Verified Resources for 2026-2027

AP Macroeconomics resources for every unit, skill, and exam question type.

AP Macroeconomics covers 6 units, from Basic Economic Concepts to Open Economy – International Trade and Finance. Use this hub for unit study guides, topic review, practice questions, FRQs, key terms, cheatsheets, score calculators, practice exams, and exam prep.

AP Macroeconomics at a glance

AP Macroeconomics studies how whole economies work, from scarcity and markets to GDP, inflation, and fiscal and monetary policy. You build and read graphs to explain economic outcomes in the short run and long run.

6 course unitspractice questionskey terms

Not sure where to start?

New to the class

Start with the overview

Get the big picture: what AP Macroeconomics covers, how it is scored, and how the units connect.

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Find your level

Take a diagnostic

Answer a quick mix of questions to see which units need the most review.

start a diagnostic
Mid-course

Jump into a unit

Open the unit you are studying now and review its guides, practice, and key terms.

browse all 6 units

What is AP Macroeconomics?

AP Macroeconomics covers 6 units, from Basic Economic Concepts to Open Economy – International Trade and Finance. Use this hub for unit study guides, topic review, practice questions, FRQs, key terms, cheatsheets, score calculators, practice exams, and exam prep.

What students review in AP Macroeconomics

  • Unit 1: Basic Economic Concepts
  • Unit 2: Economic Indicators and the Business Cycle
  • Unit 3: National Income and Price Determination
  • Unit 4: Financial Sector
  • Unit 5: Long–Run Consequences of Stabilization Policies
  • 1 more course units with topic guides.

AP Macroeconomics exam format

Use this section breakdown to plan timed practice and decide which question types need review.

SectionQuestionsTime% of Score
Section I – Multiple Choice6070 min67%
Section II – Free Response360 min33%

Total timed testing time: 130 minutes.

AP Macroeconomics units & exam weights

The course is organized into 6 units. The percentages below are the College Board exam weights, so you can see which units carry the most multiple-choice points. Open each unit for its study guide, topic pages, key terms, and practice questions.

2

AP Macro Unit 2 is about how economists measure the economy's health using three big indicators, which are GDP, the unemployment rate, and the inflation rate.

12–17%exam weight
6
10–13%exam weight
study pulse

AP Macroeconomics by the numbers

These trends come from real Fiveable practice data, so you can see what students are reviewing, which topics need extra attention, and how written practice can improve over time.

Topics with the highest MCQ miss rate

86,761 MCQs
4.7 The Loanable Funds Market
45%
6.5 Changes in the Foreign Exchange Market and Net Exports
44%
4.5 The Money Market
42%
6.6 Real Interest Rates and International Capital Flows
41%

Miss rate is based on high-volume AP Macroeconomics multiple-choice practice.

More MCQ practice lines up with stronger accuracy

+10 pts
accuracy63%25+63%50+65%100+73%500+MCQs practiced

Average MCQ accuracy by student practice volume across 1,990 AP Macroeconomics students.

FRQ scores often grow after another attempt

56 retries
57%first attempt
71%latest attempt
54%improved after retrying
2.6attempts per retried response
+14point average gain

Among AP Macroeconomics FRQ responses that students retried on Fiveable, average scores rose from 57% on the first attempt to 71% on the latest attempt.

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Big ideas & exam guides

These guides collect important exam skills, big ideas, essay tasks, and other subject-specific resources.

How to study for AP Macroeconomics

Build the course map first

Skim the 6 unit pages, then choose the units that need the most review. Use topic guides for the concepts that feel fuzzy instead of rereading the whole course.

Move from notes to practice

After each unit, answer practice questions and write free responses when they are part of the subject. Keep a short list of missed skills and revisit those guides before the next set.

Finish with exam prep

Use exam guides, cheatsheets, score calculators, and practice exams when they are available for this course. The best final review plan connects content, question types, and timing.

AP Macroeconomics FRQ practice

Use the question types below to plan written-response practice and connect exam guides to timed FRQs. Open an example prompt to practice that question type right away.

QuestionFocusPoints% of ScoreExample prompt
FRQ 1 – Long AnswerLong1017%Aggregate demand and supply equilibrium analysis
FRQ 2 – Short AnswerShort58%Fiscal policy tools achieving full-employment output
FRQ 3 – Short AnswerShort58%Opportunity cost and comparative advantage in production
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AP Macroeconomics study tools

Frequently Asked Questions

Is AP Macroeconomics hard?

AP Macro is one of the more manageable AP courses, but it still takes steady effort. The challenge is less about memorizing and more about reading and drawing graphs like AD-AS, the money market, and loanable funds. The math stays basic, mostly simple calculations and graph interpretation. If you learn each model as you finish a unit and practice FRQs regularly, the exam feels very approachable.

How do I start studying for AP Macroeconomics?

Start with the graphs, because nearly every FRQ asks you to draw one. Begin with Unit 1 supply and demand, then move into the AD-AS model in Unit 3, the money market in Unit 4, and the foreign exchange market in Unit 6. After each unit, redraw the key graph from memory and write one sentence explaining each shift. Then mix in practice questions to lock in the models.

Which AP Macroeconomics units are weighted the most?

Unit 5, Long-Run Consequences of Stabilization Policies, carries the highest weight at 20 to 30 percent of multiple-choice questions. Unit 3, National Income and Price Determination, follows at 17 to 27 percent, and Unit 4, Financial Sector, sits at 18 to 23 percent. Together these three units cover most of the exam, so prioritize the AD-AS model, the money market, monetary and fiscal policy, and economic growth.

How many FRQs are on the AP Macroeconomics exam?

The free-response section has 3 questions and runs 60 minutes, including a 10-minute reading period. Question 1 is long and worth 10 points, while Questions 2 and 3 are short and worth 5 points each. This section is 33.35 percent of your score. Most points come from drawing correctly labeled graphs and explaining outcomes, so practice both skills until they feel automatic.

What graphs do I need to know for AP Macroeconomics?

Master the production possibilities curve, supply and demand, the AD-AS model, the money market, the loanable funds market, the Phillips curve, and the foreign exchange market. These show up repeatedly on FRQs, where you must draw, label, and then shift curves to show policy effects. Practice drawing each from memory and tracing how a single change, like a tax cut, moves through multiple markets.

Ready to review?Start with the course overview, review each AP Macroeconomics unit, practice exam-style questions, and use Fiveable tools when you are ready to plan final review.