Google Rolls Out Free SAT Practice Tests Through Gemini AI Platform
Felix Pinkston Jan 21, 2026 18:33
Google launches free full-length SAT practice exams in Gemini starting January 21, 2026, partnering with Princeton Review for vetted content.
Google is making a significant push into education technology with free SAT practice exams now available through its Gemini AI platform, announced January 21, 2026 at the BETT conference in London.
The feature gives students access to full-length, on-demand practice tests without cost—a direct challenge to paid test prep services that typically charge hundreds of dollars. Content comes from The Princeton Review, addressing concerns about AI-generated material accuracy that has plagued other edtech products.
What Students Actually Get
The practice tests mirror the modern digital SAT structure, which matters because the College Board shifted to an entirely digital format. Students receive AI-generated feedback identifying specific weaknesses in algebra, data analysis, grammar, and reading comprehension. The tool also tracks time management, a common pain point for test-takers adjusting to the digital format.
Google is bundling this with expanded access to Gemini 3 Pro—its most capable model—free for education users. That's notable because Pro-tier access typically requires paid subscriptions.
Classroom Integration Changes
The bigger story for educators might be the Google Classroom updates rolling out alongside the SAT feature. Teachers can now record and attach audio and video directly within Classroom for assignments and feedback. The platform is also getting a revamped homepage with student engagement metrics for administrators and deadline tracking for students.
A new Gemini integration lets the AI pull context directly from Classroom data to help draft assignments or summarize student progress. Pilot participants have already been testing this functionality.
Google also announced Moodle support through its Gemini LTI tool, bringing NotebookLM and the Gemini app into that learning management system.
The Competitive Angle
Free SAT prep puts pressure on companies like Kaplan, Princeton Review's own paid products, and Khan Academy's test prep offerings. Google's play here is clearly about ecosystem lock-in—get students using Gemini for test prep, and they're more likely to stick with Google Workspace tools through college and into their careers.
For the edtech sector, this signals Google's willingness to offer premium-tier AI capabilities at no cost when it serves broader strategic goals. Competitors relying on subscription revenue for similar features should be watching closely.
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