For anyone wondering about score reporting times and the scheduling permit trick, here is some info from what I've read on a few different forums and from my personal experience.
Time of day
First of all, the vast majority of people get their score at 11am eastern time. You'll be emailed by NBME and told your score report is now available online, however, you will not be emailed your score report directly. The email will just let you know that your scores will be posted very soon. Make sure the email isn't in your junk section! You will then need to login to the NBME website (where you registered for the exam) to view your score report. Some people claim their score reports were actually available on the NBME website a few minutes before they got the email... but I strongly recommend not sitting there and just clicking refresh every 30 seconds... you'll go mad!! Try and go do something fun and wait for the email, or just wait until a little after 11am eastern time and then go check the NBME website.
Third or Fourth Wednesday
Test date on Wednesday, Thursday or Friday = results on the third Wednesday (19-21 days after your test)
Test date on Saturday, Monday or Tuesday = results on the fourth Wednesday (22-25 days after your test)
My experience:
A classmate of mine took Step 1 on Friday 4/20/18, so today is her "third Wednesday" and she DID get her scores back.
I took Step 1 on Monday 4/23/18, so today is also my "third Wednesday" and I did not get my scores back.
My scheduling permit disappeared sometime last weekend (5/5/18) and I didn't get my scores back today. So it looks like that isn't very indicative.
For everyone who got their scores back today, congratulations!! I hope everyone is pleased with the results, but if you're not, try and brush it off and not let it get you down. I know that's much easier said than done, and you're certainly entitled to a day or two of being bummed out, but don't let yourself wallow in sadness or pity.
First of all, even if you didn't score as high as you wanted to/what your NBME forms predicted, you still passed Step 1 and that, in and of itself, is an accomplishment worth celebrating! You worked your tail off for weeks and months on end and you passed. You may not feel like being told congratulations right now, but congrats! You should be very proud of yourself and all the hard work you put in. Bear Bryant (college football coaching legend) once said "It's not the will to win that matters, everyone has that. It's the will to prepare to win that matters." You put in the effort and preparation and you passed an incredibly difficult examination. Not that many people in the entire world could do what you just did. Doing so wasn't always fun, let's be honest... studying for step really sucked a lot of the time, but you stuck with it because of the tenacity and drive that you have within you. You can't learn that in a classroom, and residency programs will recognize that when you apply.
Secondly, you are WAY more than just a test score, and residencies will also see that when you apply!! Your clinical grades, reviews, and faculty comments will help them see how great of a med student and person you really are.... and how great of a doctor you will be one day! You'll wow them on your acting internship, impress them on your away rotation, move them on your interview day, and then they'll be begging you to come to their residency program. Keep your chin up. Your Step 1 score doesn't define who you are.
Lastly, you have people all around you who care about you and are so incredibly proud of you and all that you've accomplished. Don't ever forget that. You are not the first, nor will you be the last, extremely talented and smart medical student to make a lower step 1 score than they wanted. You're not alone, and please don't hesitate to reach out to those around you for comfort or help. Doing so doesn't make you "weak" or "dumb" or anything of the sort. We're here for you and willing to help in anyway that we can.
Congratulations on being done with Step 1 and the first two years of medical school. Now go enjoy your clinical rotations and feeling more like a "real" doctor! 🙂