The College Board Is Banning Students From Using Smart Glasses During the SATs

Smart glasses SAT ban takes effect spring 2026. Learn why the College Board prohibited wearables and how it affects students.
Matilda
The College Board Is Banning Students From Using Smart Glasses During the SATs
The College Board has officially banned smart glasses from SAT testing centers beginning spring 2026, citing academic integrity concerns as wearable AI technology becomes mainstream. Students wearing prescription smart glasses must switch to standard eyewear or reschedule their exam. The policy targets devices capable of discreetly accessing chatbots, displaying information, or recording test content—capabilities that threaten standardized testing's fundamental fairness. With millions of students taking the SAT annually for college admissions, this move represents a significant escalation in the arms race between test security and rapidly evolving consumer technology. Credit: Google Why Smart Glasses Pose a Unique Cheating Risk Unlike smartphones—which are already prohibited and easily spotted on desks—smart glasses integrate computing power directly into eyewear. Modern models feature bone conduction audio that lets users hear responses without visible earbuds, voice assistants resp…