ACT® Test Dates 2026
Read time: 4 min · Last updated: June 21, 2026
When is the ACT® in 2026-27?
These are the official test dates per the ACT®'s website. If you're considering taking the ACT®, register right now because test centers fill up fast.
| Test Date | Reg. Deadline | Late Deadline | Photo/Standby Deadline | Score Release |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| June 13, 2026 | May 8 | May 29 | June 8 | June 23 |
| July 11, 2026* | June 5 | June 24 | July 6 | July 21 |
| September 19, 2026 | August 14 | September 1 | September 14 | October 6 |
| October 17, 2026 | September 11 | September 29 | October 12 | October 27 |
| December 12, 2026 | November 6 | November 29 | December 7 | December 22 |
| February 27, 2027 | January 22 | February 9 | February 22 | March 16 |
| April 10, 2027 | March 5 | March 23 | April 5 | April 20 |
| June 12, 2027 | May 7 | May 25 | June 7 | June 22 |
| July 10, 2027 | June 4 | June 22 | July 5 | July 20 |
*No test centers in New York for July dates. July testing arrives for NY learners starting 2027.
When is the ACT® 27-28?
Here are the projected 2027–28 dates with the deadlines worked back from the test date. They're good for the planning-ahead sophomore parent, but they are subject to change until the ACT® publishes them officially.
| PROJECTED 2027–28 | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Test Date | Reg. Deadline | Late Deadline | Photo/Standby Deadline | Score Release |
| September 11, 2027 | August 6 | August 24 | September 6 | September 25 |
| October 16, 2027 | September 10 | September 28 | October 11 | October 30 |
| December 11, 2027 | November 5 | November 28 | December 6 | December 21 |
| February 26, 2028 | January 21 | February 8 | February 21 | March 15 |
| April 8, 2028 | March 3 | March 21 | April 3 | April 18 |
| June 10, 2028 | May 5 | May 23 | June 5 | June 20 |
| July 15, 2028 | June 9 | June 27 | July 10 | July 25 |
Source: ACT National Test Dates. Deadlines are 11:59pm Central.
Rule of thumb: the regular deadline closes ~5 weeks before the test date. The late deadline closes 2 weeks before.
Fees
These figures are from ACT.org and are freshly raised. Many stale articles still cite the old numbers.
- Base ACT® (English/Math/Reading): $70.00 (was $68)
- Science add-on: $5 → EMR+Science $75
- Writing add-on: $25 → EMR+Writing $95; EMR+Science+Writing $100
- Late registration: $42
- Standby testing: $75 (refunded if denied admission)
- Change Fee (test date, form, or center): $49
- Score reports to 5th/6th colleges: $20; additional reports $20
- My Answer Key (TIR): $36 before test / $44 after
All fees nonrefundable unless noted. Source: ACT Fees. If cost is a barrier, families who qualify can sidestep these charges entirely — here's how ACT fee waivers work.
When should your son or daughter take the ACT®?
Most students should take the ACT® in the spring of their junior year. At that point, most students have taken the requisite courses to succeed on the ACT®. See my article on when to take the ACT®. The flip side of that question is prep, not the sitting itself — if you're wondering when your child should start ACT® prep, that's a separate timeline worth planning backward from the test date.
That being said, many students wait until senior year to take the ACT® or SAT®. In that case, your son or daughter needs to know when the application deadlines are.
Early Action or Early Decision
Scores need to be in hand by mid-October at the latest. September of senior year is the safe bet; October is the absolute last call. Georgetown and Stanford both publicly cap early applicants at the Sept/Oct dates (PrepScholar). December rarely arrives in time for ED.
Regular Decision
Sept, Oct, and Dec can all work. December is usually the last realistic sitting before January RD deadlines.
Always book a primary date with a retake date behind it. Two sittings before your deadline beats one. Research by the ACT® shows that most students increase their score with multiple test dates. It also helps take the psychological stress off the testing situation if students know they have a back up. Small but real.
Score timing: allow about 2–3 weeks for multiple-choice scores. ACT® now posts on a rolling basis from the initial release date — the old "midnight Central" drop is gone. Online testing returns scores roughly 5 days sooner than paper, which can be helpful if timing is an issue. See my article on when to expect ACT® Scores.
The UC system (which is test blind for now, but that may change) accepts applications between Oct 1 - Dec 1.
If you have the luxury of choosing rather than racing a deadline, the season itself matters too — I break down the tradeoffs in the best time of year to take the ACT®.
Mistakes to Avoid when Registering
If your child makes any of these mistakes when registering, it can throw off the whole planning timeline. If you've never done it before, walk through how to register for the ACT® step by step first.
You need to upload a photo before taking the test
If you miss the photo deadline (~5 days before test day), your registration is auto-cancelled, you're not admitted, and the fee is NOT refunded. You can't even print your ticket without the photo. Most parents have no idea this deadline exists separately from registration. ACT®'s own rejection reasons: photo too dark/light, busy background, face too small/close, blurry, obscured by hair. Don't scan an ID photo (fails quality). Source: Photo Submission Requirements.
Test centers fill up fast
The single biggest registration frustration. In high-demand metros centers fill within 30 minutes of registration opening. Many families in the Bay area register in Nevada, Oregon, Arizona, even Texas. Some international students fly to different countries.
Practical takeaways: create your MyACT account before registration opens; have the photo ready; register the moment it opens; consider registering for 2–3 dates.
One more thing to settle before test day: whether your child tests on a center-provided device or their own. The ACT®'s bring-your-own-device (BYOD) option has its own setup requirements, and sorting it out early avoids a morning-of scramble.
Arranged Testing
If there's no test center nearby, don't let that be an excuse for not taking the test - or taking it multiple times. For US test-takers (including Puerto Rico) if there's no test center within 75 miles of a student's home, the ACT® will arrange testing closer. No center within range → "Arranged Testing." Source: Test Center Locator.
Rare-but-real catastrophes
The big planning snafu is when you don't plan for something to happen, and it happens. These edge cases are rare. But they do occur from time to time, which is part of the reason why I always encourage students to register for 2-3 dates.
Documented cases of ACT® answer sheets going missing in transit (46 students in NJ, 53 on Long Island in 2016 forced full retakes). Pandemic-era day-of site closures with kids turned away from locked buildings. Sources: CBS NY, WCCO.
When I was teaching the ACT®/SAT® in Turkey, one time the truck carrying the answer keys just caught on fire. So the students couldn't take the test.
Again, these edge cases are rare. With the shift to digital ACT®, the new problems will supplant the old ones. Instead of missing answer keys, we have test day equipment malfunctions. When the day finally comes, what's in your control is the prep — here's what to do the night before and morning of the ACT®.