AP US History Score Calculator
Estimate your APUSH exam performance with our comprehensive calculator
Enter Your Scores
Your Predicted Score
Score Breakdown
Exam Structure Overview
The AP US History exam consists of four main sections that test your knowledge of American history and historical thinking skills.
- Section I, Part A: 55 multiple-choice questions (55 minutes, 40% of score)
- Section I, Part B: 3 short-answer questions (40 minutes, 20% of score)
- Section II, Part A: 1 document-based question (60 minutes, 25% of score)
- Section II, Part B: 1 long essay question (40 minutes, 15% of score)
Score Interpretation
AP scores range from 1 to 5, with specific qualifications for each level:
| Score | Qualification | College Credit |
|---|---|---|
| 5 | Extremely Well Qualified | Most colleges |
| 4 | Well Qualified | Many colleges |
| 3 | Qualified | Some colleges |
| 2 | Possibly Qualified | Few colleges |
| 1 | No Recommendation | No credit |
Historical Score Distribution
Based on recent College Board data, here’s how students typically perform:
- Score 5: 11% of test takers
- Score 4: 15% of test takers
- Score 3: 22% of test takers
- Score 2: 23% of test takers
- Score 1: 29% of test takers
The average APUSH score typically ranges between 2.6-2.8, with approximately 48% of students earning a passing score (3 or higher).
DBQ Scoring Rubric
The Document Based Question is scored on a 7-point rubric:
- Thesis/Claim (1 point): Present a defensible thesis
- Contextualization (1 point): Describe historical context
- Evidence from Documents (2 points): Use document content and connect to argument
- Evidence Beyond Documents (1 point): Use additional historical evidence
- Analysis and Reasoning (2 points): Analyze documents and demonstrate complex understanding
LEQ Scoring Rubric
The Long Essay Question follows a 6-point rubric:
- Thesis/Claim (1 point): Present a defensible thesis
- Contextualization (1 point): Describe broader historical context
- Evidence (2 points): Provide specific examples and explain their relevance
- Analysis and Reasoning (2 points): Use historical reasoning and demonstrate complex understanding
Short Answer Questions
Each SAQ is worth 3 points and typically follows this structure:
- Part A (1 point): Identify or describe historical development
- Part B (1 point): Provide specific evidence
- Part C (1 point): Explain significance or connect to broader context
No thesis is required for short answer questions. Focus on direct, specific responses.
Exam Success Strategies
Multiple Choice Strategy
- Read questions carefully before looking at answer choices
- Eliminate obviously incorrect answers first
- Look for key words and time periods in questions
- Practice analyzing primary source excerpts
Essay Writing Tips
- Always start with a clear, defensible thesis
- Use specific historical evidence to support arguments
- Address the prompt directly throughout your essay
- Practice time management for each essay section
DBQ Approach
- Spend 15 minutes analyzing documents before writing
- Group documents by theme or perspective
- Include outside evidence beyond the documents
- Analyze point of view, purpose, and audience
Study Recommendations
- Review all 9 periods of US history chronologically
- Practice with released AP exams and questions
- Focus on historical thinking skills development
- Use multiple review sources and practice tests
Disclaimer: This calculator provides estimated scores based on historical scoring patterns and College Board guidelines. Actual exam scores may vary due to scoring curve adjustments and other factors. Use this as a study guide rather than a definitive predictor.