Advanced Placement Exam® (AP)

Advanced Placement (AP)® is a registered trademark owned by the College Board, which is not affiliated with Homeschooling for College Credit.

What are AP Exams?

Advanced Placement (AP) exams are standardized tests offered annually to high school students. They are published by The College Board and administered by approved test administrators at approved testing sites. Homeschool parents can not administer AP exams to their own teens, but homeschool students can take AP exams.

AP Exam scores can be worth college credit at participating colleges, or can be used to make your college application more competitive at selective universities.

Homeschoolers can take an AP exam without first taking an AP course, though some parents do also enroll their teens in AP courses. Since the trademark is well-protected, you can only use “Advanced Placement” or “AP” on your student’s academic records when they take College Board- approved courses.  

Prep before 2016

In 2013 The College Board did a massive revision of the AP exams and course content. As of 2016 all of the exams were using new versions. As you research AP information or prep resources, anything written before 2016 should be considered “old” and outdated.

All at Once

One considerable drawback to the AP exam program is their schedule. AP exams are offered only once per year which can overload a teen with last-minute studying if they’re attempting multiple exams. You can check the schedule in advance and use it to inform which exams your teen plans to take. You can check this as far as 2 years in advance. Be sure the date(s) work for you, that your teen has reliable transportation, and that there is no schedule conflict if you’re taking more than one exam. Retakes are almost impossible.

College Credit or Admission?

People take AP courses and exams for one of two reasons. Either they are trying to get into college (admissions) or they are trying to get out (college credit).

Some students take AP exams for college admissions. Students in this category are applying to selective schools (acceptance rates less than 50%) where having multiple passing AP scores (3+) is expected. Students in this category may get college credit or advanced standing, especially if scores are very high (5’s). For those applying to highly competitive schools (acceptance rates less than 15%) shouldn’t expect to receive  college credit or advanced standing, even with mostly 5’s. Statistics show that the average Ivy League applicant has no less than 7 strong AP exam scores in their file and will not receive any college credit for those scores. In this case, AP is used to ensure competitiveness for admissions.

Since AP and CLEP are frequently compared by parents, know that CLEP doesn’t bring the same kind of prestige on an application as AP does, but if you don’t “need” AP to get in, I strongly recommend you choose CLEP when available. CLEP is far less expensive (free with a voucher) and can be taken at home 24/7/365. Colleges consider AP and CLEP to duplicate each other, which is to say you can either use the AP exam or the CLEP exam to achieve college credit in a subject.

Among Homeschooling for College Credit families, most do not focus on admission, they focus on college credit or graduation, but if your teen is aiming for a selective school and ends up taking a lot of AP exams, you might be pleasantly surprised to learn that their AP exams will be accepted at nearly every college, and with generous credit acceptance.

Free Response (Written)

AP tests consist of free response questions graded by humans. Most will require essays and fill-in-the-blank answers. If writing isn’t your strongest suit, it’s possible to score poorly overall based on writing ability. This test format requires a grader, so you’ll test in May and get your score in July.

Advanced Standing

A “passing score” is usually considered a 3 (scale of 1-5) but for high scores, a 4 or 5, some colleges may award additional credit. That’s the best case scenario because it saves you the most time and money. Some colleges use AP exams to award “advanced standing” instead of awarding credit. This, while flattering, does not save your teen any time or money and is not necessarily a benefit to anyone except the college. In other words, it doesn’t remove a degree requirement!! An example of advanced standing is allowing your teen to start in French 2 instead of French 1 while still requiring 4 years of French. (2-5 instead of 1-4)

Courses

As a homeschool family, you’ll have the option of registering for an official AP course, an AP-like course, or preparing your own curriculum. Since AP courses are a trademarked product, you can only identify a course as “AP” on your teen’s high school transcript when it is an officially approved AP course. (AP courses are available online by many reputable providers). Some parents have successfully submitted their homeschool coop course to The College Board for approval of their AP course.  In my opinion, unless your teen is applying to an elite college and is using the course for admissions instead of college credit, it is unnecessary to find an “official” AP course. It’s perfectly acceptable to teach a high school course that also prepares for an AP exam and simply tag your course “honors” on the homeschool transcript. How your teen prepares for an AP exam doesn’t matter since anyone can take an AP exam without taking an AP course.

Finding a High School Test Site

Of the college credit options available to your family, AP is the only one that requires you collaborate with a high school to do so. The College Board does not require high schools to open their doors to homeschoolers for AP exams, so with this type of college credit, you’ll have to find an agreeable high school- there is no other option.

