What to Do After Your AP Scores Come Out (2026 Guide)
What to Do After Your AP Scores Come Out (2026 Guide)
Your AP scores just dropped. Whether you're thrilled or disappointed, here's a clear action plan for what to do in the next few days.
Step 1: Understand Your Score
AP scores run from 1 to 5. Here's what each means in practice:
Score 5 — Extremely well qualified You demonstrated mastery equivalent to an A in a college-level course. Almost every college that accepts AP credit will grant it for a 5.
Score 4 — Well qualified Strong performance. Most colleges grant full credit or placement for a 4. A few selective schools require a 5 in certain subjects.
Score 3 — Qualified Many state universities and liberal arts colleges grant credit for a 3. Competitive private universities (Ivy League, MIT, etc.) often require a 4 or 5. A 3 is still a passing score.
Score 2 — Possibly qualified Rarely grants college credit. But it does not hurt your GPA or admissions prospects.
Score 1 — No recommendation Does not grant credit anywhere. Doesn't affect your GPA or college applications.
Step 2: Check Your College's AP Credit Policy
This is the most important step. Every college sets its own AP credit rules — a 3 earns credit at UC Berkeley for some subjects but not others; a 4 might be required at MIT.
How to find your college's policy:
- Search "[College Name] AP credit policy 2026"
- Check the registrar or admissions page
- Look specifically for your subject — policies differ by department
Things to check:
- Does a 3 earn credit, or is a 4 required?
- Does it count as credit hours, or just placement out of a course?
- Does it satisfy a specific requirement (e.g., "Math requirement") or is it just elective credit?
Step 3: Decide Whether to Send Scores
You pre-designated one school for a free score report before your exam. To send scores to additional colleges now:
- Log in at collegeboard.org → AP Scores → Send Scores
- Fee applies per college per exam
- You choose which scores to send — you don't have to send scores you're unhappy with
When to send scores:
- You scored 3+ at a school that grants credit for that score: send it
- You're using the score for placement (to skip a required course): send it
- Your score is lower than the school's threshold: you can withhold it
Step 4: If You're a Rising Senior — Use This for Applications
A strong AP score (4 or 5) is worth mentioning in your college application. It demonstrates academic rigor and subject mastery.
Where to mention AP scores:
- On your college application's "courses/grades" section
- In your college counselor's recommendation context (inform them)
- NOT in your main essay — it's too granular for the essay format
If you didn't score as hoped, you are not required to report AP scores in admissions applications. Only self-report scores you're proud of.
Step 5: If You're a Rising Junior — Plan for Next Year
Use your results to inform your AP course selections for junior year:
| Result | What it tells you |
|---|---|
| Scored 4–5 | Consider taking the next level (AB → BC, Bio → Chem) |
| Scored 3 | Your preparation was adequate — plan heavier studying next time |
| Scored 1–2 | Reassess difficulty level; talk to teacher about weak areas |
The AP exams you struggle with most are often the ones worth the most effort to retake — if that subject is relevant to your intended major.
Step 6: Consider Retaking
You can retake any AP exam the following May. Both scores stay on your record — you choose which ones to send to colleges.
Good reasons to retake:
- Your score was close to a threshold (scored 3 at a school needing 4, scored 4 at a school needing 5)
- The subject is central to your intended major
- You know specifically what you missed and can address it
Not worth retaking:
- You have no college that will grant meaningful credit even for a 5
- The subject is unrelated to your major or interests
- You'd be sacrificing prep time for higher-priority exams
What If You're Already in College?
If you took AP exams in high school and are now entering college:
- Submit your AP score report to your college's registrar
- They'll evaluate credit within a few weeks
- Use earned credits to skip prerequisites or fulfill distribution requirements
- This can save tuition money — sometimes a full semester's worth
See our guide: Do AP Classes Count as College Credit?
Helpful Resources
- AP Score Calculator — See how scores are calculated
- What Is a Good AP Score?
- AP Score Distributions 2026 — How others scored
- When Do AP Scores Come Out?
- AP Scores Release Date 2026
- Do AP Classes Raise Your GPA?
More From the Blog
- AP Score Curves 2026 — Every Exam's Raw Score to 5-Point Scale
- AP Scores 2026 Release Date — When and How to Access Your Results
- Every AP Course Ranked by Difficulty — Pass Rates, Workload, and What to Expect
- What Is FRQ in AP? Free Response Questions Explained (2026)
- AP vs IB — Which Is Better for College? (2026)