Adjust the sliders below to calculate your potential AP® score
The AP® Computer Science Principles Score Calculator (AP CSP) is a free and smart digital tool designed to help students predict their final AP score (1–5) based on their raw performance on both the Multiple Choice Section (MCQs) and the Performance Task (Create Task). Using official College Board scoring rubrics and historical data, this calculator helps you understand where you stand before test day.
Unlike AP Computer Science A (which focuses on Java programming), AP Computer Science Principles is broader, exploring computational thinking, problem-solving, and the impacts of computing.
Algorithms and Programming
Abstraction
Data and Privacy
The Internet and Cybersecurity
Creative Computing (Create Task)
Component | Type | Questions / Tasks | Weight |
---|---|---|---|
Section I | Multiple Choice | 70 questions | 70% |
Section II | Create Performance Task | 1 project | 30% |
The Create Task is submitted digitally before the MCQ exam and involves designing and coding a program with written reflection.
This calculator estimates your composite score out of 100 by evaluating:
The number of correct MCQ responses (scaled to 70%)
Your Create Task score (scaled to 30%)
It then converts the composite into your predicted AP score based on scoring patterns from the College Board.
Component | Max Raw Score | Weight (%) |
---|---|---|
MCQ | 70 | 70% |
Create Task (PT) | 6 (rubric score) | 30% |
Each MCQ is worth 1 point. The Create Task is scored out of 6 points (based on College Board’s rubric).
Composite Score | Predicted AP Score |
---|---|
85–100 | 5 |
70–84 | 4 |
55–69 | 3 |
40–54 | 2 |
Below 40 | 1 |
📌 This is based on College Board data trends and may vary slightly by year.
Enter Your MCQ Score
Input the number of questions you got correct out of 70.
Enter Your Create Task Score
Use the rubric to estimate your score (0–6). Each row (functionality, abstraction, data, algorithm, purpose, impact) is 1 point.
Instantly View Results
The calculator gives your composite score and maps it to a predicted AP score (1–5).
Understand abstractions, data types, conditional logic, and loops.
Review digital security, encryption, and DNS protocols.
Practice interpreting flowcharts and pseudocode.
Demonstrate purpose: Clearly state what your program does and why.
Show abstraction: Use functions to encapsulate logic.
Include data usage: Your program should store and manipulate meaningful data.
Explain algorithms clearly in your written responses.
Test thoroughly to ensure your program runs as intended.
📊 Accurately predict your AP score before test day
⏱️ Simulate scoring after practice exams or mock Create Tasks
🎯 Set study goals and track section-wise performance
🧠 Compare impact of MCQs vs Create Task on your final score
💡 Gain clarity on how close you are to scoring a 3, 4, or 5
The AP® Computer Science Principles Score Calculator is the best tool to gauge your real exam readiness. By helping you break down your MCQ and Create Task performance into a final score, it allows you to study with intention and test-day confidence.
Whether you’re submitting your Create Task soon or finishing up practice exams, this tool will help you aim for that perfect 5!