Equilibrium price is the price at which quantity demanded equals quantity supplied, so the market clears with no shortage or surplus. On the AP Micro exam, it's where the demand and supply curves intersect, and it's the reference point for surplus areas, price controls, tariffs, and firm entry or exit.
Equilibrium price (also called the market-clearing price) is the price where the quantity buyers want to purchase exactly equals the quantity sellers want to provide. On a graph, it's the price at the intersection of the demand and supply curves. At any price above it, sellers offer more than buyers want and a surplus appears. At any price below it, buyers want more than sellers offer and a shortage appears. Market forces then push the price back toward equilibrium, which is the core idea of EK MKT-4.B.1.
The CED also gives equilibrium price a bigger job than just balancing one graph. It's a signal. Equilibrium price provides information to economic decision-makers that guides resource allocation. When demand for corn rises (say, because ethanol producers want more of it), the higher equilibrium price tells farmers to grow more corn and tells firms outside the market that profits might be available. Almost every later topic in AP Micro is really a story about something pushing the actual price away from equilibrium, or the equilibrium itself shifting.
Equilibrium price is the spine of Unit 2 (Supply and Demand) and the trigger for Unit 3's long-run story. It's defined in Topic 2.6 (AP Micro 2.6.A and 2.6.B), where you also calculate consumer and producer surplus as the triangles above and below it (2.6.C). Topic 2.7 (AP Micro 2.7.A through 2.7.C) covers what happens when curves shift and the equilibrium moves. Topic 2.8 (AP Micro 2.8.A through 2.8.C) is about governments deliberately setting prices away from equilibrium with ceilings, floors, and taxes, which creates deadweight loss. Topic 2.9 (AP Micro 2.9.A through 2.9.C) compares the domestic equilibrium price under autarky to the world price, with trade filling the gap. Then in Unit 3, AP Micro 3.6.A connects the market equilibrium price to the price each perfectly competitive firm takes as given, which determines whether firms earn profits and enter or take losses and exit. If you can find equilibrium price on a graph and explain what moves it, half of Units 2 and 3 unlocks.
Keep studying AP Microeconomics Unit 3
Supply and Demand (Unit 2)
Equilibrium price isn't a separate idea from supply and demand. It's the answer the model spits out. Every shift question on the exam is really asking you to find the old intersection, move a curve, and find the new one.
Market Surplus and Shortage (Unit 2)
Surplus and shortage are defined relative to equilibrium price. A price above equilibrium creates a surplus and a price below creates a shortage, and in a free market both pressures push the price back to equilibrium.
Price Ceiling and Deadweight Loss (Unit 2)
Price controls only bite when they're set on the wrong side of equilibrium. A ceiling below equilibrium price causes a shortage, a floor above it causes a surplus, and both shrink quantity traded and create deadweight loss.
Firms' Entry and Exit Decisions (Unit 3)
In perfect competition, the market's equilibrium price becomes each firm's price. If that price sits above average total cost, profits attract entry, supply shifts right, and the equilibrium price falls until profits hit zero. The market price is the messenger that tells firms to come or go.
Equilibrium price shows up everywhere on AP Micro, in both MCQs and FRQs. Multiple-choice stems ask things like what happens to equilibrium price when demand increases while supply stays constant, what occurs when the actual market price sits above equilibrium, and what a price ceiling set below equilibrium causes. You need to do three things with it. First, identify it graphically as the intersection of supply and demand and label it (P*) and the equilibrium quantity (Q*). Second, calculate it and the surplus areas around it from a graph or table, like the 2022 FRQ that gave individual buyers' quantities at different prices and asked you to build market demand and find equilibrium. Third, explain how shocks move it, as in the 2017 FRQ where rising ethanol production raised demand for corn, and the 2021 FRQ on Microland's corn market, which linked the market equilibrium price to an individual firm's profit and the long-run entry/exit adjustment. Double-shift questions are a classic trap, since when both curves shift, either price or quantity becomes indeterminate.
The market price is whatever price is actually being charged right now. The equilibrium price is the specific price where quantity demanded equals quantity supplied. In a free competitive market they end up being the same, but a price ceiling, floor, or temporary disequilibrium can hold the market price away from equilibrium. When the exam says the actual price is above or below equilibrium, it's testing whether you know a surplus or shortage results and that market forces push price back toward equilibrium.
Equilibrium price is the price where quantity demanded equals quantity supplied, found at the intersection of the demand and supply curves.
A price above equilibrium creates a surplus and a price below creates a shortage, and in a free market both push the price back toward equilibrium.
Consumer surplus is the area below demand and above the equilibrium price, and producer surplus is the area above supply and below it.
Price ceilings, price floors, taxes, and tariffs all move the market away from its free-market equilibrium and create deadweight loss in an otherwise efficient market.
In perfect competition, the market equilibrium price is the price each firm takes as given, and profits or losses at that price drive long-run entry and exit.
When both supply and demand shift at the same time, either equilibrium price or equilibrium quantity is indeterminate without knowing the sizes of the shifts.
It's the price at which quantity demanded equals quantity supplied, so the market clears with no shortage or surplus. Graphically, it's the price at the intersection of the demand and supply curves, labeled P*.
No. The actual market price can sit above or below equilibrium, creating a surplus or shortage, and government policies like price ceilings can legally hold it there. In a free competitive market, though, market forces push the actual price toward equilibrium.
Equilibrium price is the height of the intersection point on the vertical axis, while equilibrium quantity is the amount traded at that price, read off the horizontal axis. FRQs usually ask you to label both as P* and Q*, and double-shift questions often make one of them indeterminate.
If demand increases and supply stays constant, both equilibrium price and equilibrium quantity rise. The 2017 FRQ used exactly this setup, with ethanol production raising the demand for corn and pushing up corn's price.
No, and that's the trap. A price ceiling doesn't move the equilibrium; it makes the legal market price sit below it, which causes a shortage because quantity demanded exceeds quantity supplied at the capped price.