PreACT / PreACT Secure Time-Table: Complete Guide for Students, Parents & Schools
A complete, WordPress-ready guide to PreACT and PreACT Secure testing windows, section timing, score formulas, pacing strategy, school-day administration, and smart preparation.
Important publishing note: PreACT dates are school, district, and state dependent. This guide uses the latest public ACT 2026–2027 windows, but families should always confirm the exact test day, start time, accommodations plan, and Science requirement with the school counselor or test coordinator.
Table of Contents
What Is the PreACT?
The PreACT is an ACT-aligned practice assessment designed to help students understand their readiness for the ACT, identify academic strengths, see improvement areas, and begin college and career planning earlier in high school. It is not a national Saturday registration test like the ACT. Instead, it is ordered and administered by schools, districts, states, educational agencies, and similar organizations.
The PreACT family is useful because it gives students a lower-pressure testing experience before the official ACT. Students get practice with ACT-style English, math, reading, and science questions, while schools receive reporting that can support course placement, advising, intervention, and readiness planning.
Simple definition: PreACT is the rehearsal. ACT is the official college-admission test. PreACT Secure is the more controlled, district/state-style version of the rehearsal.
Why Students Take PreACT
Students take PreACT to answer five practical questions: Am I on track for college readiness? Which ACT section needs the most attention? What score range might I reach on the ACT later? Which courses should I take next year? Which careers or academic paths match my interests?
Early ACT benchmark signal
PreACT helps students see whether their current skills are moving toward ACT readiness in English, math, reading, and science.
ACT-style test experience
The test builds comfort with timed multiple-choice sections, digital tools, directions, pacing pressure, and score reporting.
Course and career planning
Reports can help students, parents, and counselors discuss course selection, college pathways, and future ACT preparation.
PreACT vs PreACT Secure: What Is the Difference?
The names sound similar, but the administration model is different. PreACT is the flexible school-ordered practice assessment. PreACT Secure is a secure online assessment used mainly by states and districts for more controlled administration. Both are ACT-aligned, but PreACT Secure has stricter testing conditions and secure item handling.
| Feature | PreACT | PreACT Secure | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|---|
| Typical grade level | Most appropriate for grade 9 or 10 | Most appropriate for grade 10 | Both help students prepare before the official ACT, usually before grade 11 or senior-year testing. |
| Who orders it? | Schools, districts, educational agencies, and similar customers | States and districts | Students generally do not register individually. Schools coordinate access. |
| Testing mode | Online or paper/pencil | Online only, with limited paper accommodations | Students should practice in the same mode their school uses when possible. |
| Testing window | Flexible school-selected window | Specific secure fall/spring windows | PreACT is more flexible. PreACT Secure follows controlled district/state events. |
| Score range | 1–35 | 1–35 | Scores align to the ACT scale but are capped below the full ACT maximum of 36. |
| Science | Optional by school/district starting fall 2026 | Optional by school/district starting spring 2026 | Science is not an individual student choice. Your school decides the configuration. |
Related assessments: PreACT 8/9 is most appropriate for grades 8–9 and is capped at 30. PreACT 9 Secure is most appropriate for grade 9 and is capped at 32. This page focuses on PreACT and PreACT Secure but includes related dates where they affect school planning.
PreACT / PreACT Secure Timetable for 2026–2027
The biggest planning difference is that PreACT uses a broad flexible testing window, while PreACT Secure uses designated secure windows. The student’s exact test date is normally set by the school, district, or state testing program.
2026–2027 PreACT and PreACT 8/9 Flexible Testing Window
| Milestone | 2026–2027 Date / Window | Applies To | Action Needed |
|---|---|---|---|
| Enrollment window | February 28, 2026 – May 7, 2027 | PreACT, PreACT 8/9 | School/district enrolls and sets up administration. |
| Materials ordering opens | August 3, 2026 | Online and paper administrations | Coordinator orders materials and confirms testing mode. |
| Materials shipping window | August 17, 2026 – May 7, 2027 | Paper/pencil administrations | Confirm shipping address, quantities, and secure storage process. |
| Testing window | September 1, 2026 – May 28, 2027 | PreACT, PreACT 8/9 | School chooses the actual testing date inside the window. |
| Reports expected | As early as 10 business days after receipt of materials | PreACT, PreACT 8/9 | Use reports for advising, intervention, and ACT prep planning. |
2026–2027 PreACT Secure and PreACT 9 Secure Windows
| Administration | Key Date / Window | Applies To | Planning Note |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fall setup opens | August 3, 2026 | PreACT 9 Secure, PreACT Secure | ACT Now and Test Center Manager setup begins. |
| Fall secure test window | September 28 – October 23, 2026 | PreACT 9 Secure, PreACT Secure | District/state chooses actual test date inside the window. |
| Spring agreement deadline | March 19, 2027 | PreACT 9 Secure, PreACT Secure | Final enrollment/agreement deadline for spring secure events. |
| Spring Test Event 1 | March 8 – March 19, 2027 | PreACT 9 Secure, PreACT Secure | Good fit for schools wanting early spring data. |
| Spring Test Event 2 | March 22 – April 2, 2027 | PreACT 9 Secure, PreACT Secure | Middle spring window; useful after late winter prep. |
| Spring Test Event 3 | April 5 – April 16, 2027 | PreACT 9 Secure, PreACT Secure | Later option before end-of-year testing congestion. |
No weekend assumption: PreACT assessment testing is not available on weekends or ACT holidays. Schools should publish the exact campus date, room assignments, calculator rules, and make-up procedure separately.