AP exams are taken on campus at approved high schools in a group setting. Despite the brief COVID interruption, all AP exams are back to face to face only. Parents can NOT administer an AP exam, and there are no online AP exams at this time. Over the years I’ve received a lot of feedback from families who have received resistance from the schools regarding registration. Be prepared to contact many high schools. Parents tell me they’ve had better luck contacting private high schools instead of public ones, but AP coordinators come and go so your experience may differ. Start VERY early (August is not too early) and stay in contact with any school that extends an invitation to allow your teen to take an AP exam. You’ll want to be sure that “yes” obtained in August is still a “yes” later in May when it’s time to take the exam.

High schools employ an AP Coordinator, and you’ll have to speak with that person well in advance so they can order an extra test for your teen. Large schools almost always order “extra” and don’t get too bothered by last-minute requests, but smaller schools can’t accommodate families that start too late.

You’ll want to consider any school within a reasonable driving distance. Those of you in large cities with huge high schools will have an easier time than those of you in rural areas with small schools. High schools pick and choose which AP courses they offer their students, so unless a school offers the course your teen wants to test in, they won’t offer the exam. If your teen is taking a common exam like Calculus, you may have multiple schools to choose from. A more obscure exam, like Latin, may only be offered 50 miles away! This is why you must plan ahead. Even freshman year is not too soon to start collecting names of AP classes offered at your local high schools.

How to find an AP testing center.

You may wonder what The College Board thinks of homeschoolers taking these tests and what they tell high schools about working with homeschools. This is from the AP Coordinator Book:

Homeschooled and Independent Study Students, Virtual School Students, and Students from Other Schools
Parents and students can’t order AP Exams directly. Students who are homeschooled, are independent study students, attend virtual schools, or attend schools that don’t administer AP Exams will need to find a school where they can test. The AP Program encourages AP coordinators to assist these students.


In the descriptions in this publication:
ƒ “Virtual schools” are those that exclusively offer online learning.
ƒ Similarly, “homeschooled students” are those who regularly and exclusively learn
through a designated homeschool. Homeschooled students and students whose schools don’t offer their AP subjects need to do the following as early in the school year as possible:
ƒ Use the AP Course Ledger (collegeboard.org/apcourseledger) to look up nearby
schools that offer the AP courses for the exam subjects they want to take and
where they might be able to test.
ƒ Contact the nearby schools and ask to speak with the AP coordinator to see if one
of them can arrange testing. Students should remember that schools may have
their own local deadlines and policies regarding testing outside students.
If your school agrees to order and administer exams to these students:
¨ Inform the students of exam fees and your school’s ordering deadline.
¨ Create an exam only section for each exam subject being taken at your school by a
homeschooled student, independent study student, or student from another school
(including a virtual school).
¨ Provide the join code for the exam only section to the student, so the student
can enroll in the section in My AP. Only the AP coordinator can create and provide
the join code for an exam only section.
¨ Review the student’s information in your exam roster and order the necessary exams.
¨ Inform the students when and where to take the exams.
¨ Plan to collect and submit their exam fees with those from your school. Schools may
charge students a higher fee to recover additional proctoring or administration costs.”

This is a condensed timeline recommended by The College Board.
(Their timeline assumes your student is taking an AP course at their public high school and will have the exam available to them. Homeschooling parents should begin several months earlier to allow time to find high schools and gain permission to test.)

  • August/September: Talk to the AP coordinator about taking the AP Exams. Contact the Services for Students with Disabilities (SSD) coordinator at the school if you will need testing accommodations.
  • November 15: AP Coordinator’s test order deadline.
  • May: Exams are given.

PRO TIP: Using CLEP and AP together can help make sure your teen ends up with college credit one way or the other. Try having your teen take the CLEP before AP. The questions will be similar and be a great practice run for the real exam. CLEP is easier than AP, so if they don’t do well on the CLEP, you have time for extra study. In addition, if they don’t pass the AP exam, they can still use the credit earned from their CLEP exam!

Quick Comparison between CLEP and AP Exams

Test Author
CLEP—The College Board
AP—The College Board

Cost
CLEP—$93 + test proctor fee without a voucher, $0 free + $0 proctor fee when you get a voucher from Modern States. (no limit) You can take a CLEP for free if you participate in the Modern States waiver program!

AP—Currently $97

Audience
CLEP—any age allowed, typically adults
AP—any age allowed, typically high school students

Content
CLEP—aligned “up” to 100 and 200 level college courses
AP—aligned “down” to K–12 Common Core

Test Location
CLEP—at home or an approved testing center.
AP—area high schools that offer the AP course will also offer the exam for that course .

