AP Physics 1 Score Calculator 2025–2026: New Exam Format, Updated Cutoffs, and Score Predictions
This AP Physics 1 exam score calculator is built specifically for the 2025–2026 exam cycle, incorporating the redesigned free-response format and updated cutoff estimates based on six years of College Board data. Whether you just finished a practice test or walked out of the May exam, enter your raw scores above to get an instant prediction of your 1–5 AP grade. Below, we explain every change to the 2025 exam, walk through a scored example, and show you exactly how to maximize your composite score.

What's New on the 2025–2026 AP Physics 1 Exam?
The College Board introduced a redesigned AP Physics 1 exam starting with the 2024–2025 school year. The most significant structural change is the free-response section: it now contains 4 questions worth 15 points each instead of the previous 5 questions worth 12 points each. The total FRQ points remain 60, and the 50/50 weighting between MCQ and FRQ sections is unchanged.
Other notable changes include updated question types that emphasize experimental design and quantitative analysis more heavily, refined rubrics that reward physics reasoning over rote calculation, and a slightly different distribution of topic weights across the seven units. The MCQ section remains at 40 questions in 90 minutes with no guessing penalty.
For students comparing this exam to the previous format, try our general AP Physics 1 Score Calculator which uses the older 5-FRQ scoring model.
How the 2025 AP Physics 1 Scoring Works
The scoring process follows the same two-stage system used in previous years, adapted for the new format:
- MCQ Raw Score = Number of correct answers out of 40 (1 point each, no penalty for guessing)
- FRQ Raw Score = Sum of points across 4 questions (0–15 each, max 60 total)
- MCQ Percentage = MCQ Raw ÷ 40 × 100
- FRQ Percentage = FRQ Raw ÷ 60 × 100
- Composite Score = (MCQ% + FRQ%) ÷ 2
The composite score is then mapped to the 1–5 AP grade scale using cutoff thresholds. The College Board recalibrates these thresholds annually through a statistical process called equating, which ensures that a grade of 3 in 2025 represents the same level of physics knowledge as a 3 in 2024 — even though the exam format changed.
Updated Score Cutoffs for 2025–2026
Based on historical data from 2020–2024 and the College Board's equating methodology, here are the estimated composite percentage cutoffs for the 2025–2026 exam:
- Grade 5 (Extremely well qualified): 69%+ composite — approximately 28+ MCQ correct and 41+ FRQ points
- Grade 4 (Well qualified): 53–68% — approximately 22 MCQ correct and 32 FRQ points
- Grade 3 (Qualified): 39–52% — approximately 16 MCQ correct and 23 FRQ points
- Grade 2 (Possibly qualified): 26–38% — approximately 11 MCQ correct and 16 FRQ points
- Grade 1 (No recommendation): Below 26%
These cutoffs mean you can miss about 12 MCQ questions and still score a 5 — but only if your FRQ performance is strong. The key difference from previous years is that each FRQ now carries 25% of your total FRQ score rather than 20%, making individual FRQ performance more impactful.
The New 4-FRQ Format: What Changed and Why
The College Board consolidated 5 free-response questions into 4, giving each question more depth and more points. Here's the breakdown of the 2025 FRQ types:
- FRQ 1 — Experimental Design (15 pts): Design an experiment, describe the procedure, identify variables, and analyze expected data. This question now has more sub-parts and often requires a graph sketch.
- FRQ 2 — Quantitative Analysis (15 pts): Multi-step calculations connecting equations to physical scenarios. Replaces the old "Qualitative/Quantitative Translation" format with more emphasis on numerical work.
- FRQ 3 — Paragraph Argument (15 pts): Write a coherent, evidence-based physics argument in paragraph form. This remains the most-feared FRQ type, but at 15 points it's worth investing serious practice time.
- FRQ 4 — Short Answer (15 pts): Multi-part problem covering multiple topics within a single physical scenario. Similar to the old short-answer format but expanded.
The practical impact: a single weak FRQ performance now drops your FRQ percentage by about 25% instead of 20%. If you completely blank on one question, your maximum FRQ score drops to 75%, which caps your composite at roughly 87.5% — still enough for a 5, but with much less margin for error.
