Loading the page...
Preparing tools and content for you. This usually takes a second.
Preparing tools and content for you. This usually takes a second.
Fetching calculator categories and tools for this section.
Estimate your AP Latin exam score from multiple-choice performance on sight and syllabus passages plus five free-response bands. We apply College Board-style 50/50 section weights and show recent national score distributions for context.
Last updated: April 17, 2026
Need a classics department calculator for your LMS? Get a quote
Section I is half of the composite in this model (sight + syllabus passages).
Official rubrics award finer-grained credit; this tool compresses each prompt to 4 bands so you can stress-test outcomes quickly.
You enter
Correct answers (0–52)
Discrete items, short sets, and long sets test comprehension, grammar, and figures on sight and syllabus Latin.
Modeled as
Three 0–4 rubric bands
Short answer, translation accuracy, and a focused essay prompt map to simplified point totals.
Modeled as
Two more 0–4 bands
Literary argument with cited Latin evidence is the differentiator—practice thesis + two anchors per prompt.
Output
Composite + 1–5 estimate
Same composite bands as other thecalcs AP estimators so you can compare preparation across subjects.
Reference
5 / 4 / 3 / 2 / 1 mix
Contextualize your estimate against how recent cohorts scored nationwide.
Includes
Focus & next-step lists
Recommendations emphasize morphology, meter, and evidence-based commentary instead of generic tips.
For 38/52 multiple choice and each FRQ band at 3/4 (15/20 model points):
AP score: 5 (often credit-eligible)
Composite (model): 74 / 100
Our AP Latin score calculator mirrors the public exam blueprint: half of the modeled score comes from multiple-choice accuracy and half from free-response performance. Because each FRQ publishes multi-part rubrics, we compress each question into a 0–4 planning band so you can stress-test scenarios without manually summing every subpoint.
Multiple choice: (correct / 52) × 50Free response: (points / 20) × 50Composite = MC weighted + FRQ weightedThe composite (0–100) maps to an approximate AP score of 1–5. Official scoring adds equating and reader calibration, so your July result can differ slightly.
Sight + syllabus multiple choice · five written tasks
AP Latin rewards disciplined translation, precise grammar vocabulary, and literary analysis that cites Latin words—not English paraphrase alone. Build automaticity with principal parts, common constructions, and meter so you can spend exam minutes on argument, not decoding.
Preparing for other reading-heavy AP exams? Try the AP English Language calculator or the AP World History calculator.
Request a custom calculatorResult: AP score 5 — composite 74 / 100
This band is often associated with college credit or placement for Latin — confirm each college’s policy.
Share it with classmates translating Caesar and Vergil this year
Suggested hashtags: #APLatin #Caesar #Vergil #CollegePrep #thecalcs