AP exam review verified for 2027

AP US History Exam Review

The AP US History exam tests your ability to analyze historical evidence and build arguments across four distinct question types, each with its own format, timing, and scoring rules. Knowing exactly what each section demands before exam day is the most direct path to a higher score.

Use the topic guides below to break down the MCQ, SAQ, DBQ, and LEQ sections one at a time.

What is the AP US History Exam?

The AP US History exam rewards two skills above all else: reading sources carefully and writing structured historical arguments. The MCQ and SAQ test source analysis under time pressure. The DBQ and LEQ test your ability to build a thesis, use evidence, and apply a historical reasoning skill like causation, comparison, or continuity and change over time.

APUSH has four question types across two sections. The MCQ is the largest section by question count but the SAQ, DBQ, and LEQ together make up 60% of your score, so essay preparation matters at least as much as content review.

Section I: MCQ and SAQ

The MCQ gives you 55 questions in 55 minutes, each tied to a stimulus source. The SAQ follows with 3 questions in 40 minutes. All 3 SAQs are required. Question 3 uses a primary or secondary non-text source beginning with the May 2027 exam. Each SAQ part is worth exactly 1 point, so partial credit is built into the structure.

Section II: DBQ and LEQ

You have 100 minutes total for Section II. The DBQ comes first with 7 documents and a 7-point rubric covering thesis, contextualization, evidence, analysis, and complexity. The LEQ follows with three prompt options testing the same reasoning skill in different time periods. You pick one and write from your own knowledge.

What the exam actually rewards

Every section rewards the same core habits: identifying an argument in a source, connecting evidence to a claim, and applying a historical reasoning skill explicitly. Memorizing facts helps, but students who practice writing thesis statements and sourcing documents consistently outperform those who only review content.

The exam is a writing test as much as a history test

Three of the four question types require written responses scored on rubrics. The DBQ alone is worth more than the entire SAQ section. If your study plan is mostly re-reading notes, shift time toward practicing thesis writing, document analysis, and timed essay drafts. The topic guides for each question type break down exactly what earns points.

Exam review study guides

1

Multiple-Choice Questions (MCQ)

55 stimulus-based questions in 55 minutes, worth 40% of your score. Questions come in sets tied to primary sources, secondary sources, images, maps, and data. The topic guide covers question patterns, timing strategy, and how to read stimulus sets efficiently.

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2

Short Answer Questions (SAQ)

3 questions in 40 minutes, worth 20% of your score. Each question has three 1-point parts. All 3 SAQs are required beginning with the May 2027 exam. The topic guide covers task verb strategy, worked examples, and how to earn all 9 points.

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3

Document-Based Question (DBQ)

One essay with 7 documents, recommended 60 minutes, worth 25% of your score. Scored on a 7-point rubric covering thesis, contextualization, evidence, sourcing, and complexity. The topic guide includes a full rubric breakdown and step-by-step writing strategy.

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4

Long Essay Question (LEQ)

One required broad essay prompt, recommended 40 minutes, worth 15% of your score. Scored on a 6-point rubric. No documents are provided. The topic guide covers how to choose your prompt, build a thesis, and apply historical reasoning skills from your own knowledge.

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5

Is AP US History Hard? Is It Worth Taking?

A look at what makes APUSH challenging, what the national pass-rate data shows, and how to build a realistic study plan. Useful for setting expectations and deciding where to focus your preparation time.

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AP US History Exam review notes

Exam format

How the APUSH exam is structured

The exam runs about 3 hours and 15 minutes across two sections. Section I is multiple choice followed by short answer. Section II is the document-based essay followed by the long essay. Each section has a fixed time allocation, and the essay sections share a single 100-minute block, so you manage your own pacing between the DBQ and LEQ.

