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AP Precalculus Practice Questions – Free Drills and Strategy Guide

Start the AP® Precalculus Drills — Build the Skills the Exam Actually Tests →

AP® Precalculus is organized into four units: polynomial and rational functions, exponential and logarithmic functions, trigonometric and polar functions, and a fourth unit covering functions involving parameters, vectors, and matrices. Units 1 through 3 are assessed on the AP Exam; Unit 4 may be taught as part of the course but does not appear on the exam. Many students approach the course as an extension of high school algebra — practicing procedures, drilling identities, and assuming that computational fluency will carry them through. It won’t. The AP® Precalculus exam is built around three mathematical practices: procedural and symbolic fluency, working across multiple representations, and communicating reasoning precisely. Questions require content knowledge, but that knowledge must be applied to modeling contexts, graphical and tabular data, and real-world scenarios that call for interpretation, not just calculation. This guide explains how the exam is structured, what each section demands, and how to use these AP Precalculus practice drills to build the skills the exam rewards.

How the AP® Precalculus Exam Is Structured

The AP® Precalculus exam runs three hours and is a hybrid digital exam: students complete multiple-choice questions and view free-response questions in the Bluebook testing app, then handwrite their free-response answers in paper exam booklets. Section I (multiple choice) accounts for approximately 63% of the total score; Section II (free response) accounts for approximately 37%. A critical feature of both sections is the split calculator policy: each section is divided into a no-calculator part and a graphing-calculator part, with the built-in Desmos graphing calculator available in Bluebook for calculator-permitted portions. 28 of the 40 multiple-choice questions are in the no-calculator part, so algebraic fluency is tested directly and cannot be outsourced to technology.

Section I — Multiple Choice

  • 40 questions total — 120 minutes
  • Part A: 28 questions, 80 min — no calculator (~44% of score)
  • Part B: 12 questions, 40 min — graphing calculator required for some questions (~19% of score)
  • ~63% of total score

Section II — Free Response

  • 4 questions, 6 points each — 60 minutes
  • Part A: 2 questions, 30 min — graphing calculator permitted (~19% of score)
  • Part B: 2 questions, 30 min — no calculator (~19% of score)
  • ~37% of total score

Notice that the calculator policy is reversed between the two sections: in Section I, Part B permits the graphing calculator for some questions; in Section II, Part A requires it. The no-calculator portions reward exact algebraic reasoning; the calculator-active portions reward efficient use of regression, graphing, and numerical solving tools. Practicing under both conditions before exam day is worth the effort.

The Four Free-Response Question Types

College Board identifies four recurring free-response task types, so students can prepare for the kinds of tasks that typically appear on each question.

Free-Response Task Model (typical structure each year)

  1. FRQ 1: Function Concepts (Units 1 & 2, graphing calculator, no real-world context) — Functions expressed graphically, numerically, and analytically. Often includes function composition, inverse functions, zeros, end behavior, and identification of an appropriate function type.
  2. FRQ 2: Modeling a Non-Periodic Context (Units 1 & 2, graphing calculator, real-world context) — Construct a polynomial, exponential, or logarithmic model from a real-life scenario; calculate and interpret average rates of change with units; justify conclusions about model assumptions or limitations.
  3. FRQ 3: Modeling a Periodic Context (Unit 3, no calculator, real-world context) — FRQ 3 is the periodic-context modeling task. Students can expect to build a sinusoidal model from context, determine parameters such as amplitude, period, vertical shift, and phase shift, and analyze the behavior of the function.
  4. FRQ 4: Symbolic Manipulations (Units 2 & 3, no calculator, no real-world context) — Solve equations involving exponential, logarithmic, trigonometric, and inverse trigonometric functions; rewrite expressions in equivalent forms; show all algebraic work for exact answers.

Function Type Weightings: Where the Points Are

The AP® Precalculus multiple-choice section weights questions by function type. Trigonometric and polar functions carry the heaviest weight at 30–35%. The “general functions” category (15–23%) tests concepts that apply across function types — covariation, average rate of change, composition, inverse functions, and transformations — drawing from both Units 1 and 2. All three examined units contribute substantially to the exam, and the ranges overlap significantly across administrations, so no unit can be safely deprioritized.

Function TypeUnitMC Exam Weight
Trigonometric and Polar FunctionsUnit 330–35%
Exponential and Logarithmic FunctionsUnit 222–28%
Polynomial and Rational FunctionsUnit 120–25%
General Functions (non-analytical)Units 1 & 215–23%

Note that the function-type weights above are distinct from the broader unit weights listed elsewhere in the CED (Unit 1: 30–40%, Unit 2: 27–40%, Unit 3: 30–35%). The function-type ranges are the more precise guide to where individual multiple-choice questions come from.

The Three Mathematical Practices and Their Exam Weight

Every question on the AP® Precalculus exam is tagged to one of three mathematical practices, each broken into specific skills. Knowing the weight of each skill tells you where to concentrate preparation.

Practice and SkillExam Weight
Practice 1: Procedural and Symbolic Fluency
   1.A: Solve equations and inequalities14–17%
   1.B: Express equivalent forms9–13%
   1.C: Construct new functions (transformations, compositions, inverses, regressions)15–19%
Practice 2: Multiple Representations
   2.A: Identify information from graphical, numerical, analytical, and verbal representations14–17%
   2.B: Construct equivalent representations6–9%
Practice 3: Communication and Reasoning
   3.A: Describe characteristics of a function10–14%
   3.B: Apply numerical results in context9–13%
   3.C: Support conclusions with logical rationale13%

Practice 1 (procedural fluency) and Practice 3 (communication and reasoning) together account for roughly two-thirds of the exam. Practice 1.C alone — constructing functions via transformations, compositions, inverses, and regressions — is the single heaviest skill at up to 19% of the exam. Skill 3.C (supporting conclusions) is the one skill listed with a fixed 13% weight, making it one of the most consistently assessed skills on the exam. Students who skip justification practice in their preparation will lose these points reliably.

