What the Test Gives You vs. What You Must Memorize

The SAT provides a reference sheet at the start of the Math section with certain geometric formulas. Knowing what's on that sheet saves you the mental energy of memorizing those — but it also means that everything not on the sheet is fair game to forget if you don't study it.

Formulas provided on the SAT reference sheet: Area of a circle (πr²), circumference (2πr), area of a rectangle (lw), area of a triangle (½bh), Pythagorean theorem (a² + b² = c²), special right triangles (30-60-90 and 45-45-90), volume of a box (lwh), volume of a cylinder (πr²h), volume of a sphere (4/3 πr³), volume of a cone (1/3 πr²h), volume of a pyramid (1/3 lwh).

Everything else in this article you must memorize. For each formula, we include what it means and when to use it.

Algebra and Linear Equations

FormulaWhat It MeansWhen to Use It
y = mx + b Slope-intercept form: m = slope, b = y-intercept Any linear equation question; graphing lines; finding where a line crosses the y-axis
y − y₁ = m(x − x₁) Point-slope form: build a line equation from one point and a slope When given a point and slope but not the y-intercept
m = (y₂ − y₁)/(x₂ − x₁) Slope formula: rise over run between two points Any time you need the slope from two coordinate pairs
d = √[(x₂−x₁)² + (y₂−y₁)²] Distance between two points in the coordinate plane Geometry coordinate questions; circle radius problems
Midpoint = ((x₁+x₂)/2, (y₁+y₂)/2) Average of the x-coordinates and y-coordinates Finding the center of a segment; midpoint geometry questions
x = (−b ± √(b²−4ac)) / 2a Quadratic formula: finds roots of ax² + bx + c = 0 When a quadratic can't be factored easily; finding x-intercepts
b² − 4ac Discriminant: positive = 2 real roots, zero = 1 root, negative = no real roots Questions about number of solutions to a quadratic

Geometry

Shape / ConceptFormulaNotes
Circle — standard form(x−h)² + (y−k)² = r²Center is (h, k), radius is r
Arc lengthL = (θ/360) × 2πrθ is the central angle in degrees
Sector areaA = (θ/360) × πr²Fraction of the full circle's area
Parallel lines cut by transversalAlternate interior angles equal; co-interior angles supplementaryIdentify angle pair type first
Triangle angle sum∠A + ∠B + ∠C = 180°Also: exterior angle = sum of two non-adjacent interior angles
45-45-90 triangle sidesx : x : x√2Legs are equal; hypotenuse = leg × √2
30-60-90 triangle sidesx : x√3 : 2xShort leg : long leg : hypotenuse
SOHCAHTOAsin = opp/hyp; cos = adj/hyp; tan = opp/adjRight triangle trig; know these cold

Statistics and Data Analysis

ConceptFormula / DefinitionWhen It Appears
Mean (average)Mean = Sum of values / Number of valuesData set questions; combined averages
MedianMiddle value when ordered; average of two middle values if even countComparing mean vs. median; skewed data sets
ModeMost frequently occurring valueFrequency tables; bar chart questions
Standard deviation conceptMeasures how spread out values are from the mean; larger SD = more spreadComparing variability between two groups; no calculation required on SAT
ProbabilityP(event) = favorable outcomes / total outcomesProbability questions; independent vs. dependent events
Percent change% change = (new − old) / old × 100Word problems involving growth, decrease, or markups
Percent of a numberPart = Percent × WholeSales tax, discounts, commission problems

Advanced Topics

TopicKey Rule or FormulaNotes
Exponent rules — productaᵐ × aⁿ = aᵐ⁺ⁿSame base: add exponents
Exponent rules — quotientaᵐ / aⁿ = aᵐ⁻ⁿSame base: subtract exponents
Exponent rules — power(aᵐ)ⁿ = aᵐⁿPower to a power: multiply exponents
Negative exponentsa⁻ⁿ = 1/aⁿNegative exponent = reciprocal
Fractional exponentsa^(m/n) = ⁿ√(aᵐ)a^(1/2) = √a; a^(1/3) = ∛a
Difference of squaresa² − b² = (a+b)(a−b)Factor expressions quickly; appears frequently
Perfect square trinomiala² ± 2ab + b² = (a ± b)²Completing the square; vertex form of parabola
Direct variationy = kxk is the constant of proportionality
Inverse variationy = k/xAs x increases, y decreases proportionally
Systems of equationsSubstitution or elimination; solution is the intersection pointParallel lines (same slope) = no solution; same line = infinite solutions
Vertex form of parabolay = a(x−h)² + kVertex is (h, k); a determines direction and width
Function notationf(a) = substitute a for x in the functionf(g(x)) means substitute g(x) as the input to f
High-Frequency Formulas

If you only have time to memorize five things: (1) slope-intercept form, (2) quadratic formula, (3) percent change formula, (4) difference of squares, and (5) SOHCAHTOA. These appear on virtually every SAT Math section.

Using Desmos Strategically

The digital SAT gives you access to the Desmos graphing calculator for the entire Math section. This changes your formula strategy: for anything involving graphing, intersections, or complex equations, type it into Desmos rather than solving algebraically. Desmos is fastest for:

  • Finding the x-intercepts (roots) of quadratics and polynomials
  • Solving a system of equations graphically (find the intersection point)
  • Checking whether a parabola equation has 0, 1, or 2 x-intercepts
  • Evaluating functions at specific values

Still memorize the formulas — many questions require conceptual understanding, and typing every problem into Desmos costs time. But use Desmos as your backup verification tool.

✅ Key Takeaways

  • The SAT provides geometric formulas (circle, triangle, volume) on the reference sheet — you do not need to memorize those.
  • Algebra and advanced math account for roughly 70% of Math questions — prioritize those formulas.
  • The quadratic formula, slope-intercept form, and percent change formula appear on nearly every SAT.
  • Desmos is available for the entire digital SAT Math section — use it strategically to verify answers and graph equations.
  • Standard deviation is conceptual on the SAT — you'll never have to calculate it, just compare it between groups.