  • Section I, Part A (MCQ): 55 stimulus-based questions in 55 minutes, worth 40% of the total score. Questions come in sets of 3-4 tied to a shared source.
  • Section I, Part B (SAQ): 3 short-answer questions in 40 minutes, worth 20% of the total score. Each question has three 1-point parts labeled (a), (b), and (c).
  • Section II, Part A (DBQ): One document-based essay with 7 documents, recommended 60 minutes including a 15-minute reading period, worth 25% of the total score. Scored on a 7-point rubric.
  • Section II, Part B (LEQ): One long essay based on one required broad prompt, recommended 40 minutes, worth 15% of the total score. Scored on a 6-point rubric.
Can you name the time allocation and score weight for each of the four question types without looking?
Question typeTimeScore weightRubric points
MCQ55 min40%N/A (55 questions)
SAQ40 min20%9 points (3 per question)
DBQ~60 min25%7 points
LEQ~40 min15%6 points
MCQ strategy

Reading stimulus sets efficiently

Every MCQ set is built around a source: a primary document, a historian's argument, an image, a map, a chart, or data. At least one set in the exam pairs two text sources for comparison. The key skill is identifying the argument or perspective in the source before reading the questions, then using that reading to eliminate wrong answers. Wrong answers on APUSH MCQs often misrepresent the source's time period, exaggerate a claim, or introduce outside information the source does not support.

  • Stimulus set: A group of 3-4 MCQ questions that all refer to the same source. Reading the source once carefully is more efficient than re-reading it for each question.
  • Secondary source question: A question built around a historian's interpretation. These often ask you to identify the argument, find evidence that supports or challenges it, or place it in historical context.
  • Comparison set: At least one set in the exam uses two text sources. Expect questions about similarities, differences, or how one source responds to the other.
Practice reading a primary source and writing one sentence summarizing its argument before looking at the questions. Does your summary match what the questions are actually testing?
Source typeWhat to look forCommon question task
Primary documentAuthor's purpose, audience, historical situationExplain context or identify argument
Historian's interpretationCentral claim and evidence usedSupport, challenge, or extend the argument
Image or mapWhat is shown, what is absent, time periodIdentify perspective or change over time
Chart or dataTrend, outlier, time rangeConnect data to a historical development
SAQ strategy

Earning all 3 points on every short-answer question

Each SAQ part is worth exactly 1 point and is graded independently. You do not need a thesis, and you do not need to write an introduction. The task verbs tell you exactly what to do: 'describe' means state a specific historical development, 'explain' means give a cause or effect, and 'evaluate' means make a judgment with support. Longer is not better. A focused two-to-three sentence response that directly answers the task verb earns the point. A vague paragraph does not.

  • Describe: State a specific historical fact, event, development, or characteristic. Do not just name something; give enough detail to show you understand it.
  • Explain: Show a cause-and-effect or reason-and-result relationship. Connect your evidence to the prompt explicitly.
  • Evaluate: Make a supported judgment. State your position and give specific historical evidence that backs it up.
Write a practice response to one SAQ part and check: did you use a specific historical example, and did you directly address the task verb?
SAQ questionSource typeTime period covered
Question 1 (required)Secondary source (historian)1754-1980
Question 2 (required)Primary source1754-1980
Question 3 (required source-based)Primary or secondary non-text sourcePre-1877 or post-1877
DBQ strategy

Using all 7 rubric points in the document-based question

The DBQ rubric has five categories: thesis/claim (1 point), contextualization (1 point), evidence (up to 3 points), analysis and reasoning (1 point), and complexity (1 point). The evidence category is where most points are won or lost. Using a document means more than quoting it; you need to explain how it supports your argument. Sourcing a document means connecting its historical situation, audience, purpose, or point of view to your argument. Contextualization requires a full paragraph of historical background before 1754 or outside the prompt's direct scope, not just a sentence.

  • Thesis/claim: A historically defensible claim that responds to the prompt and establishes a line of reasoning. It must go beyond restating the prompt.
  • Contextualization: A developed explanation of a broader historical context that is relevant to the prompt. Must be more than a phrase; needs to be a full explanation of how context connects to the argument.
  • Document evidence: Using at least 3 documents to address the topic earns 1 point; using at least 6 documents to support your argument earns a second point.
  • Sourcing (HAPP): For at least 3 documents, explain how the historical situation, audience, purpose, or point of view affects the document's meaning or limitations.
  • Outside evidence: Using at least one piece of specific evidence not found in the documents earns 1 point under the evidence category.
  • Complexity: Demonstrating a complex understanding of the topic, such as explaining both similarity and difference, both continuity and change, or multiple causes. Must be sustained throughout the essay, not just mentioned once.
After a practice DBQ, count how many documents you sourced with HAPP and whether your contextualization paragraph is at least 4-5 sentences of developed explanation.
Rubric categoryPoints availableMost common mistake
Thesis/claim1Restating the prompt instead of making a claim
Contextualization1Writing one sentence instead of a developed paragraph
Document evidence2Summarizing documents instead of using them as evidence
Sourcing (HAPP)1Identifying HAPP without explaining its significance
Outside evidence1Forgetting to include any evidence beyond the documents
LEQ strategy

