2026 AP US History Score Calculator

Calculate your AP US History exam score based on official College Board latest guidelines

Section 1: Multiple Choice

55% of total score

Questions correct:

28 / 55

Section 2: Free Response Questions

45% of total score • Essay Questions (6 pts each)

FRQ 1: Poetry Analysis

Analyze how a poet uses literary techniques to convey complex meaning in a given poem.

3 / 6

FRQ 2: Prose Fiction Analysis

Analyze how a prose fiction author uses literary elements and techniques to convey complex meaning.

3 / 6

FRQ 3: Literary Argument

Construct a defensible argument about a literary text using specific textual evidence from a work of your choice.

3 / 6

Your Predicted AP Score

3
out of 5

Composite Score: 50.5 / 100

Section 1 (MCQ): 28.0 pts (55% weight)
Section 2 (FRQ): 22.5 pts (45% weight)

Making Progress!

You're building momentum. Focusing on structural complexity and specific line evidence will help pull you up!

Access free AP Lit resources:

  • Sample Essay Vault
  • Literary Term Lists
  • FRQ Rubric Deconstructions
  • Poetry Prompt Hacks
  • Theme Analysis Sheets
  • Live Review Replays
AP English Lit Free Study Materials

National Performance (2025)

You scored better than 34.4% of test-takers

Score Distribution

Historical Score Trends (2020–2025)

Track how AP English Literature score distributions have shifted over the past 6 years

Score 1
Score 2
Score 3
Score 4
Score 5
Key Insight: Passing rates stabilized safely above 60% following the 6-point analytical rubric shift, which rewards sophisticated thesis structures.

Advanced Placement (AP) Resource Hub

Explore free class notes, summaries, assignments, cheat sheets shared by students to help you prepare for your AP exams.

Frequently Asked Questions

How accurate is this score prediction compared to the official College Board results?

This calculator uses the official College Board 2025 scoring guidelines to estimate your AP score. Because exams differ each year in difficulty and student performance varies, the final curve may change slightly. Use this predicted score as a tool to gauge your readiness and highlight areas where you should focus your study.
The AP English Literature exam is divided into 55% multiple-choice (MCQ) and 45% free-response questions (FRQ). The three essays each contribute 15% to your total score. Poetry Analysis (Q1), Prose Fiction Analysis (Q2), and Literary Argument (Q3) are equally weighted.
A 2 indicates developing skills but falls below the passing benchmark (3 or higher). You’re close—improving your essay scores by focusing on constructing defensible theses, incorporating specific textual evidence, and explaining how evidence supports your argument could raise your score significantly.
Review the section where your score was lowest (MCQ or FRQ). If your essay performance is low, focus on constructing defensible theses, incorporating specific textual evidence, and explaining how evidence supports your argument. You also gain access to free AP English Literature study materials uploaded by other students including essay examples, poetry analysis guides, and practice FRQs.
Both require you to analyze how literary techniques contribute to meaning. Poetry Analysis (Q1) focuses on interpreting a single poem, while Prose Fiction Analysis (Q2) examines a prose passage. Both use the same 6-point rubric: 1 point for thesis, 4 points for evidence and commentary, and 1 point for sophistication.
Focus on thesis construction, textual evidence integration, and line of reasoning development. According to the 2025 Chief Reader Report, the most common gaps are: vague evidence, lack of clear line of reasoning, and weak commentary that doesn’t explain how evidence supports claims. Practice timed essays and review sample responses with scoring commentaries.
The sophistication point rewards essays that demonstrate complex thinking. You can earn it by: (1) identifying and exploring tensions or complexities in the text, (2) situating your interpretation within a broader context, (3) accounting for alternative interpretations, or (4) employing a consistently vivid and persuasive writing style.
Absolutely. Adjust sliders to test how many MCQs or FRQ points you need to reach a target score. It’s an effective study planning tool, not just a post-test estimator. See how improving one essay by 1-2 points affects your composite score.
The calculator is updated annually in August, after College Board releases the new AP score distribution data for that exam year.
The 2025 exam featured prompts about characters affected by memories and characters who hold secrets. Practice selecting appropriate works of fiction, constructing defensible theses, and providing specific evidence from your chosen text. Review the 35+ suggested works in the prompt or select from your own reading.