AP Government Score Curve 2026 — Raw Score to AP Score Conversion
AP US Government and Politics uses a two-section scoring system — Multiple Choice and Free Response — each worth 50% of your total score. Here's how the curve works for 2026.
AP Gov Score Cutoffs (2026)
| AP Score | Min Composite | % of Max | Label |
|---|---|---|---|
| 5 | 101 / 120 | 84% | Extremely well qualified |
| 4 | 84 / 120 | 70% | Well qualified |
| 3 | 61 / 120 | 51% | Qualified |
| 2 | 43 / 120 | 36% | Possibly qualified |
| 1 | 0 / 120 | — | No recommendation |
Use our AP Gov Score Calculator to enter your actual scores and get your predicted grade.
How the AP Gov Composite Score Is Calculated
| Section | Weight | Max Raw Score | Scaled Contribution |
|---|---|---|---|
| Multiple Choice (55 Qs) | 50% | 55 | 60 points |
| FRQ 1 — Concept Application | 50% | 3 pts | ≈17.6 pts |
| FRQ 2 — Quantitative Analysis | 50% | 4 pts | ≈23.5 pts |
| FRQ 3 — SCOTUS Comparison | 50% | 4 pts | ≈23.5 pts |
| FRQ 4 — Argument Essay | 50% | 6 pts | ≈35.3 pts |
| Total | 100% | — | 120 points |
The four FRQs together are worth 60 composite points total (50% of 120).
MC conversion: Each correct MC answer ≈ 1.09 composite points (60 ÷ 55).
FRQ total: All four FRQs combined max = 17 raw points, scaled to 60 composite points. Each FRQ raw point ≈ 3.53 composite points.
Score Distribution (2026)
| Score | % of Students |
|---|---|
| 5 | 12% |
| 4 | 16% |
| 3 | 25% |
| 2 | 25% |
| 1 | 22% |
Pass rate (3 or higher): ~53% — one of the lower pass rates among social studies APs.
What Raw Score Do You Need?
To score a 5 (101/120): With 14/17 FRQ points (≈49.4 pts), you need approximately 47/55 MC (86%) to reach 101. Exceptional performance required on both sections.
With perfect FRQ (17/17 = 60 pts), you need approximately 38/55 MC (69%) to reach 101.
To score a 4 (84/120): With 12/17 FRQ points (≈42.4 pts), you need approximately 38/55 MC (69%) to reach 84.
With 10/17 FRQ points (≈35.3 pts), you need approximately 45/55 MC (82%).
To score a 3 (61/120): With 8/17 FRQ points (≈28.2 pts), you need approximately 30/55 MC (55%) to reach 61.
With 6/17 FRQ points (≈21.2 pts), you need approximately 36/55 MC (65%).
The Argument Essay Is Your Highest-Leverage FRQ
The Argument Essay (FRQ 4) is worth 6 raw points — more than any other FRQ. At ≈3.53 composite points per raw point, a 6/6 Argument Essay is worth about 21 composite points vs. a 0/6 (21-point swing).
Argument Essay rubric:
- Defensible thesis: 1 point
- Use of evidence (2 required foundational docs/cases): 2 points
- Reasoning connecting evidence to thesis: 1 point
- Complexity (counterargument + refutation): 1 point
- Additional evidence from a second source: 1 point
Most students lose the complexity point and often the second evidence point. Practice writing the counterargument refutation paragraph explicitly.
SCOTUS Comparison FRQ — Unique to AP Gov
The SCOTUS Comparison FRQ (FRQ 3) is worth 4 raw points and is unique to AP Gov. You receive a brief description of an unfamiliar Supreme Court case and must:
- Identify the constitutional principle at stake (1 pt)
- Name a required case that addresses the same principle (1 pt)
- Explain the similarity or difference in reasoning (1 pt)
- State whether the decisions are consistent (1 pt)
This requires knowing all 15 required SCOTUS cases well enough to match them to novel fact patterns — not just memorizing names.
AP Gov vs Other Social Studies AP Score Curves
| Exam | Score 5 min | Score 3 min | Pass Rate |
|---|---|---|---|
| AP US Government | 101/120 (84%) | 61/120 (51%) | ~53% |
| AP US History | 111/150 (74%) | 65/150 (43%) | ~54% |
| AP World History | 111/150 (74%) | 65/150 (43%) | ~61% |
| AP European History | 111/150 (74%) | 65/150 (43%) | ~58% |
Note: AP Gov requires a much higher percentage of max composite (84%) for a 5, compared to the history exams (74%). This reflects how tough it is to reach the top score on AP Gov.