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AP Exams · Free Response

AP FRQ & Writing Guides — free response, subject by subject

The free-response section is worth around half of your AP score on most exams, and it is where points quietly slip away. These guides break down each subject FRQ format, how the rubric assigns points, and the habits that separate a 4 from a 7.

Updated June 2026Every AP subject

What an FRQ actually is

FRQ stands for free-response question, the part of the AP exam where you write out full solutions instead of bubbling in a letter. Depending on the subject that might be worked math, a lab analysis, or a full essay. The thing multiple choice cannot do is give partial credit, and free response can: graders award points for the steps you show, not only the final answer.

Why FRQs decide your score

On most AP exams the free-response section is worth about half of the total score. That weighting is why two students with identical multiple-choice results can still land on different 1–5 scores. The gap almost always lives in the FRQ. The encouraging part is that free response is the most coachable section of the exam, because the rubric is public and the question patterns barely change from year to year.

How FRQs are scored

Every free-response question comes with a scoring rubric worth a fixed number of points. A grader reads your work against that list and decides each point on its own.

Points, not impressions
Each rubric point is awarded independently. A reader is checking specific things off a list, not forming a general opinion of your answer.
Partial credit is real
You can miss the final answer and still earn most of the points when your setup and reasoning hold up.
Show the work
Unsupported answers, even correct ones, often score nothing. The justification is what the rubric pays for.
Context and units
Math and science responses bleed easy points on missing units. Writing responses lose them on claims with no evidence.

How to use these guides

These AP FRQ guides each follow the same shape. Pick your subject below and you get the exact format (how many questions, how long, what is allowed), the question types you will face, how the rubric assigns points, and the mistakes that cost students the most. From there, practice with the College Board released free-response questions, which come with the real scoring guidelines, and check your predicted result with the score calculator for that subject.

Choose your subject

We are rolling these out by search demand. Calculus AB, Chemistry, and Statistics are live now, with Physics 1, Biology, the AP Lang essays, and the DBQ and LEQ history guides on the way.

Frequently asked questions

Quick answers, written by humans.

How much is the FRQ section worth?

On most AP exams the free-response section counts for about half of your total score. The exact split varies by subject, and each subject guide lists its own breakdown.

Is partial credit real on AP free response?

Yes. Graders score each rubric point on its own, so a strong setup with a wrong final answer still earns most of the available points. Showing your work is the whole game.

Where can I find real AP FRQs to practice with?

The College Board publishes past free-response questions with official scoring guidelines for every subject. Those released questions are the best practice material there is, and they are free.

Do these guides give away answers?

No. They teach the format, the scoring logic, and the strategy, then point you to the official released questions to practice. We do not hand out answer keys.

Subject guides

Pick your FRQ.

Related

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