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AP Stats · Conditions

Large Counts Condition the np ≥ 10 check.

Large Counts is the condition you check before running inference for proportions. The rule: np ≥ 10 AND n(1−p) ≥ 10. Skip the check on the FRQ and you lose a point.

Updated May 2026Part of AP Statistics Concepts

The condition

Before running inference for a proportion (z-test, z-interval), you must verify that the sampling distribution is approximately normal. The Large Counts Condition is the check: both np ≥ 10 and n(1−p) ≥ 10.

For a confidence interval, use p̂ (sample proportion) in place of p. For a hypothesis test, use p₀ (null-hypothesis proportion).

How to write it on the FRQ

The AP rubric explicitly awards 1 point for stating Large Counts. Write it in plain English with the numbers:

“n p̂ = 50 × 0.6 = 30 ≥ 10, and n(1−p̂) = 50 × 0.4 = 20 ≥ 10, so the Large Counts Condition is satisfied.”

Plug in actual values. Don’t just write “the condition is met.”

Frequently asked questions

Quick answers — written by humans, not a chatbot.

What if np or n(1−p) is less than 10?

You can’t use the normal approximation. AP usually steers you to a different test (e.g., exact binomial) or notes that inference isn’t appropriate.

Is Large Counts the same as the Normal Condition?

For proportions — yes. For means, the Normal Condition is different (use the sample distribution shape or CLT for n ≥ 30).

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