Availability
CLEP—365 days per year
AP—1 day per year (May)
Note: AP testing restrictions are so tight, that your teen will have to pick and choose exams that fit into their schedule. I’ve met teens that have taken 12 CLEP exams in 1 year (following each homeschool course) —that kind of aggressive credit earning is impossible via AP.

Format
CLEP—all exams are multiple choice on the computer (select the bubble by clicking the mouse). College Composition exam requires 2 essays typed into a plain text box on the screen to be sent away for grading.
AP—all exams (except Chinese & Japanese) are pencil and paper tests. (Fill in the bubble by coloring in the bubble). All exams have a free response section requiring solutions, essays, or spoken answers depending on the specific exam.

Time
CLEP—all exams are about 90 minutes, but you leave when finished.
AP—all exams are 3 hours, you must remain until the time concludes.

Score Notification
CLEP—Except for College Composition, the score is displayed on the screen when you hit “submit” on your test.
AP—mailed into graders. Scores are posted to the student’s online account in July.

Score
CLEP—a scaled numeric score that ranges from 20–80. 80 is a “perfect score.” A passing score is generally considered to be 50, but colleges may require higher scores or accept lower ones.
AP—a scaled numeric score that ranges from 1–5. 5 is a “perfect score.” A passing score is generally considered to be 3, but colleges may require higher scores or accept lower ones.

Number of Tests
CLEP—34 exams
AP—38 exams

Acceptance
CLEP—roughly 2,900 colleges (76%) award credit for passing scores.
AP—roughly 3,200 colleges (85%) award credit or advanced standing for passing scores

Subjects Offered:

PRO TIP: you can’t get college credit twice for the same exam or college course, even when you choose a different brand or school. In other words, if you took the English Literature CLEP, the English Literature AP exam, and English Literature through dual enrollment, your target college will only give you English Literature college credit once. The others will be ignored. This is called “duplication of credit.”

Art
CLEP—Humanities
AP—Art History, Music Theory, Studio Art 2-D, Studio Art 3-D, Studio Art Drawing

World Languages
CLEP—French, German, Spanish
AP—French, German, Spanish, Chinese, Italian, Japanese, Latin

English
CLEP—Composition, Composition Modular (no essay)
AP—Composition

Literature
CLEP—American Literature, English Literature, Analyzing and Interpreting Literature
AP—English Literature

History
CLEP—American Government, US History 1, US History 2, Western Civilization 1, Western Civilization 2, Social Sciences and History
AP—Comparative Government, United States Government, United States History, World History, European History, Human Geography, African American Studies

Social Sciences
CLEP—Macroeconomics, Microeconomics, Psychology, Educational Psychology, Human Growth, and Development, Sociology
AP—Macroeconomics, Microeconomics, Psychology

Math
CLEP—College Math, College Algebra, Pre-calculus, Calculus
AP—Calculus (AB), Calculus (BC), Statistics

Science
CLEP—Biology, Chemistry, Natural Science
AP—Biology, Chemistry, Physics, Environmental Science

Computers
CLEP—Information Systems
AP—Computer Science

Business
CLEP—Financial Accounting, Business Law, Management, Marketing
AP—none


If you can’t find (or don’t want to pay for) an official AP course, you can make your own.

Watch this tutorial from Angela, our HS4CC Florida moderator- she makes it sound easy!

