AP US History Calculator – APUSH Score Predictor
🏛️ AP US History Score Calculator

AP US History Calculator

Enter your MCQ, SAQ, DBQ, and LEQ scores to predict your APUSH exam score. Full scoring formula included.

🏛️ APUSH Score Calculator
MCQ (55 Questions) 40%
55 MCQ · 55 minutes · No penalty
SAQ (3 Questions) 20%
3 SAQs × 0–3 pts each · 40 min
DBQ 25%
Document-Based Question · 60 min
LEQ 15%
Long Essay Question · 40 min
AP Score
MCQ
SAQ
DBQ
Composite

AP US History Scoring: Complete Guide

AP United States History covers American history from pre-Columbian societies through the present day. Its four-component scoring structure uniquely tests both factual knowledge through multiple choice and analytical reasoning through three distinct essay types — each demanding different historical thinking skills. Understanding the weight and expectations of each component is the foundation of effective APUSH exam preparation.

ComponentRaw MaxWeightTime
MCQ (55 questions)5540%55 min
SAQ (3 questions, 3 pts each)920%40 min
DBQ (Document-Based Question)725%60 min
LEQ (Long Essay Question)615%40 min

The DBQ: Your Highest-Leverage Component

The DBQ is the single most valuable component at 25% of your score. A student who earns all 7 DBQ points gains far more toward their composite than the same improvement in any other section. DBQ scoring awards points for: Thesis (1), Contextualization (1), Evidence from Documents (2), Evidence Beyond Documents (1), Sourcing/Analysis (1), and Complexity (1). Practice writing complete DBQ responses under timed conditions repeatedly.

🏛️ APUSH Tip: The LEQ at 15% is often the lowest-practised component but has the highest potential for rapid improvement. A student who masters one essay structure for each historical thinking skill (comparison, causation, continuity/change) can reliably earn 5–6 points with consistent practice.
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Gold Resale Value Calculator

AP US History covers economic history including gold standards and monetary policy — connect classroom to markets.

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Character Headcanon Generator

Historical thinking requires imagining lived experiences — build character depth for the historical figures you study.

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One Rep Max Calculator

APUSH exam preparation is progressive overload — systematic repetition builds analytical strength over time.

Frequently Asked Questions

APUSH covers nine time periods: Period 1 (1491–1607), Period 2 (1607–1754), Period 3 (1754–1800), Period 4 (1800–1848), Period 5 (1844–1877), Period 6 (1865–1898), Period 7 (1890–1945), Period 8 (1945–1980), and Period 9 (1980–present). Periods 3–8 receive the most exam emphasis.
The four APUSH historical thinking skills are: Causation (explaining causes and effects), Continuity and Change Over Time (tracing developments across periods), Comparison (contrasting different historical situations), and Contextualization (connecting specific events to broader contexts). SAQ, DBQ, and LEQ prompts each target specific thinking skills.
The Complexity point is the hardest DBQ point to earn. Strategies include: explaining both a cause and an effect across time periods, comparing the prompt’s argument to a corroborating OR qualifying argument, making connections to a different time period or geographical area, or explaining how multiple variables interacted with each other in non-obvious ways. Shallow “on the other hand” paragraphs do not earn it.

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