AP Physics C: Mechanics Score Calculator
Enter your MCQ raw score (out of 40) and your FRQ raw score (out of 40) to estimate a predicted AP Physics C: Mechanics score from 1 to 5. The calculator uses the post-2025 exam format: 40 multiple choice items (50% of the composite) and four free response questions worth 40 rubric points total (50% of the composite), for a composite out of 80. The 1 to 5 cut scores below are unofficial estimates. College Board does not release exact cut scores, and they vary from year to year, so treat this as a rough practice estimate, not a guarantee.
Your scores
Post-2025 format · 40 MCQ + 40 FRQ
How this calculator works
Method
01
Equal-weight scaling
Each section is scaled to 50% of the composite. The post-2025 format weights MCQ and FRQ equally regardless of raw point totals.
02
Composite out of 80
The MCQ section totals 40 raw points and the FRQ section totals 40 rubric points, so the composite runs from 0 to 80. Enter your FRQ total across all four questions.
03
Cut scores are unofficial
College Board does not publish exact cut scores for AP Physics C: Mechanics. The band thresholds here are third-party estimates and shift from year to year. Do not treat them as official.
04
Treat as a target
Use the prediction to set a buffer above your goal band. A composite that just clears an estimated threshold can drop a tier if the real curve is tighter that year.
Common questions
FAQ
What composite score do I need for a 5?
As an unofficial estimate, roughly 55 or more out of 80 composite points tends to map to a 5. That is about 28 of 40 on multiple choice plus 28 of 40 on the free response section, in some combination. This is a third-party estimate only: College Board does not release exact cut scores for AP Physics C: Mechanics and adjusts the curve each year, so treat it as a floor target rather than a fixed line.
How is the AP Physics C: Mechanics exam scored?
Section I (multiple choice) and Section II (free response) each count for 50% of the composite. Multiple choice items are 1 point each with no penalty for guessing and four answer choices per question. FRQs are scored by trained readers against published rubrics; partial credit is available throughout. The two sections combine into a composite out of 80, which is mapped to a 1 to 5.
Are these AP Physics C cut scores official?
No. College Board does not publish the exact composite-to-score cut scores for AP Physics C: Mechanics, and the curve shifts from year to year. The thresholds in this calculator are unofficial third-party estimates. For reference, on the May 2025 exam 73.1 percent of students earned a 3 or higher, with a mean score of 3.30, but that describes outcomes, not the cutoffs.
Is there a penalty for guessing on MCQ?
No. The College Board scores multiple choice on raw correct answers only. Always fill in an answer for every question, even if you have to guess.
Can I use a calculator on AP Physics C: Mechanics?
Yes, on both sections. Under the post-2025 redesign a four-function, scientific, or graphing calculator is permitted on both the multiple choice and free response sections, a change from the previous calculator-free multiple choice section. The equation and constants sheet is also provided on both sections.
How accurate is this score calculator?
The composite math is exact: it adds your MCQ and FRQ raw points into a score out of 80. The 1 to 5 prediction is only an estimate, because College Board does not publish exact cut scores and adjusts them each year. Use the calculator to track relative progress on practice exams rather than to commit to a specific number.