AP Calculus AB Score Calculator

AP Calculus AB Score Calculator
📐 AP Calculus AB
College Board · 2024

Score Calculator

Enter your raw scores to predict your AP exam score (1–5)

01
Multiple Choice — Part A
30 questions · 60 minutes · No calculator
30 pts
/ 30
02
Multiple Choice — Part B
15 questions · 45 minutes · Graphing calculator
15 pts
/ 15
03
Free Response — Part A
2 questions · 30 minutes · Graphing calculator · 9 pts each
18 pts
/ 9
/ 9
04
Free Response — Part B
4 questions · 60 minutes · No calculator · 9 pts each
36 pts
/ 9
/ 9
/ 9
/ 9
Composite Score 0 out of 108
Predicted AP Score 1 No Recommendation
Score Breakdown
MC Part A (30 pts)
0 / 30
MC Part B (15 pts)
0 / 15
FRQ Part A (18 pts)
0 / 18
FRQ Part B (36 pts)
0 / 36
FRQ Detail
FRQ A10 / 9
FRQ A20 / 9
FRQ B10 / 9
FRQ B20 / 9
FRQ B30 / 9
FRQ B40 / 9
AP Score Scale
10–39
240–52
353–67
468–81
582–108

⚠️ Score thresholds are estimated based on College Board guidelines. Actual cutoffs may vary each year.

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📖 About This Calculator

AP Calculus AB Score Calculator is a free online tool designed to help students estimate their AP Calculus AB exam score before or after the official results. Based on the College Board's official scoring structure, this calculator takes your raw scores from all four sections — Multiple Choice Part A, Multiple Choice Part B, Free Response Part A, and Free Response Part B — and instantly predicts your final AP score on a scale of 1 to 5. With a detailed score breakdown, individual FRQ question tracking, and animated progress bars, this tool gives you a complete and accurate picture of your exam performance in seconds.

🚀 How to Use

1 Step 1 — Enter Multiple Choice Part A Score Input the number of questions you answered correctly out of 30. This section is completed without a calculator and is worth 30 points toward your composite score.
2 Step 2 — Enter Multiple Choice Part B Score Input the number of questions you answered correctly out of 15. This section requires a graphing calculator and is worth 15 points toward your composite score.
3 Step 3 — Enter Free Response Part A Scores Free Response Part A contains 2 questions worth 9 points each for a total of 18 points. A graphing calculator is allowed for this section. Enter your earned points for FRQ A1 and FRQ A2 individually.
4 Step 4 — Enter Free Response Part B Scores Free Response Part B contains 4 questions worth 9 points each for a total of 36 points. No calculator is allowed for this section. Enter your earned points for FRQ B1, FRQ B2, FRQ B3, and FRQ B4 individually.
5 Step 5 — Click Calculate My Score Once all scores are entered, click the Calculate My Score button to instantly see your full results.
6 Step 6 — View Your Results The calculator displays your Composite Score out of 108 and your Predicted AP Score from 1 to 5, along with animated progress bars for each section, a detailed FRQ breakdown for all 6 questions, a highlighted score scale, and a qualification label:
7 Score 1–2 → No Recommendation
8 Score 3 → Qualified
9 Score 4 → Well Qualified
10 Score 5 → Extremely Well Qualified

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

The AP Calculus AB exam has a total composite score of 108 points. It consists of two sections — Multiple Choice worth 45 points (30 from Part A and 15 from Part B) and Free Response worth 63 points (18 from Part A and 36 from Part B). Your composite score is then converted to a final AP score between 1 and 5.
A score of 3 or higher is generally considered passing and means you are "Qualified." Most colleges and universities grant credit or advanced placement for scores of 3, 4, or 5, though policies vary by institution.
This calculator uses estimated score thresholds based on community-verified College Board data and historical scoring patterns. Results are highly accurate for practice purposes but may vary slightly from your official score since College Board adjusts cutoffs each year based on exam difficulty.
A graphing calculator is allowed only on specific sections — Multiple Choice Part B and Free Response Part A. No calculator is permitted on Multiple Choice Part A and Free Response Part B.
The estimated score thresholds used in this calculator are: Composite Score AP Score 82 – 108 5 68 – 81 4 53 – 67 3 40 – 52 2 0 – 39 1
AP Calculus AB covers the equivalent of one semester of college calculus, focusing on limits, derivatives, and integrals. AP Calculus BC covers the equivalent of two semesters and includes all AB topics plus additional material such as sequences, series, and parametric equations. BC students receive both a BC score and an AB subscore.
The exam has 45 Multiple Choice questions total — 30 in Part A (no calculator) and 15 in Part B (graphing calculator allowed). The Free Response section has 6 questions total — 2 in Part A (graphing calculator allowed) and 4 in Part B (no calculator).
Most major universities in the United States accept AP Calculus AB scores of 3 or higher for college credit. A score of 4 or 5 typically earns credit for Calculus I. Always check your specific college's AP credit policy as requirements vary by institution.
Focus on practicing past Free Response questions from College Board's official website, review your weak topics in limits, derivatives, and integrals, practice with and without a calculator for the appropriate sections, and time yourself under real exam conditions to build speed and accuracy.
No, this calculator is specifically designed for AP Calculus AB. AP Calculus BC has a different scoring structure including an AB subscore. A separate AP Calculus BC Score Calculator would be needed for BC exam results.

⚠️ Disclaimer

Score thresholds are estimated based on College Board guidelines. Actual cut scores may vary each year. This tool is intended for reference and exam preparation purposes only.