HomeBlog › AP Physics 1 FRQ Guide 2026 — Free Response Tips, Format & Scoring

AP Physics 1 FRQ Guide 2026 — Free Response Tips, Format & Scoring

By Sarah Mitchell · April 14, 2026 · 4 min read · ✓ Verified 2026 CB data

The AP Physics 1 free response section is worth 50% of your total score. It has 5 questions totaling 60 raw points. Here's the full breakdown and how to maximize your score.

AP Physics 1 FRQ Format

FRQ Points Time (approx)
FRQ 1 12 pts ~22 min
FRQ 2 12 pts ~22 min
FRQ 3 12 pts ~22 min
FRQ 4 12 pts ~22 min
FRQ 5 — Experimental Design 12 pts ~22 min
Total 60 pts 110 min

The 60 FRQ points scale to 75 composite points (50% of 150).

The 5 FRQ Types

FRQs 1–4: Standard Multi-Part Questions

Each standard FRQ has 3–5 sub-parts and tests different physics skills:

FRQ 5: Experimental Design

FRQ 5 always tests your ability to design and analyze an experiment. You must:

How AP Physics 1 FRQs Are Scored

Each FRQ is scored point-by-point. Every point has a specific criterion.

Critical rules:

Claim-Evidence-Reasoning (CER) Format

AP Physics 1 FRQs frequently ask you to "justify," "explain," or "support your answer." The expected format is Claim-Evidence-Reasoning (CER):

Example prompt: "A student claims doubling the mass of a pendulum will halve its period. Do you agree? Justify your answer."

❌ Weak answer: "No, the period doesn't depend on mass."

✓ Strong answer (CER): "No, the period will remain the same. [Claim] The period of a simple pendulum is given by T = 2π√(L/g), which depends only on length and gravitational acceleration — not mass. [Evidence] Therefore, doubling the mass changes neither L nor g, and the period is unchanged. [Reasoning]"

Experimental Design FRQ — Earning All 12 Points

FRQ 5 follows a predictable structure. A full-credit response includes:

1. Variables (2 pts)

2. Procedure (3 pts)

3. Data collection and analysis (4 pts)

4. Error analysis (2 pts)

5. Claim (1 pt)

Most Common Mistakes on AP Physics 1 FRQs

1. Writing equations without identifying variables Writing "F = ma" earns 0 if you don't define what F, m, and a are in this specific problem.

2. Forgetting direction in force/motion problems Physics is a vector science. "The net force is 10 N" is incomplete. "The net force is 10 N directed downward" is correct.

3. Drawing free body diagrams wrong

4. Skipping qualitative reasoning questions Many students focus on calculation parts and skip "explain" or "describe" parts. These are often 2–3 points each and don't require math.

5. Not linearizing data for graphing If asked to make a graph that shows a linear relationship, use the equation to determine what to plot. For T = 2π√(L/g), plot T² vs. L (not T vs. L) to get a straight line.

Score Impact of FRQs

With compositeMax = 150:

FRQ Raw Score Composite pts Combined with 32/45 MC, final score
54/60 (90%) ~67.5 pts ~107/150 → 4–5 range
42/60 (70%) ~52.5 pts ~92/150 → 4
30/60 (50%) ~37.5 pts ~77/150 → 3–4

AP Physics 1 has a low 5 rate (~7%) largely because FRQ performance is weak. Students who master the CER format and experimental design questions consistently score above average.

Sources & Data

Was this article helpful?

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.