AP US History Score Calculator
Use this tool to estimate your predicted AP score from your MCQ, SAQ, DBQ, and LEQ practice scores. It helps AP U.S. History students check their score estimate, understand their score breakdown, and see which exam section needs more practice.
Enter Your Scores
Use the sliders or type your raw points.
Estimated Score Ranges
| AP Score | Composite Range | Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| 5 | 97-130 | Top score range |
| 4 | 80-96 | Strong college-ready range |
| 3 | 62-79 | Passing score range |
| 2 | 44-61 | Near passing range |
| 1 | 0-43 | Needs more review |
Use the Calculator
Add your section scores into the tool above.
You can enter:
- MCQ out of 55
- SAQ out of 9
- DBQ out of 7
- LEQ out of 6
The tool then estimates your composite score, converts your raw score into an estimated result, and shows a possible score from AP score 1 to 5.
This is a score estimator, not an official result from the College Board.
How to Use Your Practice Test Score
Use this tool after finishing a full or partial practice exam.
For the best estimate, enter your real practice scores as honestly as possible. If you only practiced one section, you can still use the tool to understand how that section affects your overall result.
This can help with:
- checking your practice test score
- estimating your exam performance
- finding your weak section
- setting a clear target score
- planning your next round of AP exam preparation
How AP U.S. History Scoring Works
The AP U.S. History exam has four main scoring parts. Each part has a different value in the final score.
| Section | Raw Points | Exam Weight |
|---|---|---|
| multiple-choice questions | 55 multiple-choice questions | 40% MCQ |
| Short-Answer Questions | 3 short-answer questions / SAQ out of 9 | 20% SAQ |
| Document-Based Question | DBQ out of 7 | 25% DBQ |
| Long Essay Question | LEQ out of 6 | 15% LEQ |
Your final result is based on section weighting, not just the number of questions correct. That is why a strong essay score can help your final estimate, and a weak free-response section can lower it.
What Your Estimated Score Means
The calculator gives a predicted score from 1 to 5.
| Estimated AP Score | Simple Meaning |
|---|---|
| 5 | Very strong performance |
| 4 | Strong performance |
| 3 | Often considered a passing score |
| 2 | Below many college credit ranges |
| 1 | Needs major improvement |
A score 3, score 4, or score 5 may help with credit at some colleges, but every school has its own college credit policy. Always check the college’s official AP credit rules before making decisions.
Understanding Your Score Breakdown
Your score breakdown shows how each section affects your estimate.
The multiple-choice questions test how well you understand primary sources, secondary sources, maps, images, and stimulus-based questions.
The SAQ section checks short written responses and clear historical reasoning.
The DBQ section uses historical documents and asks you to build a strong historical argument.
The LEQ section tests your ability to explain change, continuity, comparison, or causation using historical evidence.
Why Your Score Is Only an Estimate
This tool gives an estimated score conversion based on common scoring logic and section weights.
Your official AP score may be different because the College Board uses final scoring processes, exam difficulty, and official AP scoring guidelines. The real cutoffs can change by year.
Use this calculator as a helpful AP exam score calculator for planning, not as a guaranteed official score.
How to Improve Your Predicted Score
Start with the section that gives you the biggest improvement opportunity.
If your MCQ score is low, practice reading sources faster and answering questions from evidence.
If your free-response questions are weak, review the essay rubric and practice building a clear thesis, evidence, and reasoning.
For the document-based question, focus on document use, outside evidence, and argument structure.
For the long essay question, practice planning before writing so your answer stays clear and organized.
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FAQs
What is a good APUSH score?
A 3 is commonly seen as a passing score, while a 4 or 5 is stronger. However, college credit depends on each school’s college credit policy.
Is this calculator official?
No. This calculator is not official and is not connected with the College Board, AP Central, or AP Students. It gives an estimate for study planning.
How many multiple-choice questions are on AP U.S. History?
The exam includes 55 multiple-choice questions. This section is worth 40% MCQ of the final exam score.
How many SAQs are on the APUSH exam?
The exam includes 3 short-answer questions. The section is usually scored as SAQ out of 9 and counts as 20% SAQ of the exam score.
How are DBQ and LEQ scored?
The document-based question is usually scored as DBQ out of 7. The long essay question is usually scored as LEQ out of 6.
Can this tool predict my exact AP score?
No calculator can guarantee your official score. This tool gives an estimated AP score estimate based on your inputs, raw points, and section weights.
What score do I need to pass AP U.S. History?
Many students aim for a score 3 or higher. A score 4 or score 5 is usually considered stronger, but credit rules vary by college.
Why does my composite score matter?
Your composite score combines your section performance into one estimated total. It helps convert your section results into a likely AP score range.