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AP Score Curves 2026 — Every Exam's Raw Score to 5-Point Scale

By Sarah Mitchell · April 25, 2026 · 7 min read · ✓ Verified 2026 CB data

Every AP exam converts your raw composite score into a 1–5 scale using a score curve. The thresholds shift slightly each year based on exam difficulty — but the patterns are consistent enough to plan around. This page collects the score curves for every major AP exam in one place.

Quick note on accuracy: College Board doesn't publish exact cutoffs until after scores release in July. The tables below reflect historical data from recent exam years (2022–2024). Real cutoffs typically move by 2–5 points year over year.

How the AP Score Curve Works

Your raw composite score is calculated by combining your Multiple Choice and Free Response performance. Each section is weighted differently depending on the exam — usually 50/50, though some exams (like AP Psych) weight MC at 67%.

That composite score is then mapped to the 1–5 scale using cutoffs that College Board sets after the exam is administered. If the exam was harder than expected that year, cutoffs shift down slightly to keep the score distribution consistent.

The key insight: you don't need to score perfectly to earn a 5. On most exams, earning 65–75% of total composite points earns the top score.


AP Calculus AB Score Curve

AP Score Composite Range (0–108) % of Students
5 70–108 22%
4 52–69 17%
3 38–51 20%
2 27–37 18%
1 0–26 23%

Composite max: 108 (54 MC + 54 FRQ)

A 5 requires roughly 65% of composite points. A 3 requires just 35% — achievable with solid fundamentals in derivatives, integrals, and FTC.

AP Calc AB Score Calculator


AP Calculus BC Score Curve

AP Score Composite Range (0–108) % of Students
5 68–108 39%
4 54–67 19%
3 40–53 18%
2 26–39 13%
1 0–25 11%

Composite max: 108 (same structure as AB)

BC has a 39% five-rate — the highest of any calculus course. This is largely because the students who take BC self-select; the curve itself isn't dramatically more lenient than AB.

BC also generates an AB subscore: your performance on the AB-content questions within the BC exam is reported separately as a second AP score.

AP Calc BC Score Calculator


AP Biology Score Curve

AP Score Composite Range (0–150) % of Students
5 110–150 14%
4 85–109 22%
3 65–84 29%
2 50–64 20%
1 0–49 15%

Composite max: 150 (75 MC + 75 FRQ)

A 5 requires 73% of composite points. A 3 requires 43%. AP Bio has a relatively generous three-rate (65%) compared to other sciences.

AP Biology Score Calculator


AP Chemistry Score Curve

AP Score Composite Range (0–150) % of Students
5 110–150 11%
4 85–109 18%
3 60–84 26%
2 40–59 22%
1 0–39 23%

Composite max: 150 (75 MC + 75 FRQ)

AP Chemistry has a ~55% pass rate — one of the harder AP sciences. No calculator is allowed on the MC section, which catches students off guard. A 5 requires 73% of composite.

AP Chemistry Score Calculator


AP Physics 1 Score Curve

AP Score Composite Range (0–150) % of Students
5 115–150 14%
4 85–114 14%
3 55–84 20%
2 35–54 26%
1 0–34 26%

Composite max: 150 (75 MC + 75 FRQ)

AP Physics 1 consistently has one of the lowest pass rates of any AP exam — around 43–48%. The 5-rate and 4-rate are identical at 14%, which is unusual. The exam is concept-heavy and requires genuine reasoning, not just formula application.

AP Physics 1 Score Calculator


AP Statistics Score Curve

AP Score Composite Range (0–100) % of Students
5 70–100 16%
4 55–69 20%
3 40–54 24%
2 25–39 24%
1 0–24 16%

Composite max: 100 (50 MC + 50 FRQ)

AP Stats has a symmetric-looking distribution — roughly equal proportions on each side of the median. The investigative task FRQ (worth 9 of 50 FRQ points) can make or break your score. A 3 requires 40% of composite.

AP Statistics Score Calculator


AP US History (APUSH) Score Curve

AP Score Composite Range (0–150) % of Students
5 111–150 13%
4 85–110 19%
3 65–84 22%
2 44–64 25%
1 0–43 21%

Composite max: 150 (MC + SAQ + DBQ + LEQ)

APUSH has a 54% pass rate and a complex multi-section format. The DBQ (25% weight) is the highest-leverage component — strong sourcing and contextualization can swing your composite by 10+ points.

APUSH Score Calculator


AP World History Score Curve

AP Score Composite Range (0–150) % of Students
5 111–150 15%
4 85–110 19%
3 65–84 23%
2 44–64 24%
1 0–43 19%

Composite max: 150 — same structure as APUSH (MC + SAQ + DBQ + LEQ)

The score distribution and cutoffs are nearly identical to APUSH. AP World has a slightly higher pass rate, likely due to the broader (and for many students, more accessible) content scope.

