SAT Practice TestSAT Math10 Questions~15 min

SAT Combined Events Probability Practice Test — 10 Questions

A full SAT-style Combined Events Probability practice test with 10 questions at varying difficulty levels. Answer every question, get instant feedback, and review detailed explanations to understand exactly where you went wrong.

10
Questions
15m
Est. Time
All
With Explanations
Yes
Free to Take
Just Practice Questions Instead

What to Expect on This Practice Test

Difficulty Mix

5 Easy · 3 Medium · 2 Hard — matching the real SAT distribution.

Instant Feedback

Know immediately if you're right. Read a detailed explanation after every answer.

Topic Covered

Combined Events Probability — a key topic in the Problem Solving & Data Analysis section of SAT Math.

SAT Combined Events Probability Practice Test

10 Questions
0 / 10 answered
1Easy

Two independent spins of a fair 4-section spinner (1–4). What is P(first is 2 AND second is 3)?

2Easy

A card is drawn from a standard deck: P(heart) = 13/52. Another deck — P(face card) = 12/52. Are these experiments the same?

3Easy

Rolling two fair dice, what is P(sum = 7)?

4Easy

If P(A)=0.5 and P(B)=0.4 and A and B are independent, what is P(A and B)?

5Easy

Drawing two cards with replacement from a deck: P(both are aces)?

6Medium

A bag has 4 green and 6 red balls. Two draws without replacement. What is P(one green and one red in either order)?

7Medium

Events A and B are independent with P(A)=0.2, P(B)=0.5. What is P(A or B)?

8Medium

Three fair coins are flipped. What is P(exactly two heads)?

9Hard

Two students each pick an integer from 1 to 5 uniformly at random (with replacement). What is P(sum ≥ 9)?

10Hard

Two fair six-sided dice are rolled. What is P(sum is 5 or 9)?

How to Improve Your SAT Combined Events Probability Score

Identify your specific error pattern on this topic

After completing this practice test, look at every wrong answer and ask: 'Was this a content gap, a misread, or a careless error?' Each type has a different fix. Content gaps require review. Misreads require slowing down. Careless errors require double-checking.

Review every explanation, even correct answers

Understanding why an answer is right is as important as getting it right. Many students get lucky on questions they don't fully understand — those will come back to haunt them on test day.

Practice under time pressure

SAT Math questions should take about 1.2–1.5 minutes each. Once you understand the Combined Events Probability concepts, practice with a timer. Speed comes from pattern recognition, which comes from repetition.

Drill Combined Events Probability questions until they feel automatic

Use Blitzsat's question bank to filter specifically for Combined Events Probability questions at medium and hard difficulty. Repeat until you can answer most questions in under 60 seconds.

Want More Combined Events Probability Practice?

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