AP Statistics Score Calculator
Move the sliders to your practice-test results and see your predicted AP Statistics score update live — section weighting matches the real exam, with cutoffs estimated from publicly released past curves.
Free calculator · No sign-up needed · Updated for the 2026 exam
What will you get on the AP Statistics exam?
Set your multiple-choice raw score and your Free response (Q1-5), Investigative task points. The calculator weights each part exactly the way the real exam does, then maps your composite to an estimated 1 to 5.
Updated June 2026 · Current format: 40 multiple-choice questions (50%), five free-response questions (37.5%), and one investigative task (12.5%)
40 questions · 90 minutes · 50% of your score
5 questions · scored 0-4 each · 37.5% of your score
Scored 0-4 · 12.5% of your score
Predicted AP score
Estimated composite: 59% of available points
Estimated bands from past released curves
This is an estimate based on publicly released past AP curves. The College Board re-sets the raw-to-score conversion for every exam through a process called equating, so the real cutoffs shift a few points each year. Use this to set a study target, not as a guarantee.
How is the AP Statistics exam scored?
The AP Statistics exam has two sections. Section I gives you 90 minutes for 40 multiple-choice questions, worth half of your score. Section II gives you 90 minutes for six free-response prompts: five standard questions worth 37.5% combined, and one longer investigative task worth 12.5% on its own — each scored holistically from 0 to 4.
Your raw points never go to colleges. The College Board combines your weighted section results into a composite score, then converts that composite to the 1-to-5 scale using a process called equating. Equating adjusts the cutoffs for each year's exam so that a 4 in 2026 represents the same level of mastery as a 4 in 2025, even if one version was slightly harder.
That is why no calculator — including this one — can tell you your exact score in advance. What it can do is map your practice raw scores onto cutoffs from publicly released past exams, which is precise enough to set a realistic target and to spot the section where extra points are cheapest for you.
The investigative task deserves special respect: it is a single prompt worth one-eighth of your entire exam, it always pushes you to apply ideas in a context you have not seen before, and it is graded on the same 0-4 scale as questions half its weight. Budgeting 25-30 minutes for it is standard advice from AP readers.
Section I: Multiple choice
- 40 questions in 90 minutes
- 50.0% of your exam score
- No penalty for wrong answers — always answer everything
Free response & writing
- 2 scored parts · 24 rubric points total
- 50.0% of your exam score
- Investigative task alone is worth 12.5% of your exam
What raw score do you need for a 5 on AP Stats?
Estimated targets from publicly released past curves, using the same weighting as the calculator above.
| AP score | Est. composite needed | Example raw scores |
|---|---|---|
| 5 | 70% or higher | About 28 of 40 MCQ plus 17 of 24 free-response points |
| 4 | 57% or higher | About 23 of 40 MCQ plus 14 of 24 free-response points |
| 3 | 44% or higher | About 18 of 40 MCQ plus 11 of 24 free-response points |
| 2 | 32% or higher | About 13 of 40 MCQ plus 8 of 24 free-response points |
Estimates rounded conservatively from past released curves. The real 2026 cutoffs will be set by equating after the exam.
How hard is it to get a 5 on AP Stats?
AP Statistics has a tougher score distribution than most students expect: in recent College Board data, a meaningful share of test-takers land at a 2, and 5s have required a composite around 70%. The exam punishes vague language — answers must state conditions, define parameters, and interpret results in context.
Free-response scoring is holistic (Essentially correct / Partially correct / Incorrect per part), which means precision of language moves scores more than computation. Writing conclusions in context — 'we have convincing evidence that the population mean is greater than…' — is the single most coachable AP Stats habit.
A calculator tells you where you are. Practice moves the number.
Upload your AP Stats review packet, class notes, or textbook chapters to Scholarly and turn them into cited answers, flashcards, and practice quizzes — so the gap between your current composite and your target closes one section at a time.
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AP Statistics score calculator questions
What raw score do I need to get a 5 on AP Stats?
Based on publicly released past curves, a 5 has typically required a composite around 70% of available points — for example, about 28 of 40 mcq plus 17 of 24 free-response points. The exact 2026 cutoff will be set by the College Board's equating process after the exam.
Is AP Stats curved?
Not in the classroom sense — your score never depends on how other students perform that year. Instead, the College Board uses equating to adjust raw-score cutoffs so a given AP score means the same thing across years. In practice it behaves like a conversion table that shifts a few points from year to year.
How is the AP Statistics exam structured in 2026?
The current format is 40 multiple-choice questions (50%), five free-response questions (37.5%), and one investigative task (12.5%). Section I gives you 90 minutes for 40 multiple-choice questions, worth half of your score. Section II gives you 90 minutes for six free-response prompts: five standard questions worth 37.5% combined, and one longer investigative task worth 12.5% on its own — each scored holistically from 0 to 4.
What is the investigative task on AP Statistics?
It is the sixth free-response prompt: a longer, multi-part question that applies course concepts in an unfamiliar setting, worth 12.5% of your whole exam — the same as the other five FRQs combined count for 37.5%. It is scored 0-4 holistically. Leave yourself 25-30 minutes for it; rushing it is the most common self-inflicted wound on this exam.
When do AP scores come out in 2026?
The College Board typically releases AP scores in early-to-mid July. For the May 2026 exams, expect results in July 2026 — the exact date is announced on the College Board website closer to release.
Is there a penalty for guessing on AP Stats?
No. Only correct answers count toward your multiple-choice score, so you should answer every question, even when you are making an educated guess.
How accurate is this AP Stats score calculator?
It is an estimate. The calculator weights each section exactly the way the exam does and uses conservative cutoffs from publicly released past curves, but the College Board re-equates every exam year, so the real boundaries move a few points. Treat the output as a target-setting tool, not a promise.
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