AP Human Geography Score Curve 2026 — Raw Score to AP Score
AP Human Geography uses a two-section scoring system — 60 Multiple Choice questions and three Free Response questions — to produce a final AP score of 1–5. Here's how the curve works in 2026.
AP Human Geography Score Cutoffs (2026)
| AP Score | Min Composite | % of Max | Label |
|---|---|---|---|
| 5 | 104 / 135 | 77% | Extremely well qualified |
| 4 | 80 / 135 | 59% | Well qualified |
| 3 | 58 / 135 | 43% | Qualified |
| 2 | 38 / 135 | 28% | Possibly qualified |
| 1 | 0 / 135 | — | No recommendation |
Use our AP Human Geography Score Calculator to enter your scores and get a predicted grade instantly.
How the AP Human Geo Composite Score Is Calculated
| Section | Weight | Max Raw Score | Scaled Contribution |
|---|---|---|---|
| Multiple Choice (60 Qs) | 50% | 60 | 67.5 points |
| FRQ 1 (7 pts) | ~17% | 7 | ~22.5 points |
| FRQ 2 (7 pts) | ~17% | 7 | ~22.5 points |
| FRQ 3 (7 pts) | ~17% | 7 | ~22.5 points |
| Total | 100% | — | 135 points |
MC conversion: Each correct MC answer ≈ 1.125 composite points (67.5 ÷ 60).
FRQ conversion: Each FRQ is worth 0–7 raw points, scaled to ~22.5 composite points. Each FRQ raw point ≈ 3.21 composite points.
Score Distribution (2026)
| Score | % of Students |
|---|---|
| 5 | 12% |
| 4 | 18% |
| 3 | 23% |
| 2 | 25% |
| 1 | 22% |
Pass rate (3 or higher): ~53% — one of the lower pass rates among social studies APs.
1 rate: ~22% — notably high. Many students underestimate the exam's geographic and analytical demands.
What Raw Score Do You Need?
To score a 5 (104/135): With 18/21 FRQ points (≈57.9 pts), you need approximately 41/60 MC (68%) to reach 104.
With 15/21 FRQ points (≈48.2 pts), you need approximately 50/60 MC (83%).
To score a 4 (80/135): With 14/21 FRQ points (≈45 pts), you need approximately 31/60 MC (52%) to reach 80.
With 11/21 FRQ points (≈35.4 pts), you need approximately 40/60 MC (67%).
To score a 3 (58/135): With 9/21 FRQ points (≈29 pts), you need approximately 26/60 MC (43%) to reach 58.
With 7/21 FRQ points (≈22.5 pts), you need approximately 32/60 MC (53%).
How AP Human Geography FRQs Work
The three FRQs (each worth 7 raw points) are structured, multi-part questions — not essays. Each FRQ tests a specific geographic concept using stimulus material (maps, data, images, or scenarios).
Typical FRQ structure:
- Part A: Define or identify a concept (1–2 pts)
- Part B: Apply the concept to the stimulus material (2–3 pts)
- Part C: Explain a geographic pattern, cause, or consequence (2–3 pts)
Common FRQ topics: urbanization, migration patterns, cultural diffusion, demographic transition model, agricultural land use, political geography, economic development.
Key tip: AP Human Geography FRQs reward precise geographic terminology. "People moved to cities" earns 0; "rural-to-urban migration increased due to push factors including agricultural mechanization" earns full credit.
Why the Pass Rate Is Lower Than Expected
AP Human Geography is often taken by 9th and 10th graders — younger students who are also taking their first AP course. The lower pass rate (~53%) partly reflects this demographic, not just course difficulty.
Students who prepare thoroughly (especially for the vocabulary-heavy content) score well. The exam rewards geographic reasoning and content knowledge, not essay writing skill.