The Digital SAT gives every student access to the Desmos graphing calculator — built right into the test interface. Yet most students either ignore it or use only a fraction of its power. The truth is that Desmos can turn difficult SAT math problems into near-instant answers when you know exactly what to do. In this guide, MyGuru Tutoring's Director of Instruction walks through 7 real Digital SAT questions to show you how to use the Desmos SAT calculator smarter, faster, and with far greater confidence. Watch each short video, study the strategy behind it, and start applying these Digital SAT math tips in your next practice session.
Unlike the paper SAT of years past, the Digital SAT embeds a full-featured Desmos graphing calculator in every math module — no physical calculator required (or even helpful for most problems). College Board's intent is to shift the emphasis away from raw arithmetic and toward problem-solving and reasoning. That means students who master the Digital SAT calculator gain a measurable edge.
Here is what you can accomplish with Desmos on the Digital SAT:
The 7 videos below cover each of these strategies using actual SAT math problems. Each tip is drawn directly from MyGuru's SAT test prep sessions so you can see exactly how a high-scoring student (or tutor) approaches the Desmos graphing calculator on test day.
The Desmos SAT interface calculator is not just for graphs — it is a fully functional arithmetic tool. In this example, a student solves a word problem about the cost of stickers by subtracting the known pass price ($19.50) from the total ($62), then dividing the remainder by 10 — all directly in the Desmos interface, with zero algebra on paper. Keeping your work inside the calculator reduces transcription errors and keeps your attention on the problem logic rather than the arithmetic.
When a Digital SAT word problem involves two unknowns and a total, setting up and graphing two equations in Desmos reveals the solution at a glance. Instead of solving algebraically, you can read the intersection point directly from the graph. This strategy is especially fast for SAT math problems that would otherwise require substitution or elimination — skills that take time and invite sign errors under pressure.
Graphing two linear equations in the Desmos graphing calculator immediately reveals whether they intersect, are parallel, or are the same line — telling you whether a system has one solution, no solution, or infinitely many solutions. In this example, y = 2x + 10 and y = 2x − 1 are entered and the parallel lines appear instantly. Even if you recognize that equal slopes mean no intersection, Desmos confirms it without any calculation and eliminates all doubt before you commit to an answer.
Budget and constraint problems on the Digital SAT often involve multi-step arithmetic that is easy to mess up on paper. Here, the instructor uses the Desmos interface to sequentially divide $14,000 by 1.07 (for a tax factor) and then by 81 (the number of employees) to find the maximum price per chair — all in one smooth calculation chain. Articulating the problem's structure algebraically in the calculator means you can skip scratch paper entirely and trust the arithmetic to Desmos.
Finding the vertex of a parabola is a classic Digital SAT math tip: instead of completing the square, simply graph the quadratic in Desmos and read the vertex coordinates directly. In this video, graphing y = −x² + 9x − 100 reveals the vertex at approximately (4.5, −79.75), and the correct answer choice can be identified and confirmed in seconds. Knowing to use parentheses correctly when entering the expression — and zooming to find the vertex — are the small efficiency habits that separate high scorers from average test-takers.
For questions that ask which equation satisfies a given condition (such as "no solution" in a system), the fastest approach is to enter the known equation, then graph each answer choice one at a time and observe the result. In this example, the student enters each of four answer choices to find which line is parallel to the given equation — eliminating choices that intersect and choices that produce the same line (infinite solutions) until only the correct parallel line remains. There is no need to solve algebraically when Desmos can do the heavy lifting.
On test day, speed and accuracy both matter — and the Digital SAT calculator is your best tool for maximizing both. This video revisits the maximum-price-per-chair problem and demonstrates exactly how to input a multi-step calculation in sequence inside the Desmos interface, rounding appropriately at the end. The key test-day mindset: whenever a problem involves arithmetic that is more than one or two steps, route it through Desmos to preserve your mental energy for the conceptual parts of each question.
Knowing these strategies in theory is one thing — executing them under timed conditions is another. Here is how to build real fluency with the Desmos graphing calculator before test day:
The Digital SAT is a fundamentally different test from the paper SAT, and students who treat the built-in Desmos graphing calculator as a first resort — not a last resort — consistently score higher. The 7 tips in this guide cover the most common and highest-value use cases: from solving word problems arithmetically, to graphing systems of equations, to finding vertices and testing answer choices visually. Every one of these strategies is something you can begin applying in your very next SAT test prep session.
The best way to accelerate your progress with Desmos SAT strategies is to work with a tutor who can guide you through real problems in real time. At MyGuru, our one-on-one SAT tutors are experts in the Digital SAT format and know exactly how to train students to use Desmos efficiently and confidently.
MyGuru's expert SAT tutors will help you master Desmos and every other Digital SAT math strategy — personalized to your exact needs and schedule.
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