable or what is keeping you from saying confirmed? When will the official cutoffs come out?
Roy,
We’ve had some of the biggest states reporting very high results, so I am being cautious about saying what is confirmed. NMSC has also had some errors in its school lists, although those don’t *appear* to have impacted the scores being reported.
The press release date is September 10th. That’s when schools and press organizations are allowed to share student names publicly. Schools can share the information with students privately before that date. Sometimes NMSC releases the cutoffs on that date, sometimes it doesn’t.
I am in Texas with a 220. Will the 222 be a record high? Insane to think that TX may possibly face a 3 point increase this year.
Yes, it feels like College Board has some explaining to do if scores truly jumped this much. Large jumps usually mean poor PSAT scaling at the high end.
So is a 220 completely ruled out from SF? I received a 220 and I’m on edge looking all over Reddit.
Yes, that is correct.
So is 220 completely ruled out? I received a 220 and I’m on edge looking all over Reddit.
I’m trying to get a definitive answer on Friday, but all of my information points to a 222 cutoff.
My son received a 220 in Texas, which also included a perfect math score. The news about a 222 cutoff is pretty disheartening.
I’m sorry to be the bearer of bad news, Amy.
If the Hawaii comes from Reddit, the Reddit post said 218 did NOT qualify.
Thank you, George! Long day. Fixed.
So for anyone in Texas, is there no hope with a 220 Index? Thank you for answering!
Ashton,
I’m trying to get a definitive answer on Friday, but all of my information points to a 222 cutoff.
I am 222 for California. 223 will really really disappointing!!!! Hopefully its not confirmed like you said. Please provide hope if any. Next 5 days will be tough!!
Ira,
I don’t like being wrong, but this is an example of where I wouldn’t mind it. I’ve received a report on 222 not qualifying and there have been 1 or 2 on Reddit.
Do you think that because of the glitches it could still be possible for someone with a 221 in Texas to get semi?
I’ve seen enough evidence to feel confident in the 222, but nothing is official until NMSC says it is official.
I know the official day is the 10th, but is it taking longer for the cutoff information to come out as compared to previous years? I feel like this wait is excruciating!
The time period was compressed this year, and NMSC seems to be taking added steps to keep things under wraps. Hold on just a little longer!
Reddit post, Virginia cutoff >222
Thank you, Jackson!
Anything that you are hearing about Georgia?
Absolutely nothing, I’m afraid.
Hi Art,
Have you received any information about the cutoff from Missouri? My kid has NMI of 218. With all states NMI exceeding 2 points, I am deeply concerned.
Kand,
It’s a crazy year. I just hope NMSC releases cutoffs on 9/10, because if it depends on schools notifying students right away, so folks will be left hanging.
Any word for a 223 in CA other than the cutoff is more than 222? Could the cutoff actually have risen to 224 in CA?
Maria,
All I know so far is that a student with 224 did qualify and multiple students with 222 did not. So we don’t yet know if the cutoff is 223 or 224.
Hi Art, this is nail-biting! Any news on Oregon? These record high scores being reported all over is stress inducing! Plus the ‘errors’ reported. ai ai ai. seems more dramatic this year than the last.
Ely,
More dramatic than just about any year. Good luck! I’ll pass along Oregon information as I get it.
Hi Art, just saw your update: OR >= 219 and <= 221 = so presumably 219 or 220? is this verified or speculation as we have not heard anything from our principal. thank you for helping.
Ely,
219/220/221
I have a credible report from a student qualifying at 221 with a friend not qualifying at 218. Some schools wait until the public release date (9/10 this year), even though private notifications are technically allowed.
Hi! Any thoughts on Wisconsin with a 221? Thank you.
Jenna,
Sorry to leave you hanging for a day. Your score is well above anything WI has seen as a cutoff. You should be a Semifinalist. Congratulations!
Hi! Any thoughts on Wisconsin with a 221? Thank you.
Jenna,
I recently said that I am taking myself out of the prediction game for this year because of how unusual the results are. But…WI would need to break its own record by 5 points for you not to qualify. We’ve yet to see anything that crazy.
A post on Reddit is suggesting that someone with a 217 in Missouri qualified. Have you heard anything from your sources confirming that? Thank you!
I have not.
I don’t know the cutoff but 215 got it in Alabama
Congratulations, Nick, and thank you for letting us know!
Since there’s been glitches, do you think there’s still a chance a 221 could get semi in texas?
Alex,
I’ve now received confirmation from multiple sources, so I think 222 is for real this year. If you get a letter next week, I will gladly eat my words!
Hi Art
I see that the likely score for WA is 1 point lower than in 2024, while all other states are either increasing or staying the same. What explains this difference? Thank you!
Teresa,
The most likely estimates are created based on historical and national data, because College Board does not release state data (or information about the very highest scores). I went with 221 for WA because that’s what the data told me based on the Commended level of 210. As we start getting actual results, we can pretty much throw the estimates out the door. As I’m sure you know, we’ve been seeing states trend upward. I don’t yet have information from WA.
Any news on California? I’ve accepted my defeat as a 222. Thank you, Art.
No definitive news on the ultimate cutoff, but >222 appears to be correct. Presumably the cutoff is 223 (I suppose we can’t rule out 224 in a crazy year!).
Any info on Michigan? I’m sitting at 219 and sweating!
You are in the same boat as another commenter. We are all waiting!