1. The Exam Format
The AP Microeconomics Exam is a sprint, not a marathon. It tests your ability to read graphs, apply logic under pressure, and explain economic reasoning. Here is exactly what you will face on test day.
⏱️ Time Strategy: On the MCQ, flag any question that takes more than 90 seconds and come back to it. On the FRQ, spend 25 minutes on the Long FRQ and about 12 minutes on each Short FRQ. Use remaining time to double-check graph labels.
2. Unit Weights & Where to Focus
Not all units are created equal. Units 2 and 3 are the foundation — together they make up nearly half the exam. Master these two "Heavyweights," and you are halfway to a 5.
| Unit | What College Board Tests Most | Must-Know Topics |
|---|---|---|
| Unit 1 | PPC shape, opportunity cost calculations, comparative advantage with output/input tables | PPC graph, OC formulas |
| Unit 2 | Shifters vs. movement along curves, elasticity calculations (PED, PES, cross-price, income), consumer/producer surplus, deadweight loss from price controls & taxes, tax incidence | S&D graph, surplus areas, elasticity formulas |
| Unit 3 | Short-run cost curves (MC, ATC, AVC), long-run ATC, profit maximization (MR = MC), shut-down rule (P < AVC), long-run equilibrium in perfect competition (P = min ATC, zero economic profit) | Cost curves, PC firm & market graphs |
| Unit 4 | Monopoly graph (profit area, DWL), monopolistic competition (short-run profit → long-run zero), oligopoly/game theory (prisoner's dilemma, dominant strategy, Nash equilibrium) | Monopoly graph, game theory matrix |
| Unit 5 | Derived demand, MRP = MRC hiring rule, wage determination in competitive vs. monopsony labor markets | Labor market graph, MRP curve |
| Unit 6 | Externalities (positive/negative), Pigouvian taxes/subsidies, public goods (non-rival, non-excludable), free-rider problem, Lorenz curve & Gini coefficient | Externality graph, public goods matrix |
3. FRQ Breakdown & Scoring Tips
The Free Response section is where most students lose easy points — not because they don't know the content, but because they don't follow the rules of FRQ scoring.
Long FRQ (~50% of FRQ score)
Usually 5–7 parts spanning multiple units. Typically asks you to draw a graph, identify price/quantity, shade profit or loss, and explain what happens in the long run. Almost always involves a firm-level AND market-level graph.
Common combos: Perfect Competition + long-run adjustment, Monopoly + DWL + regulation, Monopolistic Competition short-run → long-run.
Short FRQs (~25% each)
Usually 3–4 parts focused on a single topic. Could be elasticity, game theory, externalities, labor markets, or cost calculations. More targeted but still require graphing and explanation.
Common topics: Elasticity calculation + interpretation, Game theory dominant strategy, Externality with tax/subsidy correction.
FRQ Scoring Rules — Free Points if You Follow Them
| Rule | Why It Matters |
|---|---|
| Label EVERYTHING | Every graph needs labeled axes (Price/Quantity or P/Q), labeled curves (D, S, MC, ATC, MR), and labeled points (equilibrium, price, quantity). An unlabeled graph = zero points for that part, even if the graph is perfect. |
| Answer what they ask | If they say "identify," write a single word or point to your graph. If they say "explain," write a sentence with economic reasoning. If they say "calculate," show your work. Don't write essays when they want one word. |
| Never contradict yourself | If you give two answers and one is right and one is wrong, the AP reader scores it as wrong. Pick one answer and commit. Cross out any wrong attempts clearly. |
| Use the graph to answer | Many FRQ answers should reference your graph directly: "As shown in the graph above, the profit-maximizing quantity is Q₁ where MR = MC." This connects your answer to your work. |
| Partial credit exists | Even if you can't finish, answer every part you can. Parts are scored independently. Getting 3/7 on the long FRQ is infinitely better than 0/7. |
#1 Reason Students Lose FRQ Points: They know the right answer but fail to label their graph. An AP reader cannot give you credit for a curve they can't identify. Even if your graph is drawn perfectly, if the curves are unlabeled, it's a zero. Label. Every. Curve.
