AP Calculus BC Exam Overview
1

The Exam Format

The AP Calculus BC exam is exactly the same length and format as the AB exam (3 hours and 15 minutes). The difference lies entirely in the content tested.

Section I: MCQ
Part A: No Calculator 30 Questions (60m)
*Tests pure algebraic and calculus mechanics.
Part B: Calculator Req. 15 Questions (45m)
*Graphing calculator required for numerical answers.
50% of Total Score
Section II: FRQ
Part A: Calculator Req. 2 Questions (30m)
*Heavy focus on contextual applications and modeling.
Part B: No Calculator 4 Questions (60m)
*Show all your work. Justification is paramount here.
50% of Total Score
2

The AB Subscore

Two Scores for the Price of One

When you take the Calculus BC exam, you will receive two scores from the College Board:

  • Your BC Score (1-5): Based on your performance on the entire exam.
  • Your AB Subscore (1-5): Based only on the questions that overlap with the AB curriculum (about 60% of the exam).

Why this matters: Even if you struggle with the BC-only topics (like Taylor Series), if you do well on the AB portions, you can still earn college credit for Calculus I via the AB subscore.

3

Calculator Policy

Calculus BC requires a high level of calculator proficiency, especially for finding intersection points of polar curves or calculating definite integrals.

⚠️
The 4 Required Functions: Your calculator MUST be able to: 1) Graph functions in arbitrary windows. 2) Find zeros of functions (solve equations). 3) Calculate numeric derivatives. 4) Calculate definite integrals.
4

Where Should You Focus?

While the exam is cumulative, Units 6, 9, and 10 make up nearly half of the entire test. You must master Integration and Infinite Series.

Unit 1: Limits & Continuity 4-7%
Unit 2: Differentiation Def. 4-7%
Unit 3: Diff. Composite/Implicit 4-7%
Unit 4: Contextual Apps 6-9%
Unit 5: Analytical Apps 8-11%
Unit 6: Integration (Parts/Fractions) 17-20%
Unit 7: Differential Equations 6-9%
Unit 8: Apps of Integration 6-9%
Unit 9: Parametric, Polar, Vectors BC Only 11-12%
Unit 10: Infinite Series BC Only 17-18%
5

Score Estimator

The BC curve is notoriously generous because the material is difficult. Generally, earning just over 60% of the raw points guarantees a 5.

Composite Score (108 points total) AP Score Classification
~65 - 108 5 Extremely Well Qualified
~54 - 64 4 Well Qualified
~43 - 53 3 Qualified
~33 - 42 2 Possibly Qualified
6

BC Success Strategy

Rule 1

Master the Foundation

Don't rush to Series (Unit 10) if you don't understand the Chain Rule (Unit 3). The AB material makes up 60% of your grade. Secure those points first.

Rule 2

Conquer Taylor

FRQ #6 on the BC exam is always an Infinite Series / Taylor Polynomial question. Memorize your Maclaurin series for e^x, sin(x), cos(x), and 1/(1-x).

Rule 3

Integration By Parts

You must be fast at Integration by Parts and Partial Fractions. Use the LIATE acronym to pick your 'u' quickly.

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