Independent AP Score Estimates

Free AP Score Calculators

Estimate your AP score with independent, unofficial calculators for AP Biology, AP Chemistry, and AP U.S. History.

These tools use AP exam structures, recent score distributions, and estimated cutoffs. They are not official College Board calculators.

Choose an AP Score Calculator

Select a subject and enter your practice exam results to estimate an AP score.

AP Bio

AP Biology Score Calculator

Estimate your AP Biology score using MCQ and FRQ raw score inputs.

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AP Chem

AP Chemistry Score Calculator

Estimate your AP Chemistry score using MCQ and free-response raw score inputs.

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APUSH

AP U.S. History Score Calculator

Estimate your APUSH score using MCQ, SAQ, DBQ, and LEQ raw performance.

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How score estimates work

Each calculator uses the exam structure for that AP subject, applies section weights, and estimates a composite score. Because College Board does not publish official raw-score cutoff tables, the score ranges shown here are independent estimates.

Frequently Asked Questions

What to know before using an AP score estimate.

Are these AP score calculators official?

No. These are independent, unofficial estimation tools and are not affiliated with or endorsed by College Board.

How do these AP score calculators work?

You enter raw score estimates for each section. The calculator applies section weights, estimates a composite score, and maps that estimate to an AP score from 1 to 5 using unofficial cutoffs.

How accurate are the calculators?

They are useful for practice planning, but they cannot predict an official AP score with certainty. Actual scoring boundaries are not published and may vary.

Which AP calculators are available?

AP Biology, AP Chemistry, and AP U.S. History are currently available.

Do these calculators use official College Board data?

They use official exam structures and published score distribution data where available, but the composite formulas and score cutoffs are independent estimates.

Can AP scores earn college credit?

Possibly. Credit and placement policies vary by college, department, major, and enrollment year. Students should check each college’s current AP credit policy.