AP World History Score Calculator


AP European History Score Curve

AP Score Composite Range (0–150) % of Students
5 111–150 14%
4 85–110 18%
3 65–84 22%
2 44–64 25%
1 0–43 21%

Composite max: 150 — same four-section format as APUSH/AP World

AP Euro is taken by fewer students than APUSH or AP World, but the format and score distribution are virtually identical. Content depth on Renaissance through Cold War Europe is the main challenge.

AP European History Score Calculator


AP Psychology Score Curve

AP Score Composite Range (0–150) % of Students
5 113–150 20%
4 93–112 22%
3 71–92 25%
2 55–70 17%
1 0–54 16%

Composite max: 150 — but MC carries 67% of the weight

AP Psych has one of the higher five-rates among AP sciences/social sciences at 20%. The 100-question MC section dominates scoring more than in any other AP exam. If you can score 75%+ on MC, you're in a strong position regardless of FRQ performance.

AP Psychology Score Calculator


AP Government Score Curve

AP Score Composite Range (0–120) % of Students
5 101–120 14%
4 84–100 18%
3 61–83 26%
2 43–60 24%
1 0–42 18%

Composite max: 120 (MC 50% + 4 FRQs 50%)

AP Gov requires both content knowledge (required court cases, foundational documents) and analytical writing. The required court cases appear on almost every exam — knowing them cold is non-negotiable.

AP Government Score Calculator


AP Macroeconomics Score Curve

AP Score Composite Range (0–90) % of Students
5 75–90 21%
4 58–74 22%
3 44–57 26%
2 30–43 19%
1 0–29 12%

Composite max: 90 (60 MC + 30 FRQ)

AP Macro has a decent five-rate at 21%. The MC section (67% weight) includes a lot of graph interpretation questions — understanding supply/demand, money markets, and the AD-AS model visually is essential.

AP Macroeconomics Score Calculator


AP English Language Score Curve

AP Score Composite Range (0–150) % of Students
5 110–150 12%
4 87–109 20%
3 66–86 31%
2 50–65 23%
1 0–49 14%

Composite max: ~150 (MC 45% + 3 essays 55%)

AP Lang has a high three-rate at 63%. Essays are graded on a 1–6 rubric and account for the majority of your composite. Strong rhetorical analysis and argumentative writing — not content memorization — determines your score.

AP English Language Score Calculator


Quick Comparison: All AP Score Curves at a Glance

Exam Composite Max Score 5 Cutoff Score 3 Cutoff 5-Rate Pass Rate
AP Calc AB 108 70 (65%) 38 (35%) 22% 59%
AP Calc BC 108 68 (63%) 40 (37%) 39% 76%
AP Biology 150 110 (73%) 65 (43%) 14% 65%
AP Chemistry 150 110 (73%) 60 (40%) 11% 55%
AP Physics 1 150 115 (77%) 55 (37%) 14% 45%
AP Statistics 100 70 (70%) 40 (40%) 16% 60%
APUSH 150 111 (74%) 65 (43%) 13% 54%
AP World History 150 111 (74%) 65 (43%) 15% 57%
AP Euro 150 111 (74%) 65 (43%) 14% 54%
AP Psychology 150 113 (75%) 71 (47%) 20% 67%
AP Government 120 101 (84%) 61 (51%) 14% 58%
AP Macroeconomics 90 75 (83%) 44 (49%) 21% 69%
AP English Language 150 110 (73%) 66 (44%) 12% 63%

Does the Score Curve Change Every Year?

Yes — College Board adjusts cutoffs annually. The adjustment is based on overall exam performance: if a particular year's exam was harder, cutoffs shift down by a few points so the score distribution stays consistent.

In practice, cutoffs typically move by 2–5 points maximum in any direction year over year. The tables above reflect recent historical averages and are reliable for planning purposes.

If you want to estimate your score before official results release in July, use the subject-specific score calculators on APScoreHub. They use historical conversion data to estimate your 1–5 score from raw MC and FRQ inputs.


Frequently Asked Questions

When do AP scores come out? Scores are released in early-to-mid July, about 2 months after the May exam window. College Board notifies you by email when scores are available in your account.

What is a good AP score? A 3 is the minimum passing score and earns college credit at most universities. A 4 is strong and earns credit at almost all schools. A 5 is the highest and can exempt you from more selective programs' introductory requirements.

Does AP score affect GPA? AP exam scores don't affect your high school GPA — only your grade in the AP course does. However, many schools weight AP course grades (giving an extra GPA point for an A in an AP class vs. a regular class).

Can I retake an AP exam? Yes. You can retake any AP exam in a future year. Colleges see all scores you choose to send, but you control which scores are reported — you're not required to send all of them.


Sources & Data

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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.