ACT · Math: Trigonometry · California, USA
Math: Trigonometry for the ACT Exam — California candidates
4% of the ACT test plan. ACT Math Trigonometry covers trig functions (SOHCAHTOA), basic identities, the unit circle, and graphs of sine and cosine — representing 4–6 of the 60 Math questions. Calibrated for Californian candidates.
If you have already studied this content from a textbook, you know the material. The question this page answers is whether you can apply it under exam conditions. Math: Trigonometry sits at roughly 4% of the American College Testing content distribution — Trigonometry is a small but consistent part of ACT Math and tends to concentrate in the harder questions (numbers 45–60). Despite the small question count, trig is disproportionately missed because many students study it last and encounter it least in their high school curriculum before test day. The ACT trig questions are straightforward if you know the fundamentals: SOHCAHTOA, reciprocal trig functions (csc, sec, cot), the Pythagorean identity (sin²θ + cos²θ = 1), and basic properties of sine and cosine graphs. Pass rates for the ACT are published annually by the awarding body and vary by cohort and locale. For California candidates preparing for ACT, the calibration of study to local context matters: California is the largest U.S. testing market for NCLEX, MCAT, SAT, and ACT. The CA Board of Registered Nursing has notoriously long endorsement timelines (8–14 weeks).
Common failure modes
These are the patterns that cause most candidates to lose marks on this topic. Recognising them in advance is half the work.
- !Confusing sin, cos, and tan relationships with the wrong sides — always redraw SOHCAHTOA before answering (Opposite, Adjacent, Hypotenuse relative to the angle)
- !Not knowing the reciprocal identities: csc = 1/sin, sec = 1/cos, cot = 1/tan
- !Confusing radians and degrees on unit circle questions — the ACT uses both and often mixes them in the same question
- !Forgetting that the range of sine and cosine is [−1, 1] — answers outside this range are impossible and signal a calculation error
Study tips
- 1Memorize SOHCAHTOA and the reciprocal identities cold: sin=O/H, cos=A/H, tan=O/A; csc=H/O, sec=H/A, cot=A/O.
- 2Learn the special angle values at 0°, 30°, 45°, 60°, 90°: sin and cos at these five angles are tested directly. Build a table and memorize it.
- 3Practice converting between degrees and radians: multiply by π/180 to convert degrees to radians; multiply by 180/π to convert radians to degrees.
- 4For sine and cosine graph questions, know: period of y = sin(bx) is 2π/b; amplitude of y = a·sin(x) is |a|; vertical shift y = sin(x) + c shifts the graph up c units.
- 5For NCLEX-RN: the California Board of Registered Nursing requires LiveScan fingerprinting before ATT release; book early because LiveScan vendors fill 2–3 weeks out.
- 6For MCAT/SAT/ACT: California universities are test-blind for SAT/ACT undergraduate admission as of 2024; verify whether your target medical/grad programs still require MCAT/GRE.
- 7For CDL: California has its own "California Special Requirements" addendum on top of FMCSA; review the CA Commercial Driver Handbook before sitting the written test.
Sample ACT Math: Trigonometry questions
These sample items mirror the format and difficulty of real ACT questions. Practice with thousands more on the free Koydo question bank.
- 1
In a right triangle, the hypotenuse is 10 and one leg is 6. What is the cosine of the angle opposite the leg of length 6?
- A3/5
- B4/5Correct
- C3/4
- D6/10
Why this answer?
First find the missing leg: 6² + b² = 10² → b² = 100 − 36 = 64 → b = 8. The angle opposite the leg of 6 has: opposite = 6, adjacent = 8, hypotenuse = 10. cos(θ) = adjacent/hypotenuse = 8/10 = 4/5. Note: option D (6/10) would be sin(θ), not cos(θ) — the most common error here is applying SOHCAHTOA to the wrong angle. (Illustrative.)
- 2
Which of the following is equivalent to sin²θ + cos²θ?
- A0
- B2
- C1Correct
- Dtan²θ
Why this answer?
sin²θ + cos²θ = 1 is the fundamental Pythagorean identity. It holds for all values of θ. This identity is derived from the Pythagorean theorem applied to the unit circle: for any point (cosθ, sinθ) on the unit circle, x² + y² = r² = 1.
Frequently asked questions
How many trig questions are on the ACT Math section?
Does ACT test the Law of Sines and Law of Cosines?
What is the ACT pass rate for Californian candidates?
How long should Californian candidates study Math: Trigonometry for the ACT?
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Regulatory citation: ACT Inc. — ACT Test Specifications: Mathematics section content areas and question distribution.