AP Calc BC Score Calculator
Move the sliders to your practice-test results and see your predicted AP Calculus BC score update live — the multiple choice and each 9-point free-response question are weighted exactly like 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 Calculus BC exam?
Set your multiple-choice raw score, then your free-response points for the calculator questions (Q1-2) and the no-calculator questions (Q3-6). 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: 45 multiple-choice questions (50%) and six 9-point free-response questions (50%), with calculator and no-calculator parts in both sections
45 questions · 105 minutes · 50% of your score
2 questions · 9 points each · graphing calculator required
4 questions · 9 points each · no calculator allowed
Predicted AP score
Estimated composite: 61% 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 Calculus BC exam scored?
The AP Calculus BC exam has two sections of equal weight. Section I gives you 1 hour 45 minutes for 45 multiple-choice questions — 30 without a calculator, then 15 where a graphing calculator is required. Section II gives you 90 minutes for six free-response questions, each scored out of 9 rubric points by AP readers: two calculator questions in the first 30 minutes, then four no-calculator questions in the last hour.
Your raw points never go to colleges. On the official scoring worksheet, your multiple-choice count is scaled to 54 points and added to your 54 possible free-response points for a composite out of 108. The College Board converts that composite to the 1-to-5 scale through a process called equating, which adjusts the cutoffs each year so a 4 in 2026 represents the same mastery as a 4 in 2025, even if one version ran 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 whether your cheapest remaining points are in the multiple choice or in a specific FRQ type.
Calc BC's released cutoffs are among the most reachable of any AP exam — composites in the high-50s percent have been enough for a 5 — but that reflects who takes it: a self-selected group that has already pushed past AB-level calculus, close to half of whom earn the top score. The rubrics themselves are unforgiving of bare answers; most of each question's 9 points sit in the setup and justification, not the final number.
Section I: Multiple choice
- 45 questions in 105 minutes — 30 no-calculator, then 15 with a graphing calculator
- 50% of your exam score, scaled to 54 composite points
- No penalty for wrong answers — always answer everything
Section II: Free response
- 6 questions · 9 points each · 54 rubric points total
- 50% of your exam score — the series question traditionally closes the exam
- Points attach to setup and justification, not just the final answer
What raw score do you need for a 5 on AP Calc BC?
Estimated targets from publicly released past curves, using the same weighting as the calculator above.
| AP score | Est. composite needed | Example raw scores |
|---|---|---|
| 5 | 58% or higher | About 30 of 45 MCQ plus 27 of 54 free-response points — roughly 4 to 5 points per FRQ |
| 4 | 46% or higher | About 24 of 45 MCQ plus 21 of 54 free-response points |
| 3 | 36% or higher | About 18 of 45 MCQ plus 18 of 54 free-response points |
| 2 | 27% or higher | About 14 of 45 MCQ plus 13 of 54 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 Calc BC?
Calc BC posts one of the strongest score distributions of any AP exam — in recent years roughly four in five students earn a 3 or higher and close to half earn a 5. That is not because the material is easy; the cohort is self-selected, mostly students who accelerated through or beyond AB. You also receive a Calculus AB subscore alongside your BC score, computed from the roughly 60% of the exam built on AB topics, and many colleges grant AB-level credit from it even when the BC score falls short of their cutoff.
The free response is where 5 candidates separate, and the series question — traditionally the final FRQ — is the classic discriminator: building a Taylor or Maclaurin series, finding a radius of convergence with the ratio test, and bounding error with the alternating series bound or Lagrange remainder. Across all six FRQs the rubric pays for shown reasoning — the integral you set up, the sign analysis that justifies a maximum, correct units — so a bare correct answer can earn one point of nine while a clean setup with an arithmetic slip usually keeps most of them.
A calculator tells you where you are. Practice moves the number.
Upload your Calc BC 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 FRQ type at a time.
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Paste or upload your Calc BC review notes and get a practice quiz that tests concepts — series convergence, parametric motion — not plug-and-chug.
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AP Calculus BC score calculator questions
What raw score do I need to get a 5 on AP Calc BC?
Based on publicly released past curves, a 5 has typically required a composite around 58% of available points — for example, about 30 of 45 multiple-choice questions plus 27 of 54 free-response points, an average of 4 to 5 points per FRQ. The exact 2026 cutoff will be set by the College Board's equating process after the exam.
Is AP Calc BC curved?
Not in the classroom sense — your score never depends on how other students perform that year. The College Board uses equating to adjust raw-score cutoffs so a given AP score means the same thing across years. BC's cutoffs look generous next to other exams, but that reflects the strength of its self-selected cohort, not an easier grading standard.
How is the AP Calculus BC exam structured in 2026?
Section I is 45 multiple-choice questions in 1 hour 45 minutes — 30 without a calculator, then 15 with a graphing calculator — worth 50%. Section II is six free-response questions in 90 minutes — two calculator, four no-calculator — each scored out of 9 points, worth the other 50%. Since 2025 the exam is hybrid digital: you answer the multiple choice and view the FRQs in the Bluebook app, but handwrite your free-response work in a paper booklet.
What is the Calculus AB subscore on the BC exam?
Every BC exam also reports an AB subscore from 1 to 5, computed from the questions covering AB topics — roughly 60% of the exam. If your BC score misses a college's credit cutoff, many institutions still award AB-level credit based on the subscore, so it is worth checking each college's policy before assuming a lower BC score earns nothing.
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 Calc BC?
No. Only correct answers count toward your multiple-choice score, so you should answer every question. The same logic applies on the free response: readers award rubric points for any correct work shown, so a setup without a finished answer can still earn several of the 9 points.
How accurate is this AP Calc BC score calculator?
It is an estimate. The calculator weights each part 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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Condense a semester of Calc BC notes into one organized study guide.
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