AP Exams Scoring Guide
How scores are calculated, what they mean, and how to reach your goal score.
Scoring Overview
Each exam is scored 1โ5: 5 = extremely well qualified, 4 = well qualified, 3 = qualified, 2 = possibly qualified, 1 = no recommendation. About 60% of students earn 3+. Score requirements for college credit vary by school and subject โ top universities often require 4 or 5. The MCQ section is graded by computer; FRQ by trained AP graders in June.
Score Scale
| Section | Duration | Max Score |
|---|---|---|
| Multiple Choice | 105 min | 5 |
| Free Response | 90 min | 5 |
Section Breakdown
mcq
Multiple-choice questions covering the full subject scope. Typically 50โ70 questions in 60โ90 min.
Subject-specific content from the AP course framework
frq
Free-response questions: short-answer, document-based, essay, or problem-solving depending on subject.
ApplicationAnalysisSynthesisArgumentation
Key Facts
- Length
- ~3 hours per exam
- Sections
- Multiple Choice + Free Response (varies by subject)
- Score
- 1โ5 (3+ usually = college credit)
- Cost
- $98 USD per exam (US)
- Subjects
- 38+ available
- Test date
- First two weeks of May annually
Study Tips
- 1.Start with the College Board AP Course and Exam Description โ it's the official content map.
- 2.Use released past exams from the College Board AP Central โ they're the closest to the real test.
- 3.Princeton Review or Barron's prep books are popular and reliable.
- 4.Schedule timed practice tests in the 4 weeks before May.
- 5.Focus on the FRQ rubric โ graders look for specific elements; missing them costs points fast.
- 6.Form a study group for verbal subjects (history, English) to practice arguments.