Ratios and Proportional Relationships — SAT Math Guide
Ratios and proportional relationships SAT questions test your ability to compare quantities and solve problems involving scaling. These problems appear frequently in the Problem Solving and Data Analysis domain, making up about 3-4 questions on your Digital SAT. You'll encounter everything from recipe scaling to map distances, so mastering this topic gives you a solid foundation for real-world math applications.
What You Need to Know
Ratio: A comparison of two quantities, written as a:b, a/b, or "a to b"
Proportion: An equation stating that two ratios are equal (a/b = c/d)
Unit rate: A ratio where the second quantity equals 1
Scale factor: The ratio used to enlarge or reduce similar figures
Cross multiplication: Multiply across the equal sign to solve proportions
Direct variation: As one variable increases, the other increases proportionally
📐 KEY FORMULA: If a/b = c/d, then ad = bc (cross multiplication)
💡 PRO TIP: Set up proportions with the same units in the same positions (top/top, bottom/bottom)
How to Solve Ratios and Proportional Relationships on the SAT
Example Question 1 — Medium Difficulty
A recipe for 6 servings calls for 2 cups of flour. How many cups of flour are needed for 15 servings?
A) 4 cups
B) 5 cups
C) 6 cups
D) 7.5 cups
Solution:
Step 1: Set up a proportion: 2 cups/6 servings = x cups/15 servings
Step 2: Cross multiply: 2 × 15 = 6 × x
Step 3: Solve: 30 = 6x, so x = 5
✅Answer: B — You need 5 cups of flour for 15 servings.
Example Question 2 — Hard Difficulty
On a map, 3 inches represents 45 miles. If two cities are 7 inches apart on the map, what is the actual distance between them in miles?
A) 95 miles
B) 105 miles
C) 115 miles
D) 125 miles
Solution:
Step 1: Set up the proportion: 3 inches/45 miles = 7 inches/x miles
Step 2: Cross multiply: 3x = 45 × 7
Step 3: Calculate: 3x = 315
Step 4: Solve: x = 105
✅Answer: B — The actual distance is 105 miles.
Common SAT Math Mistakes to Avoid
❌Mistake: Mixing up units when setting up proportions
✅Fix: Always label your units and keep like units in the same position
❌Mistake: Forgetting to cross multiply correctly
✅Fix: Remember ad = bc when you have a/b = c/d
❌Mistake: Not simplifying ratios before comparing
✅Fix: Reduce ratios to lowest terms first (6:9 becomes 2:3)
❌Mistake: Confusing inverse and direct relationships
✅Fix: Direct means both increase together; inverse means one increases as the other decreases
Practice Question — Try It Yourself
If 4 workers can complete a job in 6 hours, how long will it take 3 workers to complete the same job at the same rate?
A) 4.5 hours
B) 6 hours
C) 8 hours
D) 9 hours
Show Answer
Answer: C — This is an inverse proportion. Total work = 4 × 6 = 24 worker-hours. So 3 workers need 24 ÷ 3 = 8 hours.
Key Takeaways for the SAT
Always set up your proportions clearly with proper units labeled
Cross multiplication is your go-to method for solving SAT math proportions
Watch for inverse relationships where more of one thing means less of another
Convert complex ratios to unit rates when comparing multiple options
Double-check that your answer makes logical sense in the context
Related SAT Math Topics
Strengthen your SAT math prep with these related topics:
Percentages and percent change →
Units and unit conversion →