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AP Physics 1 Exam Review

The AP Physics 1 exam tests your ability to reason through mechanics, energy, momentum, rotation, fluids, and oscillations using models, graphs, equations, and written justification. Knowing the format and what each question type demands is the fastest way to turn your content knowledge into points.

Use the topic guides below to break down each section of the exam before your test date.

What is the AP Physics 1 Exam?

AP Physics 1 is widely considered one of the most demanding AP exams because every question requires you to do more than recall a formula. You need to connect representations, justify claims with physics principles, and show your reasoning explicitly in writing and math.

The exam is 3 hours total, split evenly between 40 MCQs and 4 FRQs. Each section counts for 50% of your score. The FRQs have fixed types with specific rubric expectations, so learning the task structure for each one is as important as knowing the physics content.

Section I: MCQ

40 single-select questions, 80 minutes, 50% of your score. That works out to 2 minutes per question. Questions reward physics reasoning and distractor choices are designed to catch common conceptual errors, not just calculation mistakes.

Section II: Free Response

4 FRQs in 100 minutes, worth 50% of your score. The four question types are Mathematical Routines (10 pts), Translation Between Representations (12 pts), Experimental Design (10 pts), and Qualitative/Quantitative Translation (8 pts). Each has a different task structure and rubric.

What the exam rewards

Correct answers require you to explain motion, forces, energy, momentum, torque, rotation, fluids, and oscillations using multiple representations: free-body diagrams, energy bar charts, graphs, symbolic derivations, and written justification. Shallow memorization of formulas is not enough.

Why format knowledge matters as much as content knowledge

Each FRQ type has a predictable structure. FRQ 2 (TBR) always asks for four representations of one scenario. FRQ 3 (Experimental Design) always splits into a design half and a data-analysis half. FRQ 4 (QQT) always asks you to match a verbal explanation to a mathematical derivation and show they agree. Students who know these structures before exam day spend less time figuring out what is being asked and more time earning points.

Exam review study guides

1

Multiple-Choice Questions

40 questions, 80 minutes, 50% of your score. Learn unit weightings, pacing strategy, and how to read distractor choices as physics claims. The topic guide covers a worked example and common trap patterns.

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2

Mathematical Routines

10 points, 20-25 minutes. This question asks you to draw representations, derive symbolic expressions, calculate values, and justify a claim. The topic guide covers free-body diagram rules, derivation structure, and a worked example.

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3

Translation Between Representations

12 points, 25-30 minutes. The highest-value FRQ asks you to describe one scenario four ways: visual representation, equation, graph, and written justification. The topic guide includes a worked spring-block example and step-by-step strategy.

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4

Experimental Design

10 points, 25-30 minutes. Two halves: design an experiment and analyze data. The topic guide covers procedure-writing strategy, linearization, best-fit lines, and how to extract a physical quantity from a graph.

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5

Qualitative/Quantitative Translation

8 points, roughly 15-20 minutes. Explain a scenario in words, derive the matching equation, and show both analyses agree. The topic guide covers the agreement step in detail with a worked collision example.

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6

Is AP Physics 1 Hard?

AP Physics 1 has one of the lowest exam context of any AP exam. This guide explains what makes it difficult, what the score distribution looks like, and includes a two-week study path to help you prepare efficiently.

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AP Physics 1 Exam review notes

Exam format

Section I: Multiple-Choice Questions

The MCQ section gives you 80 minutes for 40 questions, all single-select with four answer choices. A calculator is allowed. The questions are weighted by topic, so units like forces, energy, and momentum appear more frequently than fluids or oscillations. Distractor choices are built around the most common physics misconceptions, so eliminating wrong answers requires understanding why they are wrong, not just knowing the right one.

  • Pacing: 2 minutes per question on average. Flag and skip questions that require long setup; return to them after answering the ones you can do quickly.
  • Distractor patterns: Wrong answers often reflect sign errors, incorrect direction of net force, or confusion between velocity and acceleration. Read each choice as a physics claim, not just a number.
  • Calculator use: A four-function, scientific, or graphing calculator is allowed throughout Section I. Most MCQs reward reasoning over arithmetic, so do not over-rely on calculation.
Can you identify which physics principle is being tested in an MCQ before you look at the answer choices? Practice reading the stem and naming the concept first.
FeatureDetail
Number of questions40
Time allowed80 minutes
Answer formatSingle-select, 4 choices
Score weight50% of total score
CalculatorAllowed
Exam format

Section II: Free-Response Overview

Section II has 4 FRQs in 100 minutes and counts for 50% of your score. Each question has a fixed type with a specific point value and suggested time. The highest-value question is FRQ 2 (Translation Between Representations) at 12 points. The lowest is FRQ 4 (Qualitative/Quantitative Translation) at 8 points. Knowing the task structure of each type before exam day is essential because the rubric rewards specific moves, not just correct physics.