Test Structure and Section Timing
The enhanced PreACT / PreACT Secure structure is built around three core multiple-choice sections — English, Math, and Reading — plus an optional Science section that schools or districts may choose to administer. Each question has four answer choices under the enhanced model.
| Section | Total Items | Scored Items | Embedded Field Test Items | Time | Average Time Per Item |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| English | 48 | 36 | 12 | 35 minutes | 43.75 seconds |
| Math | 36 | 32 | 4 | 45 minutes | 75 seconds |
| Reading | 33 | 25 | 8 | 40 minutes | 72.7 seconds |
| Science Optional | 36 | 30 | 6 | 40 minutes | 66.7 seconds |
| Total without Science | 117 | 93 | 24 | 120 minutes | About 61.5 seconds |
| Total with Science | 153 | 123 | 30 | 160 minutes | About 62.7 seconds |
Embedded field test items are unscored questions used to evaluate future test material. Students do not know which items are field test items during testing, so every item should be answered seriously.
Testing with One-and-One-Half Time
Students approved for one-and-one-half time receive 50% additional time for each multiple-choice section. The formula is:
| Section | Standard Time | 1.5x Time | Planning Meaning |
|---|---|---|---|
| English | 35 minutes | 52.5 minutes | Students can slow down, but must still pace through passages. |
| Math | 45 minutes | 67.5 minutes | Use extra time for setup, calculation checks, and skipped items. |
| Reading | 40 minutes | 60 minutes | Plan passage reading time and question time separately. |
| Science | 40 minutes | 60 minutes | Focus on graphs, tables, variables, and claim/evidence questions. |
Time Per Question: The Math Behind the Clock
A strong PreACT strategy starts with pacing. Students do not need to answer every question at the same speed, but they do need a checkpoint system. The universal pacing formula is:
English Pace
English is fast. Students should answer grammar questions quickly and avoid overthinking every sentence.
Math Pace
Math gives the most time per item, but calculation-heavy problems can still consume the clock.
Reading Pace
Reading pacing should be passage-based: read efficiently, then answer in evidence order.
Science Pace
Science is optional by school/district, but if taken, students should prioritize graphs and tables first.
Pace-Check Formula
Use this formula at any checkpoint to see how much time should remain:
Example: In Math, after completing 18 of 36 items, a student should have:
PreACT Score Formula and Reporting
The enhanced PreACT scoring model is designed to align with the enhanced ACT. The most important change is that the Composite score uses English, Math, and Reading. Science is optional by school/district and is not part of the enhanced Composite score.
Where \(E\) is English, \(M\) is Math, and \(R\) is Reading. If Science is taken, students may also see science-related reporting, and a STEM-style estimate can be described as:
| Assessment | Most Appropriate Grade | Maximum Reported Score | Composite Model |
|---|---|---|---|
| PreACT 8/9 | Grade 8 or 9 | 30 | EMR Composite by fall 2026; new blueprint date still listed as TBD |
| PreACT | Grade 9 or 10 | 35 | EMR Composite starting fall 2026 |
| PreACT 9 Secure | Grade 9 | 32 | EMR Composite from spring 2026 |
| PreACT Secure | Grade 10 | 35 | EMR Composite from spring 2026 |
Score interpretation tip: Do not treat a PreACT score as a final ACT score. Treat it as a diagnostic map. The most useful part is not just the Composite number; it is the pattern of section strengths, weaknesses, reporting categories, and predicted ACT range.
Interactive Planning Tools
Use these tools to convert the timetable into a student-specific plan. They are built with simple JavaScript and can be pasted directly into WordPress with this section.
PreACT Date Window Planner
PreACT Composite Score Estimator
Section Pace Calculator
10-Week PreACT / PreACT Secure Prep Plan
PreACT should not create panic. Its best use is to build a structured preview of the ACT. A focused 10-week plan is enough for most students to become familiar with the format, refresh core academic skills, and develop a pacing routine.
Weeks 1–2: Diagnostic and Setup
Take a short timed diagnostic or official practice set. Record English, Math, Reading, and Science performance separately. Build a one-page mistake log.
Weeks 3–4: English and Reading Foundation
Review punctuation, sentence structure, transitions, main idea, evidence, inference, and paired passage logic. Practice short timed sets instead of long untimed worksheets.
