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AP Statistics Score Calculator 2026 — Free Score Predictor

AP Statistics is one of those exams where students consistently underestimate the difficulty until they’re staring at an inference question that requires three different concepts working together.

If you just finished a practice test and want to know where you actually stand, enter your scores below. This calculator uses the official College Board scoring formula and historical cutoff data from 2022–2024 AP Statistics exams.

AP Statistics Score Calculator 2026

40 MCQ (50%) + 6 FRQ questions (50%) = 100 composite points • 15% score a 5 • Pass rate: 58.7%

Choose Score Curve:

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50% of your total score

How AP Statistics Scoring Works

The exam is divided into two sections that together determine your final 1–5 score. Here is exactly how your raw scores become a composite and how that composite maps to the AP scale.

Section I — Multiple Choice (40 Questions, 50% of Score)

You have 90 min to answer 40 multiple-choice questions. There is no guessing penalty — every unanswered question is a missed opportunity, so bubble in an answer for every question even if you are unsure. Your MCQ raw score counts for 50% of your total composite.

Section II — Free Response (6 questions (5 short + 1 investigative task), 50% of Score)

You have 90 min for the free-response section. Your FRQ raw score is scaled and combined with your MCQ score to produce your composite out of 100. The composite is then converted to the 1–5 AP scale using that year's cutoffs.

Scoring formula: MCQ: 40 pts raw. FRQ: each scored 0-4, total 40 pts raw. Both scaled to 50 pts each.

Score Cutoffs (Estimated, Based on 2022–2024 Data)

AP Score Meaning Composite Range (est.)
5 Extremely Well Qualified 70-100
4 Well Qualified 57-69
3 Qualified 44-56
2 Possibly Qualified 30-43
1 No Recommendation 0-29

The College Board adjusts these cutoffs each year based on overall exam difficulty. These estimates are based on historical data from 2022–2024 and are accurate to within a few points in most years.

2024 Score Distribution

Here is how students performed on recent AP exams:

  • Score 5: ~15% of students
  • Pass rate (3 or higher): 58.7%
  • Mean score: 2.85
  • Total test-takers: approximately 220,000+

What Topics Are Tested — Unit Breakdown

Unit Topic Exam Weight
Unit 1 Exploring One-Variable Data 15–23%
Unit 2 Exploring Two-Variable Data 5–7%
Unit 3 Collecting Data 12–15%
Unit 4 Probability & Random Variables 10–20%
Unit 5 Sampling Distributions 7–12%
Unit 6 Inference for Categorical Data: Proportions 12–15%
Unit 7 Inference for Quantitative Data: Means 10–18%
Unit 8 Inference for Categorical Data: Chi-Square 2–5%
Unit 9 Inference for Quantitative Data: Slopes 2–5%

What Your Predicted Score Means

If You Predicted a 3 or Below

Identify which section is dragging your score down using the composite breakdown above. If MCQ is the issue, work through unit-by-unit content review using the weighting table — spend the most time on the highest-weighted units first. If FRQ is the issue, practice writing complete, specific, justified answers and compare your work against official College Board scoring guidelines for past exams.

If You Predicted a 4

Getting from a 4 to a 5 usually requires improving in 2–3 specific areas rather than a full content overhaul. Analyze your MCQ misses by unit. For FRQ, identify which question types cost you the most points and focus practice there. A few targeted improvements often move students from the 4 to 5 threshold.

If You Predicted a 5

Your goal now is consistency under exam conditions. Take full-length timed practice tests and track whether your performance holds in the later sections of the exam. Many students perform well on practice sets but drop points in the final 20% of the MCQ when fatigue kicks in. Build your stamina.

What AP Score Do You Need for College Credit?

Most universities accept 4 or 5 for introductory statistics credit. Many business, psychology, and social science programs give credit for a 3. Always verify your specific school’s AP credit policy at the College Board AP Credit Policy search tool — policies change and vary significantly between institutions.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is AP Statistics hard?

AP Statistics is considered moderately difficult — easier than Calculus BC but harder than many humanities APs. The pass rate is about 58.7%, with 15% scoring a 5. The conceptual reasoning required for inference problems is what trips up most students.

Can you use a calculator on AP Statistics?

Yes — a graphing calculator is required and essential. You need to know how to run hypothesis tests and confidence intervals on your TI-84 or equivalent. The College Board provides an approved calculator list.

How accurate is this score calculator?

This calculator uses the official College Board scoring formula and historical cutoff data from 2022–2024 AP exams. Predictions are typically within one composite point of actual scoring. However, College Board adjusts cutoffs each year based on exam difficulty, so treat your result as a highly informed estimate, not a guarantee.

When are AP scores released in 2026?

AP scores for the 2026 exam are expected in mid-July 2026, typically the week after the Fourth of July. Scores are released on a staggered schedule over several days. You can access your official scores by signing into your College Board account at cbaccount.collegeboard.org.

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Score predictions use official College Board scoring methodology and historical cutoff data from 2022–2024. Actual cutoffs vary annually. AP® and Advanced Placement® are registered trademarks of the College Board®. This calculator is independent and not affiliated with College Board.

About the Author

🎓 AP Lang Score: 5 · Stanford '25 · 3 Years AP Tutoring 21 articles published

I'm Ethan Caldwell, and I scored a 5 on the AP English Language and Composition exam in 2022 — after nearly bombing my first full practice test with a composite score of 61. That gap between my first attempt and exam day is exactly what this site is built on. I spent months reverse-engineering the College Board's scoring formula, tracking my practice scores against the actual cutoffs, and figuring out which essay moves consistently earn rubric points and which ones just feel impressive. I built the first version of this calculator in a Google Sheet my junior year because nothing online actually showed the MCQ-to-FRQ weighting clearly. Over 50,000 students later, it's still the same core idea — honest math, no paywalls. I graduated from Stanford University in 2025 with a degree in Cognitive Science, where I focused on how students process feedback and build test-taking strategies. I've tutored AP Lang privately for three years, working directly with students at the 2→3 and 3→4 score thresholds, which are the most common stuck points. I've read hundreds of student essays and graded them against official College Board rubrics. Every article on this site comes from that real-world experience. When I write about the sophistication point, it's because I've watched students miss it the exact same way seventeen times in a row. When I say the synthesis essay is more forgiving than most teachers claim, it's because I've run the scoring numbers and seen it. If you're here because you just took a practice test and you're nervous about where you stand — you're in the right place. Use the calculator, read the study guides, and reach out if you have questions.