Building a full argument from your own knowledge

The LEQ has no documents. Every point of evidence comes from what you know. The 6-point rubric covers thesis (1 point), contextualization (1 point), evidence (2 points), analysis and reasoning (1 point), and complexity (1 point). The three prompt options test the same historical reasoning skill in different time periods, so choose the period where you have the most specific evidence, not just the most general familiarity. A strong LEQ thesis names a specific argument and previews the reasoning structure of the essay.

  • Historical reasoning skill: The LEQ always tests one of three skills: causation, comparison, or continuity and change over time. The prompt will signal which one. Your essay must apply that skill explicitly, not just describe events.
  • Specific evidence: Naming a specific historical example earns 1 point; explaining how that example supports your argument earns a second point. Vague references to 'many events' do not earn credit.
  • Complexity in the LEQ: Demonstrating complexity means doing more than listing causes or effects. It means explaining how factors interact, qualify each other, or connect to a different time period or scale.
Write a practice LEQ thesis for each of the three time period options on a prompt. Which one lets you name the most specific evidence in your preview?
LEQ rubric categoryPoints available
Thesis/claim1
Contextualization1
Evidence: specific examples1
Evidence: supports argument1
Analysis and reasoning1

Common mistakes

Writing a DBQ thesis that just restates the prompt

A thesis must make a historically defensible claim and establish a line of reasoning, meaning it should preview why or how, not just what. 'The American Revolution was caused by many factors' is not a thesis. 'Colonial resistance to British taxation escalated into revolution primarily because Parliamentary policies threatened the economic autonomy that colonists had come to see as a right' is.

Treating SAQ responses like mini-essays

SAQ parts do not need introductions, transitions, or conclusions. Each part is worth 1 point and is graded on whether you answered the specific task. Writing four sentences of context before your actual answer wastes time and often buries the point-earning content.

Summarizing documents instead of using them as evidence

In the DBQ, restating what a document says does not earn the evidence point. You must explain how the document supports your specific argument. The difference is connecting the source's content to your thesis, not just describing it.

Choosing the LEQ prompt based on familiarity rather than evidence depth

Students often pick the most recent time period because it feels more familiar, but the LEQ rewards specific evidence, not general knowledge. If you can name three precise examples for an earlier period and only vague trends for a later one, the earlier period is the stronger choice.

Running out of time in Section II by spending too long on the DBQ

The DBQ and LEQ share 100 minutes. Students who spend 75 or more minutes on the DBQ often write rushed, incomplete LEQs that miss rubric points they could have earned. Practice pacing both essays in a single sitting before exam day.

How this exam guide helps with AP prep

Every section tests historical reasoning, not just recall

The MCQ, SAQ, DBQ, and LEQ all reward students who can apply causation, comparison, or continuity and change over time explicitly. Knowing facts is necessary but not sufficient. Practice connecting evidence to a reasoning skill in every study session, not just during essay practice.

The DBQ and LEQ share a rubric structure

Both essays award points for thesis, contextualization, evidence, analysis and reasoning, and complexity. The DBQ adds sourcing because it provides documents. Practicing the shared rubric categories on LEQ prompts, where you have no documents to rely on, builds the skills that transfer directly to the DBQ.

SAQ task verbs appear in DBQ and LEQ prompts too

The verbs describe, explain, and evaluate show up across all three written sections. A student who has practiced writing precise SAQ responses has already built the sentence-level habits that make DBQ and LEQ body paragraphs stronger. The SAQ is not just a standalone section; it is a training ground for essay writing.