4. Score Estimator
AP scores range from 1 to 5. Your Composite Score is calculated out of approximately 90 points (60 MCQ raw + ~30 FRQ raw, weighted). Here are the approximate cut-score ranges.
| Composite Score (approx.) | AP Score | Classification | % of Test-Takers (2024) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 72 - 90 Points | 5 | Extremely Well Qualified | ~24% |
| 59 - 71 Points | 4 | Well Qualified | ~26% |
| 49 - 58 Points | 3 | Qualified | ~16% |
| 38 - 48 Points | 2 | Possibly Qualified | ~14% |
| 0 - 37 Points | 1 | No Recommendation | ~20% |
What does this mean practically? About 50% of test-takers score a 4 or 5 — Micro is one of the more generous AP exams. To hit a 5, you need roughly 80% correct. That's about 48/60 MCQ correct plus strong FRQ performance. Very achievable with focused study.
5. The Essential Graphs
AP Microeconomics is 80% visual. If you can draw and fully label every graph below from memory, you are prepared for any FRQ the College Board can throw at you.
| Graph | Unit(s) | What You Must Be Able to Do |
|---|---|---|
| Production Possibilities Curve (PPC) | 1 | Draw bowed-out shape, label axes with two goods, identify efficient/inefficient/unattainable points, show growth (outward shift). |
| Supply & Demand | 2 | Draw equilibrium, shift curves for any scenario, shade consumer surplus (CS), producer surplus (PS), deadweight loss (DWL). Show effects of price ceilings, price floors, and per-unit taxes. |
| Cost Curves (Short-Run) | 3 | Draw MC, ATC, AVC curves with correct relationships (MC crosses ATC and AVC at their minimums). Identify shutdown point (min AVC), breakeven point (min ATC). |
| Perfect Competition (Firm + Market) | 3 | Draw side-by-side: market S&D determines price → firm is price-taker with horizontal D = MR = AR. Show profit/loss rectangle. Show long-run equilibrium (P = min ATC). |
| Monopoly | 4 | Draw D, MR (below D), MC, ATC. Find Q where MR = MC, go up to D for price. Shade profit rectangle and deadweight loss triangle. Show socially efficient output (where D = MC). |
| Monopolistic Competition | 4 | Draw short-run (like monopoly but with economic profit/loss) AND long-run (D tangent to ATC → zero economic profit, excess capacity). |
| Labor Market (Factor Market) | 5 | Draw DL = MRP and SL = MRC. Show competitive equilibrium (wage = MRP at intersection). For monopsony: draw upward SL with MRC above it, find Q where MRP = MRC, wage from SL curve. |
| Externalities | 6 | Draw negative externality: MSC above S (private), show overproduction DWL. Draw positive externality: MSB above D (private), show underproduction DWL. Show corrective tax/subsidy. |
The Graph Test
Close your notes. Grab a blank sheet of paper. Can you draw and fully label all 8 graphs above in under 15 minutes? If yes, you're ready. If not, that's your study priority.
6. How to Use This Website
Passive reading isn't enough. Follow our 4-step "Active Recall" process for each unit.
Read the Unit Guide
Go through the unit summary. Focus on why each concept works, not just memorizing definitions. How does it connect to the unit before?
Study the Graphs
For each graph in the unit, understand the story it tells. What does each curve represent? What happens when it shifts? Where is profit? Where is DWL?
Draw from Memory
Close your notes. Draw every graph from memory on blank paper. Label axes, curves, and key points. Check your work. If you can't draw it, you don't know it.
Take the Unit Quiz
Take the Unit Quiz under timed conditions. Questions are modeled after real AP exams to show you how College Board twists simple concepts.
The Micro Exam Secret
It's all about the graphs.
Every MCQ tests whether you can read a graph. Every FRQ tests whether you can draw one. Master the 8 essential graphs, understand the story each one tells, and you will score a 5.