Adjust the sliders below to calculate your potential AP® score
The AP® Latin Score Calculator helps students predict their AP exam score (1–5) based on raw performance in both Multiple Choice (MCQ) and Free Response (FRQ) sections. Designed using College Board rubrics and historical data, this tool gives a highly accurate preview of your expected results before the official scores are released.
Whether you’re tracking progress through mock exams or final reviews, this calculator gives you actionable feedback for success on the AP Latin exam.
The AP Latin Exam assesses a student’s ability to read, translate, analyze, and interpret Latin texts, primarily from:
Vergil’s Aeneid
Caesar’s Gallic War
It tests both literal translation skills and analytical understanding of grammar, syntax, cultural context, and literary devices.
Section | Type | Questions/Tasks | Time | Weight |
---|---|---|---|---|
I | Multiple Choice (MCQ) | 50 questions | 60 minutes | 50% |
II-A | Free Response: Translation & Short Answer | 2 translations + 2 questions | ~60 minutes | 33% |
II-B | Free Response: Analytical Essays | 1 essay + 1 sight reading | ~60 minutes | 17% |
2 Translation Passages (Vergil + Caesar)
2 Short-Answer Textual Analysis Questions
1 Analytical Essay
1 Sight-Reading Essay (unseen passage)
This calculator computes your composite score (out of 100) by applying weightings to your raw MCQ and FRQ scores, then maps that total to your estimated AP score.
Section | Raw Score Estimate | Weight (%) |
---|---|---|
Multiple Choice | 50 points | 50% |
Translations (FRQ IIA) | 20 points (2 × 10) | 15% |
Short Answers (FRQ IIA) | 10 points (2 × 5) | 10% |
Analytical Essay (FRQ IIB) | 15 points | 15% |
Sight-Reading Essay | 10 points | 10% |
✍️ Each free-response section is graded using detailed College Board rubrics, typically on a 0–5 or 0–6 scale.
Composite Score | Predicted AP Score |
---|---|
85–100 | 5 |
70–84 | 4 |
55–69 | 3 |
40–54 | 2 |
Below 40 | 1 |
📌 These score thresholds are approximations based on College Board data and may vary slightly each year.
Input Your MCQ Score
Enter your correct answers out of 50.
Enter Translation Scores
Self-grade your Vergil and Caesar translations (0–10 each).
Add Short Answer Scores
Score each textual analysis response from 0–5.
Input Essay Scores
Use rubrics to estimate your essay and sight-reading scores.
Get Results
The calculator will compute your composite score and map it to a predicted AP score (1–5).
Review vocabulary and syntax frequently found in Vergil and Caesar.
Practice scanning passages for grammatical clues (ablative absolutes, indirect statement, etc.)
Focus on literary and rhetorical devices and their functions in passages.
Use line references and Latin quotes to back up answers in short responses.
In translations, aim for literal accuracy while preserving meaning.
In essays, include literary analysis, structure, tone, and authorial purpose.
Sight-reading: Focus on identifying clauses, verb forms, and punctuation clues.
📊 Predict your AP Latin score accurately
🎯 Pinpoint areas of weakness: translation, MCQs, or essays
⏱️ Simulate real scoring under exam-like conditions
🧠 Adjust study strategies based on section weight
📝 Track progress after practice exams and FRQ sets
The AP® Latin Score Calculator is a must-have tool for students looking to excel on one of the most challenging AP exams. It helps you visualize your readiness, measure performance across sections, and refine your Latin strategy as the exam approaches.
Whether you’re mastering meter in Aeneid or unraveling Caesar’s syntax, this calculator will guide you on your path to a strong AP score.