AP Macroeconomics Score Curve 2026 — Raw Score to AP Score
AP Macroeconomics uses a two-section composite score — 60 Multiple Choice questions and three Free Response questions — to produce a final AP score of 1–5. Here's the full breakdown for 2026.
AP Macro Score Cutoffs (2026)
| AP Score | Min Composite | % of Max | Label |
|---|---|---|---|
| 5 | 75 / 90 | 83% | Extremely well qualified |
| 4 | 58 / 90 | 64% | Well qualified |
| 3 | 44 / 90 | 49% | Qualified |
| 2 | 30 / 90 | 33% | Possibly qualified |
| 1 | 0 / 90 | — | No recommendation |
Use our AP Macroeconomics Score Calculator to enter your scores and get a predicted grade instantly.
How the AP Macro Composite Score Is Calculated
| Section | Weight | Max Raw Score | Scaled Contribution |
|---|---|---|---|
| Multiple Choice (60 Qs) | 66.7% | 60 | 60 points |
| FRQ 1 — Long (10 pts) | 33.3% | 10 | ~13.3 points |
| FRQ 2 — Short (6 pts) | 33.3% | 6 | ~8 points |
| FRQ 3 — Short (6 pts) | 33.3% | 6 | ~8 points |
| Total | 100% | — | ~90 points |
MC conversion: Each correct MC answer ≈ 1.0 composite point.
FRQ conversion: All three FRQs combined = 22 raw points → ~29.3 composite points. Each raw FRQ point ≈ 1.33 composite points.
Score Distribution (2026)
| Score | % of Students |
|---|---|
| 5 | 22% |
| 4 | 20% |
| 3 | 18% |
| 2 | 22% |
| 1 | 18% |
Pass rate (3 or higher): ~60%
5 rate: ~22% — notably high compared to other social studies APs, partly because students who self-select into AP Macro often have economics interest and strong analytical skills.
What Raw Score Do You Need?
To score a 5 (75/90): With 18/22 FRQ points (≈24 composite pts), you need approximately 51/60 MC (85%) to reach 75.
With perfect FRQ (22/22 = 29.3 pts), you need approximately 46/60 MC (77%).
To score a 4 (58/90): With 14/22 FRQ points (≈18.6 pts), you need approximately 39/60 MC (65%) to reach 58.
With 11/22 FRQ points (≈14.7 pts), you need approximately 43/60 MC (72%).
To score a 3 (44/90): With 9/22 FRQ points (≈12 pts), you need approximately 32/60 MC (53%) to reach 44.
With 7/22 FRQ points (≈9.3 pts), you need approximately 35/60 MC (58%).
AP Macro FRQ — What to Expect
The three FRQs are structured, point-based questions testing specific macroeconomic models. Unlike history essays, you earn points by correctly drawing and labeling graphs, identifying equilibrium changes, and applying model logic — not by writing paragraphs.
The Long FRQ (10 pts) typically covers one of the core macro models:
- AD-AS model (Aggregate Demand / Aggregate Supply)
- Money market
- Loanable funds market
- Phillips Curve
The Short FRQs (6 pts each) test more focused concepts: fiscal policy, monetary policy, exchange rates, balance of payments, or economic indicators.
Most commonly missed points:
- Forgetting to show where the curve shifts to AND label the new equilibrium
- Confusing short-run vs. long-run effects
- Mixing up expansionary and contractionary policy outcomes
- Getting the direction of exchange rate effects wrong
AP Macro vs AP Micro — Score Curves
| AP Macroeconomics | AP Microeconomics | |
|---|---|---|
| compositeMax | 90 | 90 |
| Score 5 min | 75/90 (83%) | 75/90 (83%) |
| Score 3 min | 44/90 (49%) | 44/90 (49%) |
| Pass rate | ~60% | ~66% |
| 5 rate | ~22% | ~19% |
Both use identical structures and cutoffs. AP Macro has a slightly lower pass rate because the content — GDP, inflation, monetary policy, international trade — requires understanding interconnected systems, not just individual market behavior.