AP Calc AB Score Curve 2026 — Raw Score to AP Score Conversion
The AP Calculus AB score curve converts your raw composite score (0–108) into an AP score of 1–5. Here is the full conversion table and what you need to know to hit your target score.
AP Calc AB Score Curve 2026
| AP Score | Composite Score Range | % of Students |
|---|---|---|
| 5 | 70–108 | 22% |
| 4 | 52–69 | 17% |
| 3 | 38–51 | 20% |
| 2 | 27–37 | 18% |
| 1 | 0–26 | 23% |
Composite max: 108 points
To earn a 3, you need roughly 35% of the maximum composite score. A 5 requires about 65%.
Use our AP Calc AB Score Calculator to enter your actual MC and FRQ scores and see your predicted grade instantly.
How the AP Calc AB Composite Score Is Calculated
The exam has two equally weighted sections (50/50):
| Section | Questions | Your Raw Score | Multiplier | Points |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Multiple Choice (45 questions) | 45 MC | correct answers | ×1.2 | max 54 |
| Free Response (6 questions × 9 pts) | 6 FRQ | points earned | ×1.0 | max 54 |
| Total | max 108 |
MC is scored right-only (no penalty for wrong answers). Each of the 6 FRQ questions is worth 9 points.
What Score Do You Need?
| Target | Composite Needed | MC + FRQ Strategy |
|---|---|---|
| 5 | 70/108 (65%) | ~38/45 MC + ~32/54 FRQ |
| 4 | 52/108 (48%) | ~28/45 MC + ~24/54 FRQ |
| 3 | 38/108 (35%) | ~20/45 MC + ~18/54 FRQ |
The 3 threshold (35%) is achievable even with significant gaps in knowledge — but it requires consistency across both sections, not strength in just one.
Does the Curve Change Every Year?
Yes. College Board adjusts the cutoffs each year based on overall exam difficulty. A harder exam shifts cutoffs down slightly; an easier exam shifts them up.
The table above reflects recent historical data (2022–2024 average). Cutoffs typically move by 2–4 points maximum year over year for AP Calc AB.
Key point: the adjustment favors students. If the exam is harder than usual, fewer composite points are needed for each AP score.
AP Calc AB vs AP Calc BC Curve
| AP Calc AB | AP Calc BC | |
|---|---|---|
| Composite max | 108 | 108 |
| Score 5 cutoff | 70 (65%) | 68 (63%) |
| Score 3 cutoff | 38 (35%) | 40 (37%) |
| Five-rate | 22% | 39% |
AP Calc BC has a higher five-rate because stronger math students self-select into it, not because the curve is dramatically more generous.
Tips to Hit Your Target Score
- For a 5: Master limits, derivatives, integrals, and the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus. FRQ partial credit adds up — show all work even when unsure
- For a 4: Get MC above 60% and earn at least 2–3 points on every FRQ question
- For a 3: Focus on the highest-frequency topics: derivatives, basic integration, and area between curves. These appear on every exam