AP World History Score Calculator

Use this tool to estimate your AP score from your raw score in multiple choice, short answer, document-based question, and long essay question sections. This tool helps you turn a practice test score into a clear predicted score. Enter your correct answers and essay points to see your composite score.

71/130 Composite Score AP Score 3

Enter Your Scores

Use the sliders or type your raw points.

Estimated Score Ranges

AP Score Composite Range Meaning
597-130Top score range
480-96Strong college-ready range
362-79Passing score range
244-61Near passing range
10-43Needs more review

Estimate Your AP World History Score

This tool works as a score estimator for students who want a quick idea of their exam score before the real test.

You can use it after a full practice test, a class review, or section-by-section practice from AP Classroom or Bluebook-style questions.

The result is not an official College Board score. It is an estimated score based on section weights, raw points, and an estimated score conversion.

How to Use the Tool

Enter your score for each part of the exam:

  1. Add your MCQ score based on how many answers you got correct.
  2. Add each SAQ score.
  3. Add your DBQ score.
  4. Add your LEQ score.
  5. Review your scaled score, section score, and final estimate.

You can also use the target score helper to see how close you are to a higher score range.

How the Scoring Works

The AP World History exam uses different section weights. Your weighted score is based on how much each section counts toward the final result.

Exam partRaw inputWeight / scaled value
MCQ55 multiple-choice questions40% multiple choice, MCQ scaled to 52
SAQ3 short-answer questions20% short answer, SAQ scaled to 26
DBQDBQ out of 725% DBQ, DBQ scaled to 32.5
LEQLEQ out of 615% LEQ, LEQ scaled to 19.5

Your SAQ out of 3 scores are combined into an SAQ total out of 9. Then the tool estimates your raw points to AP score using a composite score out of 130.

What Your Result Means

Your result shows an estimated score on the AP score scale 1 to 5.

ScoreSimple meaning
5Excellent result range
4Strong result range
3Common passing score range
2Below typical passing range
1Needs more review

A score of 3 or higher may qualify for college credit, but every college has its own AP credit policy. Always check the school’s official credit page before making decisions.

What to Improve Based on Your Score

Use the section results to find the easiest place to improve.

If your MCQ score is low, practice more stimulus-based questions, maps, charts, and short source passages.

If your free response score is low, focus on the rubric, thesis, contextualization, sourcing, historical evidence, and clear argument writing.

For essay improvement, review common skills like comparison, causation, and continuity and change. These skills are important for strong historical reasoning.

Accuracy Note

This tool gives an estimate, not an official result from the AP Program, AP Students, or AP Central.

Official score ranges can change because the final score cutoff may vary by exam version and year. Use the result as a helpful guide for practice, not as a guaranteed final score.

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FAQs

What is this tool used for?

It helps you estimate your AP World History result from your raw score, section points, and essay scores.

Is this the same as an APWH score calculator?

Yes, students often use “APWH” as a short name for AP World History. This tool is made for the same exam.

How many multiple-choice questions are on the exam?

There are 55 multiple-choice questions. Your number of correct answers is converted into a scaled section score.

How is the SAQ section scored?

Each SAQ is scored out of 3. The tool combines your 3 short-answer questions into an SAQ total out of 9.

How many points are the DBQ and LEQ worth?

The DBQ is scored out of 7, and the LEQ is scored out of 6. These essay scores are then weighted as part of the final estimate.

Can I use this after a practice exam?

Yes. It is useful for turning a practice score into an estimated final result, especially after a full-time practice exam.

Does a 3 always mean college credit?

Not always. A 3 is often considered a passing score, but college credit depends on each school’s AP credit policy.

Is the final score official?

No. Only the College Board gives official scores for Advanced Placement exams. This tool is for practice and planning.