HomeBlog › AP Calculus AB vs BC — Which Should You Take? (2026)

AP Calculus AB vs BC — Which Should You Take? (2026)

By APScoreHub · March 30, 2026

AP Calculus AB and BC cover similar material but are very different exams in scope, difficulty, and the college credit they earn. Here's a complete comparison to help you decide which one to take.

The Key Difference

AP Calculus AB covers roughly one semester of college calculus (Calc I).

AP Calculus BC covers two semesters (Calc I + Calc II). It includes everything in AB plus additional topics like series, polar coordinates, and parametric equations.

BC is not just "harder AB" — it's more content. If you're strong in math, BC is often the better choice.

Content Comparison

Topic AP Calc AB AP Calc BC
Limits
Derivatives
Integrals
Fundamental Theorem of Calculus
Differential equations (basic)
Integration techniques (parts, partial fractions)
Sequences and series
Taylor and Maclaurin series
Polar and parametric functions
Logistic growth

BC covers roughly 40% more material than AB.

Exam Structure

Both exams have the same format:

Section Questions Time Weight
MC — No Calculator 30 questions 60 min 50%
MC — Calculator 15 questions 45 min 50% (combined)
FRQ — Calculator 2 problems 30 min 50%
FRQ — No Calculator 4 problems 60 min 50% (combined)

Score Comparison (2026)

AP Calc AB AP Calc BC
% Scoring 5 22% 39%
% Scoring 4 17% 18%
% Scoring 3+ 59% 70%
Composite max 108 pts 108 pts

BC has a dramatically higher 5 rate (39% vs 22%) — but this is because BC attracts more mathematically advanced students, not because BC is easier.

College Credit: AB vs BC

This is often the deciding factor.

AP Calc AB AP Calc BC
Score needed 3–5 (varies) 3–5 (varies)
Credits earned 1 semester (Calc I) 2 semesters (Calc I + II)
Typical credit hours 3–4 6–8
At selective schools Often requires 4 or 5 Often requires 4 or 5

A BC score of 4 or 5 can place you directly into Calc III at most universities — saving an entire year of math prerequisites for STEM majors.

BC also offers an "AB subscore" — even if you score a 3 on BC overall, your AB subscore may be high enough to earn Calc I credit at some schools.

Calculate Your Score

Which Should You Take?

Take AP Calculus AB if:

Take AP Calculus BC if:

The honest advice: If you can handle BC, take BC. The extra college credit is worth it, and the self-selected BC student pool means your competition understands it's the harder exam. A 4 on BC is more impressive than a 5 on AB to most college advisors.

What If You Took AB Already?

Some students take AB in junior year and BC in senior year. This works well — BC builds directly on AB content, and you'll find the first half of BC is review.

Others self-study BC after AB. The new BC-only content (series, polar) can be learned independently with a good textbook or Khan Academy.

Related Calculators & Articles