Free AP Calculus AB FRQ Guide 2026 — 6 Questions, Scoring Strategy & Worked Examples
HomeBlog › AP Calculus AB FRQ Guide 2026

AP Calculus AB FRQ Guide 2026 — Free Response Tips, Format & Examples

By Sarah Mitchell · July 4, 2026 · 5 min read · ✓ Verified 2026 CB data

The AP Calculus AB free response section is worth 50% of your total score and consists of 6 questions. Unlike the multiple choice section, partial credit is real — a student who earns 0 on every MC question can still score a 3 with a strong FRQ performance. Here's exactly how to maximize your points.

AP Calc AB FRQ Format

PartQuestionsCalculator?TimePoints
Part AFRQ 1–2Yes (graphing calculator required)30 min~12 pts each
Part BFRQ 3–6No60 min~9 pts each
Total6 FRQs90 min54 pts

The 54 raw FRQ points are scaled to 54 composite points (50% of the 108-point total). The MC section accounts for the other 54 points.

Important: Once Part A ends, you cannot return to FRQ 1–2. Once Part B begins, your calculator must be put away — and you cannot use it for any Part B question, even to check arithmetic.

Calculator vs. No-Calculator: What Changes

Part A (calculator allowed): Problems typically involve numerical computation that would be difficult or impossible by hand — finding zeros of functions, evaluating definite integrals numerically, solving equations. The calculator is expected to handle the computation; you handle the setup. Always write out the integral or equation you're solving, then state the calculator result.

Part B (no calculator): Problems require algebraic manipulation, derivative rules, integration techniques, and conceptual reasoning. You'll be expected to show full work step by step. Decimal approximations are rarely appropriate here — keep exact forms (π, √2, ln 2).

The 6 FRQ Types You'll See

AP Calc AB FRQs follow recognizable patterns from year to year. Familiarize yourself with each type:

1. Rate / Accumulation (almost always Part A, FRQ 1)

A context: water flowing into a tank, cars entering a parking lot, a particle moving along a line. You're given a rate function r(t) and asked to: (a) find the value of an integral (net change), (b) write an equation for a quantity at time t, (c) find a rate of change at a specific time, (d) find a maximum or minimum. This is the most common type and the one to drill hardest.

2. Particle Motion (often Part A or B)

Position, velocity, acceleration. You need to know: v(t) = x'(t), a(t) = v'(t) = x''(t); distance traveled = ∫|v(t)|dt; displacement = ∫v(t)dt. The particle is moving left when v(t) < 0 and speeding up when v and a have the same sign.

3. Graph Analysis (reading graphs, often Part B)

You're given a graph of f, f', or f'' and asked about the other functions. Memorize: f is increasing where f' > 0, concave up where f'' > 0 (or f' is increasing). A relative maximum occurs where f' changes from positive to negative.

4. Area and Volume

Area between curves: ∫[a to b] (top − bottom) dx. Volume by washers/disks: π∫[a to b] [f(x)]² dx or π∫[a to b] ([f(x)]² − [g(x)]²) dx. Volume by cross sections: integrate the area of the cross section across the base.

5. Differential Equations

Slope fields: sketch by plugging coordinates into dy/dx. Separable DEs: separate variables, integrate both sides, apply initial condition to solve for C. Euler's method: y_{n+1} = y_n + h·f'(x_n, y_n) — step through manually.

6. Function Behavior / Analysis (no specific formula, conceptual)

Using the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus: if g(x) = ∫[a to x] f(t) dt, then g'(x) = f(x). Mean Value Theorem, Intermediate Value Theorem, Extreme Value Theorem — know the conditions and conclusions of each.

How the Rubric Works

AP Calc AB FRQs use a point-by-point rubric where each part of a question (a, b, c, d) is worth 1–4 points. Key facts about how graders score:

5 Mistakes That Lose Points

  1. Missing units. "The rate is 4" when the answer should be "4 gallons per minute" — costs a point every time.
  2. Calculator answer without setup. On Part A, writing "∫ = 7.423" without writing the integral being evaluated earns zero points. Always write the expression first.
  3. Sign errors in displacement vs. distance. Displacement = ∫v(t)dt (signed). Distance = ∫|v(t)|dt (always positive). Splitting at zeros of v(t) is required when v changes sign.
  4. Losing C in integration. When solving a DE or finding an antiderivative, forgetting +C and then not applying an initial condition loses two points: one for the missing constant, one for not finding the particular solution.
  5. Vague justification. "The function has a maximum because the derivative changes" earns nothing. "f has a relative maximum at x = 2 because f'(2) = 0 and f' changes from positive to negative at x = 2" earns the point.

Justification template: [Claim] because [evidence using the specific function/value]. AP graders score the justification as a separate point from the answer — even a correct answer earns zero justification points without explanation.

Worked Example: Rate/Accumulation FRQ

Prompt: Water flows into a tank at a rate modeled by W(t) = 30t·e^(−t/5) gallons per hour, where t is measured in hours. At t = 0, the tank contains 200 gallons.

(a) Find the total amount of water that flows into the tank from t = 0 to t = 4.

Answer: ∫[0 to 4] W(t) dt = ∫[0 to 4] 30t·e^(−t/5) dt ≈ 131.009 gallons. (Use calculator for Part A problems like this.)

Award-winning student writes: "∫₀⁴ 30te^(−t/5) dt ≈ 131.009 gallons." The integral expression, numerical result, and units — all three earn points.

(b) Is the amount of water in the tank increasing or decreasing at t = 6? Give a reason.

Answer: W(6) ≈ 30(6)·e^(−6/5) = 180e^(−1.2) ≈ 54.2 > 0. Since the rate of flow is positive, the amount of water is increasing at t = 6.

(c) Find the amount of water in the tank at t = 4.

Answer: Amount = 200 + ∫[0 to 4] W(t) dt ≈ 200 + 131.009 = 331.009 gallons. Use the answer from part (a) and carry it forward — this is the accumulation formula: Q(t) = Q(0) + ∫[0 to t] rate dt.

Score Impact of FRQs

FRQ Raw Score (/54)Approximate CompositeEstimated AP Score
49–54~93–1085
40–48~79–924
27–39~60–783
14–26~40–592
0–130–391

FRQ partial credit is real. A student who writes the correct setup for every question but makes arithmetic errors everywhere will still earn substantial partial credit — often enough to pass.

Ready to practice? Test your knowledge before exam day.

AP Calculus AB Practice Test →

Or use the AP Calc AB score calculator →

Related Guides

SM
Sarah Mitchell · AP Educator & Tutor

Sarah Mitchell has tutored AP students for 8 years and scored 5s on 11 AP exams. She writes about AP scoring strategy and exam preparation at APScoreHub.

Was this article helpful?