Your next target is AP 5. You need about 10 more estimated composite points, or about 14 with buffer.
Maintained for 2026 · unofficial AP Physics 2 estimate
AP Physics 2 Score Calculator 2026
Estimate your AP Physics 2 score from MCQ and FRQ points with transparent 2026 assumptions and target-gap guidance. Enter raw section points from a practice test to see an estimated AP score, target gap, weakest section, and a dynamic study plan. This is not an official AP score.
Use raw practice-test points for each section. Values are clamped to the allowed range.
Estimated Composite Score will appear here.
Add your raw points to see the score band, weakest section, and study gap.
Moderate confidence estimate: Useful for planning; yearly equating and section scoring can shift official boundaries.
Unofficial estimate. Actual AP scores may differ. Your calculator inputs are processed in your browser and are not stored by us.
Plan first, reference second
Next-step plan
Update your scores above, then read the plan first. Open the reference drawer only when you need the cutoff math.
Dynamic study plan
Personalized next-step plan
You are currently in the estimated AP 4 range for AP Physics 2.
AP 5 polish: You are already in a strong band; use Multiple Choice to close the AP 5 margin without weakening Free Response. Multiple Choice is the best next focus (70% accuracy, 15.0 weighted points still available). Your strongest current section is Free Response.
sort misses by fluids, thermodynamics, electricity, and magnetism topics
Your next target is AP 5. You need about 10 more estimated composite points, or about 14 with buffer.
AP 5 polish: You are already in a strong band; use Multiple Choice to close the AP 5 margin without weakening Free Response. Multiple Choice is the best next focus (70% accuracy, 15.0 weighted points still available). Your strongest current section is Free Response.
Section diagnostics
2-week plan
- Polish physics MCQ accuracy: sort misses by fluids, thermodynamics, electricity, and magnetism topics.
- Run one timed high-difficulty Multiple Choice set, then check whether the AP 5 buffer improves.
- If the gap remains, add FRQ setup and explanation practice.
4-week plan
- Weeks 1–2: convert preventable Multiple Choice misses into reliable rubric/accuracy points.
- Week 3: combine Multiple Choice with Free Response practice.
- Week 4: take a mixed timed set and compare the new target gap.
8-week plan
- Weeks 1–3: convert preventable Multiple Choice misses into reliable rubric/accuracy points.
- Weeks 4–6: rotate Multiple Choice, Free Response, and full-section timing.
- Weeks 7–8: run full mixed simulations and protect Free Response under time pressure.
This plan uses predicted score, target gap, weakest section, normalized section performance, and weighted lost points. It is unofficial study guidance, not an AP score guarantee.
Reference drawer
AP Physics 2 scoring reference
Use these details when you want the estimated ranges, scoring model, exam inputs, and assumptions. The calculator result and study plan above remain the primary product flow.
Estimated AP Physics 2 composite ranges
| Estimated AP Score | Estimated composite range | How to read it |
|---|---|---|
| 5 | 80–100 | Estimated high-score range; keep reviewing misses. |
| 4 | 65–79 | May be college-credit relevant, but policies vary by school. |
| 3 | 48–64 | May be college-credit relevant, but policies vary by school. |
| 2 | 30–47 | Use as a diagnostic baseline for study planning. |
| 1 | 0–29 | Use as a diagnostic baseline for study planning. |
How scoring works
AP Physics 2 uses 40 multiple-choice questions and 4 free-response questions, with each section worth about 50% of the exam score. This calculator scales each section to an estimated 50-point share before mapping the total to an AP score estimate.
Cutoffs are estimated ranges based on historical scoring patterns and public exam structure.
Exam format inputs
| Section | Input range | Calculator weighting |
|---|---|---|
| Multiple Choice | 0–40 points | Weight 1.25 |
| Free Response | 0–40 points | Weight 1.25 |
Methodology and confidence
Moderate confidence estimate: Useful for planning; yearly equating and section scoring can shift official boundaries.
FRQ partial credit and exam-form difficulty can shift boundaries, especially near the 3/4 and 4/5 edges.
Last updated: May 9, 2026. This calculator is independent and not affiliated with College Board.
AP Physics 2 practice notes
Use the AP Physics 2 estimate as a checkpoint
AP Physics 2 users usually have raw MCQ and FRQ points and want a quick estimate before deciding which topics or FRQ skills to repair.
Use it after a released-style practice set to test whether fluids, thermodynamics, electricity, or magnetism misses are holding down the estimate.
FRQ explanation points can lift the estimate even when MCQ accuracy is flat, so review diagrams and justification language first.
FRQ partial credit and exam-form difficulty can shift boundaries, especially near the 3/4 and 4/5 edges.
How this calculator works
How this AP Physics 2 score calculator works
AP Physics 2 uses 40 multiple-choice questions and 4 free-response questions, with each section worth about 50% of the exam score. This calculator scales each section to an estimated 50-point share before mapping the total to an AP score estimate.
Enter Multiple Choice 0–40; Free Response 0–40 from a practice test or rubric estimate. The calculator clamps impossible values before estimating a score.
Cutoffs are estimated ranges based on historical scoring patterns and public exam structure. The result includes estimated composite, AP band, and gap to target scores.
Use it after a released-style practice set to test whether fluids, thermodynamics, electricity, or magnetism misses are holding down the estimate.
Raw score target guide
What score do I need for a 3, 4, or 5?
Use this AP Physics 2 page as a AP Physics 2 score calculator. Enter your real practice-test points first, then compare the live gap above with these estimated planning thresholds.
- Target 3Plan around about 48 of 100 estimated composite points before adding a safety buffer for yearly scoring shifts.passing-range check
- Target 4Plan around about 65 of 100 estimated composite points before adding a safety buffer for yearly scoring shifts.strong-score buffer
- Target 5Plan around about 80 of 100 estimated composite points before adding a safety buffer for yearly scoring shifts.top-band buffer
These are unofficial planning ranges. Official AP score setting can shift by year, exam form, rubric scoring, and equating.
FAQ
AP Physics 2 questions students ask after practice tests
Is this AP Physics 2 calculator official?
No. This AP Physics 2 calculator is unofficial and independent. It is designed for practice-test planning, not official College Board score reporting.
Which AP Physics 2 points should I enter?
Enter raw practice scores for Multiple Choice, Free Response. The calculator clamps values to each section range and converts them into an estimated composite.
What score do I need for a 3, 4, or 5 on AP Physics 2?
Use the live gap-to-target result after entering your section points, then compare it with the raw score target guide below the calculator. The shown gap is a planning estimate, so build extra buffer if you are close to the cutoff.
How does this AP Physics 2 score calculator work?
AP Physics 2 uses 40 multiple-choice questions and 4 free-response questions, with each section worth about 50% of the exam score. This calculator scales each section to an estimated 50-point share before mapping the total to an AP score estimate. Cutoffs are estimated ranges based on historical scoring patterns and public exam structure.
How should I use this AP Physics 2 estimate?
Use it after a released-style practice set to test whether fluids, thermodynamics, electricity, or magnetism misses are holding down the estimate.
Why can AP Physics 2 cutoffs vary?
Useful for planning; yearly equating and section scoring can shift official boundaries. FRQ partial credit and exam-form difficulty can shift boundaries, especially near the 3/4 and 4/5 edges.