AP Gov FRQ Guide 2026 — Free Response Tips, Format & Scoring
The AP US Government free response section is worth 50% of your total score and has 4 distinct question types. Each requires a different strategy. Here's the complete breakdown.
AP Gov FRQ Format
| FRQ | Type | Points | Time |
|---|---|---|---|
| FRQ 1 | Concept Application | 3 pts | ~20 min |
| FRQ 2 | Quantitative Analysis | 4 pts | ~20 min |
| FRQ 3 | SCOTUS Comparison | 4 pts | ~20 min |
| FRQ 4 | Argument Essay | 6 pts | ~40 min |
| Total | 17 pts | 100 min |
The 17 raw FRQ points scale to 60 composite points (50% of the 120-point total). Each FRQ raw point ≈ 3.53 composite points.
FRQ 1 — Concept Application (3 pts)
You receive a real-world political scenario (a news story, a policy situation, or a political event) and must apply AP Gov content to it.
The 3 points are earned by:
- (a) Describe the scenario using a specific political science concept (1 pt)
- (b) Explain how the scenario illustrates the concept (1 pt)
- (c) Explain the effect of the scenario on a government institution or political actor (1 pt)
Key tip: The scenario is always designed to connect to one of the course's "big ideas." If you see a president refusing to enforce a law, think: separation of powers, checks and balances, executive power. Don't overthink it — pick the most obvious connection and explain it precisely.
Common topics tested: federalism, civil liberties, voting behavior, interest groups, bureaucracy, congressional procedures, executive orders.
FRQ 2 — Quantitative Analysis (4 pts)
You receive a visual — usually a bar chart, line graph, map, or table about political data — and must analyze it.
The 4 points are typically earned by:
- (a) Describe a pattern or trend from the data (1 pt)
- (b) Explain a reason for the pattern (1 pt)
- (c) Draw a conclusion or make a prediction based on the data (1 pt)
- (d) Explain how the data connects to a broader political concept (1 pt)
Common data types: voter turnout by demographic, approval ratings over time, electoral maps, party identification trends, congressional composition.
Key tip: Part (a) just requires describing the data — be specific and use numbers. "Democrats won more electoral votes in 2020 than in 2016" earns the point. Vague statements like "Democrats did better" do not.
FRQ 3 — SCOTUS Comparison (4 pts)
This is the most content-heavy FRQ. You receive a brief description of an unfamiliar Supreme Court case and must compare it to one of the 15 required SCOTUS cases.
The 4 points are earned by:
- (a) Identify the constitutional principle at stake in the non-required case (1 pt)
- (b) Identify a required SCOTUS case with the same constitutional principle (1 pt)
- (c) Explain the reasoning of the required case (1 pt)
- (d) Explain whether the two cases have consistent or inconsistent outcomes, and why (1 pt)
The 15 required SCOTUS cases (know all of these cold): Marbury v. Madison, McCulloch v. Maryland, Schenck v. United States, Brown v. Board of Education, Engel v. Vitale, Baker v. Carr, Tinker v. Des Moines, New York Times v. United States, Wisconsin v. Yoder, Roe v. Wade, Shaw v. Reno, United States v. Lopez, McDonald v. Chicago, Citizens United v. FEC, Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization.
Key tip: You don't need to know every detail of every case — focus on the constitutional principle and the outcome. For the SCOTUS Comparison FRQ, "matching" the right required case to the unfamiliar case's principle earns you 2 of the 4 points before you write a word of analysis.
FRQ 4 — Argument Essay (6 pts)
The Argument Essay is the highest-value FRQ (6 points = ~21 composite points). You receive a claim about American government and must defend, qualify, or refute it with evidence.
The 6 points are earned by:
| Component | Points | Requirement |
|---|---|---|
| Thesis | 1 pt | Defensible claim that goes beyond restating the prompt |
| Evidence — Foundational Document | 1 pt | Cite and use a required foundational document |
| Evidence — Second Source | 1 pt | Use a second required document, case, or data |
| Reasoning | 1 pt | Explain how evidence supports thesis (not just assert it) |
| Complexity | 1 pt | Counterargument + refutation OR explain nuance |
| Sophistication | 1 pt | (rare) Demonstrates particularly sophisticated reasoning |
Required foundational documents (must know these for evidence points): Declaration of Independence, Articles of Confederation, Constitution + Amendments (especially 1st, 2nd, 4th, 14th), Federalist No. 10, Federalist No. 51, Brutus No. 1, Letter from Birmingham Jail.
Most commonly missed points:
- Complexity point: Students state a counterargument but don't refute it. You must both state AND refute it in the same paragraph.
- Reasoning point: Students list evidence but don't explain how it supports the thesis. Add one connecting sentence: "This demonstrates [thesis claim] because..."
- Second evidence point: Many students only use one foundational document. The second point requires a different document, a required SCOTUS case, or a quantitative source.
Argument Essay template:
- Intro: Thesis that takes a clear position on the prompt
- Body paragraph 1: Evidence from foundational document + explanation
- Body paragraph 2: Evidence from a second source + explanation
- Body paragraph 3 (complexity): Counterargument + refutation
- Conclusion: Optional, not required for points
FRQ Score Impact
| FRQ Raw Score | Composite pts | Combined with avg MC (28/55), final score |
|---|---|---|
| 17/17 (100%) | 60 pts | ~91/120 → 5 |
| 13/17 (76%) | ~46 pts | ~76/120 → 4 |
| 9/17 (53%) | ~32 pts | ~62/120 → 3 |
The Argument Essay alone (6 pts) is worth ~21 composite points — equivalent to getting 19 more MC questions correct.