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AP Statistics · Free Response

AP Statistics FRQ six questions plus the investigative task.

Section II of the AP Statistics exam is six free-response questions in 90 minutes, worth 50% of your score: five short questions and one longer Investigative Task. Here is the format, how the holistic rubric works, and the phrasing that earns full credit.

Updated June 2026Part of AP FRQ & Writing Guides

The format at a glance

Section II of the AP Statistics exam is six free-response questions in 90 minutes, worth half of your total score. Five are shorter questions and the sixth is a longer Investigative Task that counts for more.

Questions
Six free-response questions.
Split
Five short questions plus one Investigative Task.
Time
90 minutes.
Weight
50% of your total AP score.
Calculator
Graphing calculator allowed throughout.
Scoring
Each question scored holistically from 4 down to 0.

What each question tests

The short questions move through the four big areas of the course: exploring data with graphs and summary statistics, designing samples and experiments, probability and random variables, and inference with confidence intervals and significance tests. The Investigative Task takes something familiar and pushes it somewhere you have not seen, then asks you to reason your way through. It rewards clear thinking more than memorized procedure.

How the rubric scores points

Statistics is graded holistically. Each question earns a single score from 4 for a complete response down to 0, based on how well your statistics, your communication, and your context fit together. On an inference question, readers look for three moves: name the procedure and check its conditions, carry out the mechanics, and state a conclusion in context that is linked back to the interval or the p-value. Miss any one of those and a 4 quietly becomes a 3 or a 2.

Where students lose points

Skipping conditions
Running a test without checking the conditions that let you use it.
No context
Writing reject the null without saying reject it about what, in the words of the problem.
Conclusion with no link
Stating a decision that is never tied to the p-value or the confidence interval.
Calculator-only answers
Reporting output without naming the procedure that produced it.

How to practice

Work the College Board released AP Statistics free-response questions with the official scoring guidelines next to you, and practice writing full conclusions in context until the structure is automatic. Save a few recent Investigative Tasks for full-length, timed reps. When you want to see where a raw score lands, the AP Statistics score calculator will project it onto the 1–5 scale.

Frequently asked questions

Quick answers — written by humans, not a chatbot.

How many FRQs are on the AP Statistics exam?

Six, made up of five short-answer questions and one longer Investigative Task, in 90 minutes, worth half of your score.

How is the AP Statistics FRQ scored?

Holistically. Each question gets a single score from 4 for a complete answer down to 0, based on how well your statistics, communication, and context hold together.

What is the Investigative Task?

The sixth and final FRQ. It is worth more than the others and asks you to apply a familiar concept to an unfamiliar situation.

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