Weeks 5–6: Math Skill Repair
Focus on algebra, functions, geometry, statistics, probability, and essential skills. For every missed math problem, write the reason: concept gap, setup error, calculation error, or time pressure.
Weeks 7–8: Science and Mixed Practice
If your school is taking Science, practice reading graphs, identifying variables, comparing experiments, and evaluating scientific claims. If Science is not required, use this time for the weakest EMR section.
Week 9: Full Timed Simulation
Complete a full timed sequence in the same order as test day. Practice break management, calculator setup, online tools, scratch paper habits, and answer review strategy.
Week 10: Final Review
Do not overload new content. Review the mistake log, memorize pacing checkpoints, sleep well, organize materials, and clarify the exact school testing instructions.
School and Test Coordinator Checklist
For schools, PreACT is not just a test-day event. It is an administration workflow. A clean process improves student experience and reduces data/reporting issues.
Confirm administration model
- Choose PreACT, PreACT Secure, or related assessment.
- Confirm online vs paper mode.
- Decide whether Science is included.
- Check accommodations and supported formats.
Prepare systems and rooms
- Set up ACT Now and Test Center Manager.
- Load and assign students.
- Create rooms and staff assignments.
- Run technology checks for online testing.
Protect timing and consistency
- Follow section order and approved breaks.
- Use approved calculator rules.
- Maintain secure handling procedures.
- Document irregularities immediately.
Use the data
- Review item and reporting-category patterns.
- Identify course placement or intervention needs.
- Share student reports with families.
- Build ACT prep plans from the results.
Student Test-Day Checklist
Students should approach PreACT like a real test, but not like a life-or-death exam. The goal is to practice performance under timed conditions and collect useful feedback.
The Night Before
- Confirm the test room and arrival time.
- Charge any approved school device if instructed.
- Prepare an approved calculator for Math if allowed.
- Sleep early; fatigue damages reading speed and accuracy.
During the Test
- Read directions carefully at the start of each section.
- Use skip-and-return when a question is taking too long.
- Answer every item; do not leave blanks.
- Use break time to reset, not to discuss test content.
Best student mindset: PreACT is feedback, not judgment. A lower-than-expected result is still useful if it shows exactly what to fix before the official ACT.
Guide for Parents and Counselors
Parents and counselors should use PreACT results as a planning conversation. The goal is not simply to ask, “Was the score good?” A better question is, “What does this score suggest we should do next?”
How to Read the Results Productively
Look at section gaps
If Math is much lower than Reading, the student may need targeted algebra/geometry review rather than general test prep.
Study reporting categories
Reporting categories are more actionable than broad scores. They show whether the issue is grammar, inference, functions, data interpretation, or another skill.
Plan the ACT timeline
Use PreACT results to choose when to begin ACT prep, when to take the first official ACT, and whether Science should be part of the plan.
Recommended Follow-Up After Scores Arrive
- Week 1 after scores: Review the student report and identify the lowest section.
- Week 2: Build a 30-day improvement plan for the lowest section.
- Month 2: Complete one timed ACT-style practice set in the weakest section.
- Month 3: Decide whether the student should take the ACT earlier, later, or after additional coursework.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is PreACT the same as the ACT?
No. PreACT is an ACT-aligned practice and planning assessment. It predicts readiness and helps students prepare, but it is not the official ACT college-admission test.
Can I choose my own PreACT test date?
Usually no. Schools and districts choose the date within the allowed testing window. Students should ask their counselor or test coordinator for the campus schedule.
Is Science required?
Science is optional under the enhanced model, but the decision is made by the school, district, or state — not by each individual student. Always confirm your local configuration.
How long is the test without Science?
The enhanced PreACT / PreACT Secure takes 120 minutes without Science, not including administrative instructions and breaks.
How long is the test with Science?
The enhanced PreACT / PreACT Secure takes 160 minutes with Science, not including administrative instructions and breaks.
Does PreACT have a Writing section?
The PreACT family discussed here focuses on multiple-choice English, Math, Reading, and Science. Students preparing for the official ACT Writing test should practice that separately if their future ACT plan includes Writing.
What score scale does PreACT use?
PreACT and PreACT Secure are capped at 35, PreACT 9 Secure is capped at 32, and PreACT 8/9 is capped at 30. The score scale is aligned to the ACT scale, but each assessment has its own maximum.
What should I do after getting my PreACT score?
Review the section breakdown, compare strengths and weaknesses, update your course plan, and create a targeted ACT preparation plan. The best next step is usually fixing the lowest section first.
Official source reminder: Before publishing, verify your local testing details with ACT and your school/district. Helpful official ACT pages include the PreACT FAQ, Administer PreACT, and Administer PreACT Secure pages.
Official references: ACT PreACT FAQs · Administer PreACT · Administer PreACT Secure


