AP Statistics

AP Statistics 2026 Exam Guide: Top Topics & FRQ Strategy

March 2026 · MathHub US
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Contents

  1. Exam Overview
  2. Top 10 Highest-Yield Topics
  3. FRQ Section: What to Expect
  4. The Investigative Task
  5. Common Mistakes
  6. Study Tips

Exam Overview

AP Statistics is a 3-hour exam divided into two sections. The MCQ section tests breadth of knowledge, while the FRQ section — especially the investigative task — tests your ability to think statistically and communicate clearly.

SectionFormatQuestionsTimeWeight
Section IMultiple Choice40 questions90 min50%
Section II Part AShort FRQ5 questions65 min37.5%
Section II Part BInvestigative Task1 question25 min12.5%
2026 Exam Date: AP Statistics is scheduled for Wednesday, May 13, 2026 (morning). Graphing calculators are permitted throughout the entire exam.

Top 10 Highest-Yield Topics

AP Statistics covers four main conceptual categories: Exploring Data, Sampling & Experimentation, Anticipating Patterns (Probability), and Statistical Inference. Inference dominates the exam — typically 30–40% of all questions.

TopicCategoryExam Frequency
Significance tests for means & proportionsInferenceVery High
Confidence intervalsInferenceVery High
Chi-square tests (GOF, independence, homogeneity)InferenceHigh
Linear regression (LSRL, residuals, inference for slope)Exploring DataHigh
Sampling distributionsProbabilityHigh
Experimental design (control, random, replication)SamplingMedium-High
Normal distribution & z-scoresProbabilityMedium-High
Conditional probability & independenceProbabilityMedium
Binomial & geometric distributionsProbabilityMedium
Describing distributions (shape, center, spread)Exploring DataMedium

FRQ Section: What to Expect

The five short FRQs each focus on a single statistical concept. You have about 13 minutes per question. Each is scored on a 0–4 rubric by AP readers who look for specific statistical justifications — not just correct numbers.

Key FRQ Writing Principles

The Investigative Task

The investigative task is the single most complex problem on the exam. It's scored out of 4 points and tests your ability to connect multiple statistical concepts across a multi-part problem. Unlike the short FRQs, it often introduces a novel context or asks you to extend your reasoning beyond standard procedures.

Common investigative task themes: simulation-based inference, comparing multiple groups with inference, designing and analyzing a study, interpreting regression output in a new way, or combining probability with inference.

How to Approach It

  1. Read the entire problem before answering any part.
  2. Parts (a) through (c) or (d) build on each other — use your earlier work.
  3. Show your statistical reasoning even when the answer seems obvious.
  4. If asked to "explain," write 2–3 sentences connecting the statistical concept to the context.

Common Mistakes

Mistakes that frequently cost points:
  1. Saying "the probability that H₀ is true is 0.03" — a p-value is NOT the probability the null hypothesis is true
  2. Skipping condition checks for tests and intervals
  3. Using σ (population SD) when you have sample data — use s and t-procedures
  4. Saying a confidence interval "proves" or "shows" the true parameter — it only "estimates"
  5. Not naming the specific test you're using (e.g., "two-sample t-test for difference in means")

Study Tips

Practice resource: Work through inference problems in our AP Statistics chapter library, which covers hypothesis testing, confidence intervals, and regression inference with step-by-step worked examples.

Struggling with AP Statistics?

Our AP Statistics tutors focus on the exact FRQ communication skills that separate 3s from 5s. Book a free session to see where you stand.

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