Expiration Dates

TitleACE IDOrganization’s IDStart DateEnd DateTotal Recommended Credits
AP Physics C: Electricity and MagnetismCBAP-00398203/01/202402/28/20294
AP Physics 2: Algebra-BasedCBAP-00388403/01/202402/28/20294
AP Physics 1CBAP-0037 03/01/202402/28/20294
AP StatisticsCBAP-00349003/01/202402/28/20293
AP Computer Science ACBAP-00413103/01/202402/28/20294
AP PsychologyCBAP-00268503/01/202402/28/20293
AP Physics C: MechanicsCBAP-00408003/01/202402/28/20294
AP Music TheoryCBAP-00227503/01/202402/28/20296
AP Art HistoryCBAP-00011303/01/202402/28/20293
AP World History: ModernCBAP-0032 12/01/202211/30/20286
AP Calculus BCCBAP-0021 12/01/202211/30/20288
AP Calculus ABCBAP-0020 12/01/202211/30/20284
AP U.S. HistoryCBAP-0017 12/01/202211/30/20286
AP European HistoryCBAP-0016 12/01/202211/30/20286
AP PrecalculusCBAP-0049 12/01/202211/30/20284
AP African American StudiesCBAP-0048 12/01/202211/30/20283
AP Computer Science PrinciplesCBAP-0047 11/01/202110/31/20273
AP Chinese Language and CultureCBAP-0033 11/01/202110/31/202716
AP Japanese Language and CultureCBAP-0031 11/01/202110/31/202716
AP Italian Language and CultureCBAP-0030 11/01/202110/31/202712
AP Spanish Literature and CultureCBAP-0028 11/01/202110/31/202715
AP Spanish Language and CultureCBAP-0027 11/01/202110/31/202712
AP LatinCBAP-0018 11/01/202110/31/202712
AP German LanguageCBAP-0013 11/01/202110/31/202720
AP French LanguageCBAP-0011 11/01/202110/31/202712
AP ChemistryCBAP-0004 11/01/202110/31/20278
AP BiologyCBAP-0003 11/01/202110/31/20274
AP Environmental ScienceCBAP-0035 12/01/202011/30/20263
AP United States Government and PoliticsCBAP-0015 12/01/202011/30/20263
AP Comparative Government and PoliticsCBAP-0014 12/01/202011/30/20263
AP English Literature and CompositionCBAP-0010 12/01/202011/30/20266
AP English Language and CompositionCBAP-0009 12/01/202011/30/20266
AP 2D Art & DesignCBAP-0044 12/01/202011/30/20263
AP DrawingCBAP-0046 12/01/202011/30/20263
AP 3D Art & DesignCBAP-0045 12/01/202011/30/20263
AP SeminarCBAP-0042 01/01/201912/31/20256
AP ResearchCBAP-0043 01/01/201912/31/20256
AP MicroeconomicsCBAP-0036 01/01/201912/31/20253
AP Human GeographyCBAP-0029 01/01/201912/31/20253
AP MacroeconomicsCBAP-0007 01/01/201912/31/20253

Digital AP Exam Subjects 

Of the 28 digital exams in 2025, 16 will be fully digital and 12 will be hybrid digital.  

Fully Digital Subjects 

Students complete multiple-choice and free-response questions in Bluebook, with all responses automatically submitted at the end of the exam.   

  • AP African American Studies (U.S. schools only)   
  • AP Art History  
  • AP Comparative Government and Politics  
  • AP Computer Science A
  • AP Computer Science Principles   
  • AP English Language and Composition   
  • AP English Literature and Composition   
  • AP Environmental Science  
  • AP European History   
  • AP Human Geography  
  • AP Latin  
  • AP Psychology  
  • AP Seminar   
  • AP United States Government and Politics  
  • AP United States History   
  • AP World History: Modern  

Hybrid Digital Subjects 

Students complete multiple-choice questions and view free-response questions in Bluebook. They handwrite their free-response answers in paper exam booklets that are returned for scoring.  

  • AP Biology   
  • AP Calculus AB  
  • AP Calculus BC  
  • AP Chemistry  
  • AP Macroeconomics   
  • AP Microeconomics  
  • AP Physics 1: Algebra-Based   
  • AP Physics 2: Algebra-Based  
  • AP Physics C: Electricity and Magnetism  
  • AP Physics C: Mechanics  
  • AP Precalculus  
  • AP Statistics   

Note: The AP Exam administration for exams with audio components and exams consisting solely of portfolio assessments is remaining unchanged for the May 2025 AP Exam administration:

  • AP 2-D Art and Design
  • AP 3-D Art and Design
  • AP Drawing
  • AP Chinese Language and Culture
  • AP French Language and Culture
  • AP German Language and Culture
  • AP Italian Language and Culture
  • AP Japanese Language and Culture
  • AP Music Theory
  • AP Research 
  • AP Spanish Language and Culture
  • AP Spanish Literature and Culture

APPROVED AP COURSES

PA Homeschoolers:  Approved AP courses. Fully online $700-900

Dumb Ox Learning: Approved AP courses. Fully online $570

UNOFFICIAL CURRICULUM & AP TEST PREP RESOURCES

Crack AP: dozens of free AP practice tests for most subjects.  Fully online, $0

Modern States:  “test prep” course that follows a homeschool curriculum. Fully online, $0 *NOTE* Modern States does not give vouchers for AP exam costs, but they do give them for CLEP exam costs.

Khan Academy: “test prep” course that follows a homeschool curriculum. Fully online, $0

Emile:  independent curriculum and “test prep” course.  Fully online, $20/month

Straighterline: AP curriculum and “test prep” course (limited to 4 courses)  Fully online, $99/month + $59 per course.

Study.com: independent curriculum and “test prep” course.  Fully online, $39/month *HS4CC families can get 30% off up to 3 months by entering the code “HS4CC” at checkout.

Sonlight Homeschool Curriculum: Several unofficial AP courses taught from a Christian worldview. Price varies.