Worked Example: Predicting Your 2025 Score
Let's walk through a concrete example. Suppose a student scores:
- MCQ: 28 correct out of 40
- FRQ 1 (Experimental Design): 11/15
- FRQ 2 (Quantitative Analysis): 13/15
- FRQ 3 (Paragraph Argument): 8/15
- FRQ 4 (Short Answer): 10/15
Step 1: MCQ Percentage = 28/40 × 100 = 70.0%
Step 2: FRQ Raw = 11 + 13 + 8 + 10 = 42. FRQ Percentage = 42/60 × 100 = 70.0%
Step 3: Composite = (70.0 + 70.0) / 2 = 70.0%
Step 4: 70.0% falls above the 69% cutoff → Predicted Grade: 5
This student earned a 5 despite scoring only 8/15 on the paragraph argument FRQ. The strong performance on FRQs 2 and 4 compensated. This shows why balanced preparation across all FRQ types matters — you don't need perfection on every question.
AP Physics 1 Score Trends: 2020–2025
Looking at six years of score distributions reveals consistent patterns that inform our 2025 predictions:
- The pass rate (3+) has stayed between 47% and 51% every year — remarkably stable despite pandemic-era format changes in 2020–2021.
- The percentage of 5s ranges from 7.4% to 8.8%, making AP Physics 1 one of the hardest AP exams to ace. Compare this to AP Physics C, where about 25% of students earn a 5 on Mechanics.
- The percentage of 1s has remained around 25%, higher than most AP exams, reflecting the conceptual difficulty of the material.
- For 2025, we project slight improvements due to the redesigned FRQ format giving students more time per question and more opportunities for partial credit on each.
The College Board's equating process ensures that grade boundaries shift to maintain consistent standards, so even if the 2025 exam is slightly easier or harder, the percentage distribution should remain within historical norms.
Common Mistakes That Cost You Points
Based on AP reader commentary and released scoring rubrics, these are the most frequent point-losing errors on the AP Physics 1 exam:
- Leaving FRQ sub-parts blank: With 15 points per question, even writing a partial answer on each sub-part can earn 3–5 points through partial credit. Never leave a section empty.
- Missing units on calculations: AP readers deduct points for missing or incorrect units. Always include N, m/s², kg·m/s, J, or W as appropriate.
- Weak paragraph arguments: FRQ 3 requires a structured argument that references specific physics principles by name. Generic statements like "the force increases" without citing Newton's second law or conservation of energy lose points.
- Incomplete free-body diagrams: Every force must be labeled, drawn in the correct direction, and have the correct relative magnitude. Missing one force (like normal force or friction) costs 1–2 points per diagram.
- Not showing work on calculations: Even if you get the right numerical answer, the rubric awards points for the setup, equation selection, and algebraic manipulation steps. Show every step.
Strategies to Improve Your AP Physics 1 Score
If the calculator above predicts a lower score than your target, here are evidence-based strategies to close the gap:
- Prioritize FRQ practice: Since each FRQ is now worth 15 points, improving by even 2 points per question adds 8 points total — enough to move from a 3 to a 4 in many cases. Practice with released FRQs from the AP Physics 1 Grade Calculator page and study the official rubrics.
- Master Newton's Laws and energy conservation: These two topics appear on 30–40% of exam questions combined. Being fluent with F = ma, free-body diagrams, and W = ΔKE covers a large portion of the exam.
- Practice the paragraph argument format: FRQ 3 is where most students leave the most points on the table. Write 4–6 sentences that name the physics principle, state the relevant equation, apply it to the specific scenario, and draw a conclusion.
- Use process of elimination on MCQ: Even eliminating one answer on a four-choice question raises your guessing odds from 25% to 33%. With 40 questions and no guessing penalty, this strategy alone can add 2–3 correct answers.
- Time management: On the MCQ, spend no more than 2 minutes per question. Flag hard ones and return to them. On FRQs, allocate roughly 22 minutes per question and save 2 minutes at the end for review.
When to Use This 2025 Score Calculator
This AP Physics 1 score calculator for 2025–2026 is designed for these specific situations:
- After taking a practice exam using the new 4-FRQ format and wanting to convert raw scores to a predicted grade
- Right after the May 2025 or May 2026 AP Physics 1 exam to estimate your score while answers are fresh
- During study planning to set target MCQ and FRQ scores for each grade level
- When comparing your progress across multiple practice tests over the school year
- To understand the "what if" scenarios — how would improving on one FRQ type change your predicted grade?
For the older 5-FRQ exam format or general AP Physics 1 score estimation without year-specific cutoffs, use our standard AP Physics 1 Score Calculator. And if you're studying for the calculus-based AP Physics C exam, check out our AP Physics C Score Calculatorfor Mechanics and E&M predictions.
