In May, a certain quiet dread descends upon high school hallways. The weight of backpacks increases. Flashcards pile up on lunch tables. Every year, students begin to ask the same question between second period and the bus ride home: how difficult is this for everyone else? The closest thing to an honest response is the College Board’s yearly AP exam score distribution data.
The most recent officially available distributions, from 2025, present a picture that is truly inconsistent across subjects. Additionally, students and parents are already looking through last year’s results in an attempt to get a sense of what’s ahead as the 2026 exams conclude in mid-May and scores are anticipated to be released on July 6.
There are some startling findings in the data. For example, 44% of test-takers in AP Calculus BC received a 5 in 2025. Almost half. You are prompted to pause and read it again by that number. Although it’s possible that the self-selection effect is playing a major role in this situation—students who advance to Calculus BC are typically exceptionally at ease with mathematical precision—it still raises the question of whether the test is properly calibrated. Only roughly 20% of students who took AP Calculus AB, which was taken by a much larger and more diverse student body, received a 5, with a significant 13% receiving a 1. Very different results for the same subject family.
With almost 55% of students achieving the highest score, AP Chinese Language and Culture presents an even more unequal picture. The majority of observers believe, most likely correctly, that a sizable portion of those test-takers are native or heritage speakers, which makes the number less shocking but still worth noting. The distribution indicates that the exam, which was created for language learners, might not be measuring what its creators intended, at least not consistently.
Conversely, in 2025, more than 23% of students received a 1 on the AP Statistics exam, which has the highest percentage of lowest scores among the math and computer science tests. It’s still unclear if this is due to the difficulty of the test, the way the course is taught, or the characteristics of the students who typically take it. To some extent, all three are probably true. AP Latin, on the other hand, was one of the most difficult subjects on the list, with a combined 3-or-above rate of only 58.6%.

At this point, it’s really anyone’s guess as to what the AP exam score distribution 2026 cycle will look like. Although preliminary data and scores are received in July, the College Board usually releases final distributions in October. Seeing how those figures change from year to year—sometimes by just one or two points, sometimes by more—shows how curriculum modifications, trends in student preparation, and exam redesigns truly affect outcomes. It’s not always what the press releases indicate.
There is a propensity to view low passing rates as a warning sign and high passing rates as evidence that a subject is manageable, particularly among nervous juniors and their parents. That reasoning quickly falls apart. The passing percentage for AP Physics C: Electricity and Magnetism, which is generally regarded as brutal, is 72.9%, compared to 69% for AP Environmental Science. The numbers don’t accurately reflect difficulty as people would like them to.
In fact, the data does a good job of highlighting areas where sizable student populations are continuously having difficulties. It’s important to pay attention when about 25% of AP World History students receive a 2, as was the case in 2025. This is not a reason to avoid the course, but rather a sign that preparation needs to be more focused, specific, and honest about the requirements of the test. In contrast, the passing rates for AP Research and AP Seminar were higher than 83% and 88%, respectively, indicating that the structure of the Capstone program may be functioning differently from the traditional subject exams.
July 6th will arrive quickly. Some of the scores will be quietly set aside, while others will be celebrated when they arrive in inboxes. However, the distribution data provides a map of the actual preparation gaps and which subjects prioritize depth over last-minute cramming, which is more durable than any single result when taken seriously rather than skimmed for assurance. It’s important to know that before May of next year, not after.
