If you are serious about studying in the U.S., then you need to begin to learn how to match yourself, as a good counselor would for an American high school student. Though it appears you won’t be submitting your SAT score, you should be aware of it, in that it will indicate the suitability of your potential choices — and will be evident in your application even if you do not submit it. Since we don’t know your score, consider a hypothetical figure of 1290. In this case, colleges such as Amherst, Dartmouth, Georgetown and, to further the example, the notably well-endowed, but insufficiently “prestigious,” University of Richmond, would be out of reach, and, in my opinion, not appropriate schools to which to apply.
To continue this point, it seems one reason you have not meaningfully refined your list since opening your thread is because you haven’t screened schools based on their academic expectations. To do this, research student-body profiles through IPEDS or Common Data Sets, then consider your own academic profile, including your standardized scoring results, in this context.