  • FRQ 1: Mathematical Routines: 10 points, 20-25 minutes suggested. Draw representations like free-body diagrams, derive symbolic expressions, calculate numerical values, and justify a claim with physics principles.
  • FRQ 2: Translation Between Representations: 12 points, 25-30 minutes suggested. One scenario described four ways: visual representation, equation, graph, and a written justification connecting all three.
  • FRQ 3: Experimental Design: 10 points, 25-30 minutes suggested. Two halves: design an experiment to answer a scientific question, then analyze real data by plotting points, drawing a best-fit line, and extracting a physical quantity.
  • FRQ 4: Qualitative/Quantitative Translation: 8 points, roughly 15-20 minutes suggested. Explain a scenario in words, derive the matching equation, and show that both analyses agree. The agreement step is where most points are lost.
For each FRQ type, can you name the specific tasks the rubric expects? Practice writing out the task list for each type from memory before you attempt a full question.
FRQTypePointsSuggested Time
FRQ 1Mathematical Routines1020-25 min
FRQ 2Translation Between Representations1225-30 min
FRQ 3Experimental Design1025-30 min
FRQ 4Qualitative/Quantitative Translation815-20 min
Scoring

How the exam is scored

Your raw score from Section I (MCQ) and Section II (FRQ) are each converted and combined to produce a composite score, which is then translated to the 1-5 AP scale. Both sections carry equal weight. On the FRQs, rubric points are awarded for specific elements: a correct diagram, a correct symbolic expression, a correct numerical answer with units, and a written justification that cites a physics principle. Partial credit is available on FRQs, so attempting every part of every question is always worth doing.

  • Partial credit: FRQ rubrics award points for individual parts. A wrong final answer does not erase points earned on earlier parts of the same question.
  • Units and significant figures: Numerical answers on FRQs typically require correct units. Missing units can cost a point even when the number is correct.
  • Written justification: Many FRQ parts explicitly require a written explanation citing a physics principle. A correct equation alone is not sufficient for those parts.
On your next free-response review attempt, score your own response using the rubric criteria above. Did you earn the justification point on every part that asked for one?
SectionWeightRaw Points Available
Section I: MCQ50%40
Section II: FRQ50%40 (10+12+10+8)

Common mistakes

Skipping the written justification

On FRQs, many parts explicitly award a point for a written explanation that cites a physics principle. Writing only an equation or a number earns zero for that part even if the math is correct. Always check whether the prompt says 'justify,' 'explain,' or 'derive' and respond accordingly.

Drawing imprecise free-body diagrams

Rubrics for FRQ 1 and FRQ 2 often include a point for a correct force diagram. Common errors include drawing a net force arrow instead of individual forces, omitting normal force or friction, or placing arrows at the wrong point on the object. Practice drawing diagrams to rubric standards, not just roughly correct ones.

Confusing the QQT agreement step with repetition

FRQ 4 asks you to show that your qualitative and quantitative analyses agree. Students often just restate one of them. The agreement step requires you to explicitly connect the two, for example by showing that the direction of change predicted by your words matches the sign or trend in your equation.

Misreading experimental design prompts

FRQ 3 has two distinct halves. Students sometimes spend too long on the design half and rush the data analysis, or they describe a procedure without identifying variables. Read the full question before writing and allocate time to both halves.

Treating MCQ as a computation exercise

Most MCQ questions on AP Physics 1 reward conceptual reasoning. Students who jump to calculation often miss the physics principle being tested and fall for distractor choices that are numerically plausible but physically wrong. Read the stem, name the concept, then evaluate the choices.

How this exam guide helps with AP prep

MCQ and FRQ test the same physics, differently

An MCQ might ask you to identify the direction of net force on an object in circular motion. FRQ 1 might ask you to draw the free-body diagram for the same scenario, derive an expression for the net force, and justify your answer. The physics content overlaps, but the task demands are completely different. Practicing both formats on the same topics is more efficient than treating them as separate subjects.

Experimental design skills appear in both sections

FRQ 3 is the dedicated lab question, but MCQ questions also test your ability to interpret graphs, identify variables, and evaluate experimental conclusions. Reviewing linearization and best-fit line analysis for FRQ 3 will also improve your performance on data-interpretation MCQs.

Representation fluency is the common thread across all FRQ types

Every FRQ type asks you to work with at least two representations of the same physical scenario. FRQ 2 makes this explicit by requiring four representations, but FRQ 1 connects diagrams to equations, FRQ 3 connects procedures to graphs, and FRQ 4 connects words to math. Building fluency in moving between representations is the single skill that pays off across the entire free-response section.

