AP Calculus AB

AP Calculus AB 2026 Exam Tips: How to Score a 5

March 2026 ยท MathHub US
โ† Back to US Blog

Contents

  1. Exam Structure & Scoring
  2. Highest-Yield Topics
  3. MCQ Strategy
  4. FRQ Tactics
  5. Common Mistakes
  6. 6-Week Study Plan

Exam Structure & Scoring

The AP Calculus AB exam is 3 hours and 15 minutes long, split into two sections:

SectionPartQuestionsTimeCalculator?
Section I (MCQ)Part A30 questions60 minNo
Section I (MCQ)Part B15 questions45 minYes
Section II (FRQ)Part A2 questions30 minYes
Section II (FRQ)Part B4 questions60 minNo
MCQ
50% of total score
FRQ
50% of total score
~65%
Raw score needed for a 5
~43%
Raw score needed for a 3
2026 Exam Date: The AP Calculus AB exam is scheduled for Tuesday, May 12, 2026 (morning). Mark your calendar and plan your 6-week countdown from late March.

Highest-Yield Topics

AP Calculus AB tests 8 major units, but some appear far more heavily than others. Based on historical score distributions and College Board's curriculum framework:

UnitTopicExam WeightPriority
Unit 5Analytical Applications of Differentiation15โ€“18%๐Ÿ”ด Critical
Unit 6Integration and Accumulation of Change17โ€“20%๐Ÿ”ด Critical
Unit 4Contextual Applications of Differentiation10โ€“15%๐ŸŸ  High
Unit 8Applications of Integration10โ€“15%๐ŸŸ  High
Unit 3Differentiation: Composite, Implicit, Inverse9โ€“13%๐ŸŸก Medium
Unit 7Differential Equations6โ€“12%๐ŸŸก Medium
Unit 1Limits and Continuity10โ€“12%๐ŸŸข Foundation
Unit 2Differentiation: Definition & Fundamentals10โ€“12%๐ŸŸข Foundation

Focus the bulk of your practice on Units 5 and 6. These two units alone account for roughly 35% of the exam, and they also appear every year in the FRQ section.

MCQ Strategy

The MCQ section is worth 50% of your score. Here's how to maximize it:

Part A (No Calculator โ€” 30 questions, 60 min)

Part B (Calculator โ€” 15 questions, 45 min)

FRQ Tactics

The 6 free-response questions test your ability to communicate mathematical reasoning clearly. Scoring is rubric-based โ€” you earn points for specific steps, not just final answers.

Golden rule: Show all your work, even if you use a calculator for Part A. A correct final answer with no supporting work earns 0 points. An incorrect answer with correct setup earns partial credit.

The 4 Most Common FRQ Types

  1. Rate/Accumulation problems โ€” always set up the integral with correct limits and units. Write the integral expression before evaluating it numerically.
  2. Particle motion โ€” position, velocity, acceleration. Know when a particle changes direction (v(t) = 0 and sign change). Know total vs. net distance.
  3. Table/graph-based questions โ€” the function is given as data or a graph, not an equation. You must use the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus to relate integrals and derivatives.
  4. Differential equations โ€” separation of variables, general vs. particular solution, slope fields. Always include the constant of integration "+C" in your general solution.

Communication Tips

Common Mistakes

Top 5 mistakes that cost students a 5:
  1. Forgetting the "+C" on indefinite integrals (automatic point deduction)
  2. Not checking endpoints when finding absolute extrema on a closed interval
  3. Confusing the derivative of ln|x| with 1/x (sign errors with absolute values)
  4. Setting up wrong limits of integration (using y-values instead of x-values, or swapping bounds)
  5. Not distinguishing between net displacement and total distance traveled

6-Week Study Plan

WeekFocusGoal
Week 1Limits & Continuity, Derivatives reviewDiagnose weak areas
Week 2Unit 5 โ€” Analytical Applications (critical points, MVT, IVT)Master curve analysis
Week 3Unit 6 โ€” Integration (u-sub, FTC Part 1 & 2)Build integration fluency
Week 4Units 7โ€“8 โ€” Differential equations, area/volumeComplete curriculum coverage
Week 5Full practice exam (timed)Simulate real exam conditions
Week 6Targeted FRQ practice + mistake reviewClose remaining gaps
Recommended resource: Work through AP-style problems using our AP Calculus textbook chapters โ€” especially the limits, differentiation, and integration sections. Each chapter includes worked examples that match the FRQ format.

Need Personalized AP Calculus Tutoring?

Our tutors specialize in AP Calculus AB and BC. We cover every FRQ type and help you maximize partial credit. Book a free consultation.

Book a Free Consultation

Related Posts