AP Precalculus Score Calculator

AP Precalculus Score Calculator

📐 AP Score Calculator

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

28 questions · No calculator
12 questions · Graphing calculator
2 questions · No calculator · Max 12 pts
2 questions · Graphing calculator · Max 12 pts
Composite Score out of 64
Predicted AP Score

AP Score Scale

10 – 22
223 – 35
336 – 46
447 – 54
555 – 64

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

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📖 About This Calculator

P Precalculus Score Calculator is a free online tool designed to help students estimate their AP Precalculus exam score before or after the official results. Based on the College Board's scoring structure, this calculator takes your raw scores from all four sections — Multiple Choice Part A & B and Free Response Part A & B — and instantly predicts your final AP score on a scale of 1 to 5. Whether you're practicing with past papers or reviewing your actual exam performance, this tool gives you a clear picture of where you stand.

🚀 How to Use

1 Step 1 — Enter Multiple Choice Part A Score
2 Input the number of questions you answered correctly out of 28. This section is completed without a calculator. You can either type the number directly or drag the slider.
3 Step 2 — Enter Multiple Choice Part B Score
4 Input the number of correct answers out of 12. This section requires a graphing calculator. Adjust using the input box or the slider below it.
5 Step 3 — Enter Free Response Part A Score
6 This section contains 2 questions worth 6 points each, for a total of 12 points. Enter the total points you earned without a calculator.
7 Step 4 — Enter Free Response Part B Score
8 This section also contains 2 questions worth 6 points each, totaling 12 points. Enter your earned points for the graphing calculator-allowed section.
9 Step 5 — View Your Results
10 Once all scores are entered, the calculator automatically displays your Composite Score out of 64 and your Predicted AP Score from 1 to 5, along with a qualification label:
11 Score 1–2 → No Recommendation
12 Score 3 → Qualified
13 Score 4 → Well Qualified
14 Score 5 → Extremely Well Qualified
15 The score scale bar at the bottom highlights exactly which range your composite score falls into.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

No, this is an independent estimation tool built to help students predict their AP Precalculus exam score based on College Board's publicly available scoring structure. It is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or connected to College Board in any way. The predicted score it generates is an estimate based on typical composite score cutoffs, and actual results may vary since College Board finalizes official scores after each exam administration.
The key difference is calculator usage. Multiple Choice Part A contains 28 questions and must be completed without any calculator, testing your ability to work through precalculus concepts by hand. Part B contains 12 questions and allows a graphing calculator, focusing on problems that benefit from computational tools. Both sections are entered separately in the calculator so your composite score reflects the correct weighting of each part.
The composite score combines your raw scores from all four sections — MCQ Part A out of 28, MCQ Part B out of 12, FRQ Part A out of 12, and FRQ Part B out of 12. These four scores are added together to produce your total composite score out of 64. The calculator then maps that composite score to the standard AP 1 to 5 scale based on typical College Board score cutoff ranges for AP Precalculus.
Absolutely — this is actually one of the most effective ways to use it. After completing any full-length practice exam, enter your section scores into the calculator to instantly see your predicted AP score and identify which sections are dragging your composite score down. Using it consistently across multiple practice tests lets you track your improvement over time and focus your preparation on whichever sections — MCQ or FRQ, calculator or non-calculator — need the most work.

⚠️ Disclaimer

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