Review checklist

  • Know the format coldBefore reviewing any content, make sure you can name the time allocation, score weight, and rubric point total for each of the four question types. Surprises on exam day cost time and confidence.
  • Practice reading stimulus sources before answering MCQ questionsFor each MCQ set, read the source and write one sentence summarizing its argument or perspective before looking at the questions. This habit prevents the most common MCQ error: answering based on outside knowledge instead of the source.
  • Write at least one timed SAQ under real conditionsSet a timer for 13 minutes per question and write all three parts without stopping. Check each response: did you use a specific historical example, and did you directly address the task verb in every part?
  • Audit your DBQ for all 7 rubric categoriesAfter any practice DBQ, go through the rubric point by point. Mark which documents you sourced with HAPP, check whether your contextualization is a full paragraph, and confirm you included at least one piece of outside evidence.
  • Practice choosing your LEQ prompt strategicallyPractice listing specific evidence for broad chronological windows before exam day. Beginning with the May 2027 exam, the best response is not about choosing a prompt; it is about choosing the most precise evidence for the required prompt.
  • Review the historical reasoning skills by nameCausation, comparison, and continuity and change over time appear in every essay section. Practice writing one sentence that explicitly applies each skill to a historical example, not just describes events.
  • Use the score calculator to set a realistic targetThe Fiveable score calculator lets you estimate your AP score based on projected section performance. Use it to identify which section has the most room for improvement and adjust your study focus accordingly.

How to study AP us history exam

Start with format, not contentRead the topic guides for each question type before reviewing any historical content. Understanding exactly what each section asks you to do, and how it is scored, makes every subsequent content review more targeted. You will know which skills to practice as you study each period.
Review content by historical reasoning skill, not just chronologyAs you review each time period, practice framing what you know in terms of causation, comparison, and continuity and change over time. Ask: what caused this? How does this compare to an earlier or later development? What changed and what stayed the same? This directly prepares you for the LEQ and DBQ.
Practice one essay type per study sessionRotate through SAQ, DBQ, and LEQ practice rather than doing all three in one sitting. Focused practice on one format at a time builds the specific habits each section requires. Use the topic guides to check your work against the rubric after each attempt.
Do a full timed Section II simulationAt least once before the exam, sit down and write a complete DBQ and LEQ back to back in 100 minutes. This is the only way to know whether your pacing is realistic. Most students discover they need to write faster or plan more efficiently when they try this for the first time.
Use the score calculator in the final weekEstimate your projected score using the Fiveable score calculator based on your practice performance in each section. If your MCQ accuracy and essay rubric scores suggest you are close to a score threshold, identify the one or two rubric points you are most consistently missing and focus your final review there.

More ways to review

Topic study guides

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

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FRQ practice

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

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Cram archive videos

Watch past review streams filtered to AP US History Exam when you want a video walkthrough.

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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 APUSH progress check (MCQ and FRQ)?

The APUSH progress check in AP Classroom includes both MCQ and FRQ parts that pull directly from the unit's core topics, covering periods of U.S. history like political developments, social movements, and economic change. The MCQ section tests content recall and historical reasoning, while the FRQ part asks you to write short analytical responses. Practicing these question types helps you understand what College Board expects before the real apush exam. Head to /apush/ap-us-history-exam for matched practice questions aligned to the same topics.

How do I practice APUSH FRQs?

Practicing APUSH FRQs means writing short-answer questions (SAQs), document-based questions (DBQs), and long-essay questions (LEQs) on the unit's key topics, such as Reconstruction, industrialization, or the Cold War, depending on the period. Start by reading the prompt carefully, identifying the historical reasoning skill it targets (causation, continuity and change over time, comparison), then outline before writing. Reviewing scored sample responses from College Board helps you see exactly what earns points. Find practice prompts and study guides at /apush/ap-us-history-exam.

Where can I find APUSH practice questions?

The best place to find APUSH practice questions, including MCQ sets and full practice test materials, is /apush/ap-us-history-exam, where questions are organized by period and topic. For MCQ practice, look for stimulus-based questions that pair a primary source, image, or map with historical reasoning prompts, since that's the format on the real apush exam. Mixing timed MCQ sets with written FRQ practice gives you the most complete preparation. Using an apush score calculator after practice tests also helps you track where you stand.

How should I study for the APUSH exam?

Studying for the APUSH exam works best when you organize content chronologically, connect themes across periods, and practice writing under timed conditions. Start by reviewing key periods and their turning points, like the Colonial Era, Civil War and Reconstruction, Progressive Era, and post-World War II America. Then practice stimulus-based MCQs to sharpen historical reasoning, and write at least one APUSH FRQ per study session to build writing stamina. Use an apush score calculator on practice tests to identify which periods need more attention, and revisit those topics before moving on. Full study resources are at /apush/ap-us-history-exam.

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