Review checklist

  • Know the format cold before exam dayYou should be able to name the four FRQ types, their point values, and their suggested times without looking them up. Uncertainty about what a question is asking costs time and points.
  • Practice drawing representations accuratelyFree-body diagrams, energy bar charts, and motion graphs each have rubric-specific rules. A force arrow pointing the wrong direction or a bar chart with the wrong sign loses points even when your physics reasoning is correct.
  • Write justifications that cite physics principlesMany FRQ parts require a written explanation that names a law or principle, such as Newton's second law or conservation of momentum. Practice writing one-to-two sentence justifications that connect the principle to the specific scenario.
  • Review experimental design vocabularyFRQ 3 expects you to identify independent and dependent variables, describe a procedure that controls for confounding variables, and explain how to linearize a relationship. Practice writing a procedure from scratch, not just recognizing one.
  • Work through the QQT agreement step explicitlyFRQ 4 requires you to show that your verbal explanation and your mathematical derivation reach the same conclusion. Students who skip or rush this step lose points even when both analyses are individually correct.
  • Use the score calculator to set a realistic targetThe Fiveable score calculator for AP Physics 1 lets you estimate your composite score from MCQ and FRQ performance. Use it to identify which section needs more attention in your remaining study time.
  • Triage your MCQ weak spots by topicMCQ questions are weighted by topic. Forces, energy, and momentum appear more frequently than fluids or oscillations. Identify which high-weight topics you are least confident in and prioritize those in your final review.

How to study AP physics 1 exam

Start with the exam format, not content reviewBefore reviewing any physics content, read the topic guides for each FRQ type so you know exactly what each question asks you to do. Students who learn the task structure first can target their content review more efficiently.
Review high-weight MCQ topics firstForces, energy, and momentum are the most heavily weighted topics in Section I. If your study time is limited, prioritize these before reviewing fluids, oscillations, or rotational dynamics.
Practice each FRQ type separately before mixing themWork through FRQ 1, 2, 3, and 4 as isolated practice sessions before attempting a full timed Section II. Each type has a different task structure, and mixing them too early makes it harder to internalize the rubric expectations for each.
Score your own FRQ responses with rubric criteriaAfter each FRQ attempt, check whether you earned the diagram point, the symbolic expression point, the numerical answer point with units, and the justification point. Self-scoring against specific criteria is more useful than just checking if your final answer was right.
Use the score calculator in the final weekRun your recent practice performance through the Fiveable AP Physics 1 score calculator to estimate your composite score. Use the result to decide whether to focus remaining time on MCQ pacing, FRQ justification writing, or a specific content area.

More ways to review

Topic study guides

Open the individual guides for AP Physics 1 Exam when you want a closer review of one topic.

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Practice questions

Use AP-style practice after you review the notes so you can check what you understand.

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FRQ practice

Practice free-response reasoning and compare your answer with scoring guidance.

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Cheatsheets

Use unit cheatsheets for a quick visual review after you work through the notes.

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Score calculator

Estimate your broader AP score goal after you review the course and exam format.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What's on the AP Physics 1 Unit 1 progress check (MCQ and FRQ)?

The AP Physics 1 Unit 1 progress check in AP Classroom includes both MCQ and FRQ parts drawn from the unit's foundational topics: kinematics, motion in one and two dimensions, vectors, and the relationships between position, velocity, and acceleration. The MCQ part tests conceptual understanding and quantitative reasoning, while the FRQ part asks you to explain and justify motion scenarios using graphs, equations, and written reasoning. For matched practice on these exact topics, visit AP Physics 1 Unit 1.

How do I practice AP Physics 1 Unit 1 FRQs?

AP Physics 1 FRQ practice for Unit 1 focuses on kinematics topics like interpreting motion graphs, analyzing displacement and velocity, and explaining acceleration in one and two dimensions. FRQs in this unit typically ask you to derive an expression, sketch or interpret a graph, or justify a claim with physics reasoning in writing. Start by working through past College Board FRQs on kinematics, then check your justification sentences, not just your math. You can find structured FRQ practice at AP Physics 1 Unit 1.

Where can I find AP Physics 1 Unit 1 practice questions?

For AP Physics 1 Unit 1 practice questions, including multiple-choice and practice test style problems, the best starting point is AP Physics 1 Unit 1. That page has MCQ sets and FRQ practice covering kinematics, motion graphs, vectors, and one- and two-dimensional motion. AP Classroom also has a built-in progress check with scored MCQ and FRQ sections. Working through both formats helps you prepare for the ap physics 1 exam, since the real test mixes conceptual MCQs with multi-part free-response questions.

How should I study AP Physics 1 Unit 1?

Studying AP Physics 1 Unit 1 well means building fluency with kinematics concepts before memorizing equations. Start by sketching position-time and velocity-time graphs for different motion scenarios until you can read them instantly. Then practice deriving kinematic equations from those graphs rather than just plugging numbers in. Work at least five ap physics 1 frq problems where you write out full justifications, because the ap physics 1 exam rewards clear reasoning as much as correct answers. Use an ap physics 1 score calculator after practice tests to track where you're losing points and adjust your focus. Find practice sets and study guides at AP Physics 1 Unit 1.

Ready to review AP Physics 1 Exam?Start with the notes, check the topic cards, and use the practice or resource links when they are available for this course.