What AP® Precalculus Multiple-Choice Questions Actually Test

Multiple-choice questions present four answer choices and appear across all representations: graphical, numerical, analytical (algebraic), and verbal. Many questions embed a function in a real-world context and ask you to interpret, model, or reason — not just calculate. The exam tests whether you can move fluently between representations of the same function and whether you can explain what a result means in context, not just produce it.

Calculator-active questions in Part B are designed for tasks that genuinely benefit from technology: regression modeling, finding intersection points, evaluating functions at non-standard inputs, and solving equations numerically. But not every Part B question requires the calculator — only some do. Students who reach for the calculator on every Part B question often waste time and introduce rounding errors. The better habit is to ask first: can I answer this algebraically in fewer steps?

No-calculator questions in Part A directly reward algebraic fluency. A question about the period of a transformed sinusoidal function, the horizontal asymptote of a rational function, or the base of an exponential model implied by a given doubling time requires you to work with function properties analytically. These questions cannot be approximated away.

Common Mistakes on AP® Precalculus Multiple Choice

1. Treating the no-calculator sections as easier.

Many students assume that questions without a calculator must be simpler. They are not. No-calculator questions target algebraic manipulation, equivalent representations, and exact reasoning — the skills that take the longest to build and can’t be patched by technology. A question asking for the exact solution to a logarithmic equation, or the amplitude of a transformed cosine function from its algebraic form, requires fluency that doesn’t appear on a calculator screen. Students who have coasted on graphing calculators throughout the year are the most likely to run out of time on Part A.

2. Confusing description with interpretation.

Many questions ask you to interpret a result in context — not just state it. An average rate of change of 3.2 is not the answer; “the population increased by approximately 3,200 people per year between 2010 and 2020” is the answer. Skill 3.B (applying numerical results in context) and Skill 3.C (supporting conclusions) together account for more than 20% of the exam and reward students who have practiced connecting mathematical outputs to real-world meaning. Reading the question stem carefully for task verbs —— interpret, justify, describe, construct — is the fastest way to know what kind of answer is being asked for.

3. Ignoring function model selection questions.

Questions about which function type best models a given data set or context (Topics 1.13, 2.6) are among the most consistently missed on the exam. Students tend to rush through them because they seem qualitative. In reality, selecting the right model requires you to check whether first differences are constant (linear), second differences are constant (quadratic), ratios are constant (exponential), or the data is periodic (sinusoidal) — and to articulate why the others are ruled out. Wrong answers in these questions typically describe properties that are true of the correct model type in general but don’t explain why a specific data set confirms it.

4. Losing points on equivalent representations.

Skill 1.B (expressing equivalent forms) and Skill 2.B (constructing equivalent representations) require you to move between forms of the same function — factored and standard form of a polynomial, logarithmic and exponential forms, sum-to-product or product-to-sum identities for trigonometric expressions. Students who only practice one form of a function are repeatedly surprised by questions that present a familiar relationship in an unfamiliar algebraic skin. Practicing each function type in all of its standard algebraic forms — before exam day, not during it — is the fix.

5. Mishandling sinusoidal model construction.

FRQ 3 is the periodic-context modeling task, and it is among the most predictable questions on the exam — yet many students still lose points on it. The four parameters (amplitude, period, vertical shift, phase shift) each have a defined relationship to the context: amplitude is half the range of output values, period is the length of one full cycle, vertical shift is the midline value, and phase shift is determined by where the cycle begins. Students who have practiced this construction repeatedly under timed conditions before the exam are simply faster and more accurate than students who have only read about it.

Four Strategic Principles for AP® Precalculus Multiple Choice

1. Know the Calculator Rules Before You Start Each Section

Before reading the first question of any section, confirm which part you are in and whether the calculator is permitted. Students who reach for the Desmos calculator during no-calculator Part A, or who spend time on algebraic manipulation during calculator-active Part B when the calculator would solve it faster, lose time and points. Make the “calculator or no calculator?” check an automatic habit at the start of each section.

2. Identify the Mathematical Practice Before Reading the Choices

Before you look at the answer choices, identify the task: Is the question asking you to solve an equation (1.A)? Rewrite an expression in an equivalent form (1.B)? Read information off a graph or table (2.A)? Describe a function’s characteristics (3.A)? Apply a result to a real-world context (3.B)? Justify a conclusion (3.C)? Knowing what kind of answer you need before you see the choices prevents you from being drawn toward responses that are mathematically correct but answer the wrong question.

3. Work Across All Four Representations

The AP® Precalculus exam explicitly includes items in graphical, numerical, analytical, and verbal representations. A function may appear as a graph in one question and as an equation in the next. Students who are comfortable with all four representations can extract information efficiently from whichever form the question presents; students who only feel at home with equations slow down significantly when the same relationship is expressed as a table or a graph. During practice, deliberately translate between representations for every function type you study.

4. Eliminate with Specific Reasons, Not Instinct

On the harder questions, especially those involving model selection and justification, wrong answers are crafted to sound plausible. The most effective elimination technique is to articulate the specific flaw in each wrong choice: this answer describes a linear relationship, but the ratios in the table are constant, not the differences; this answer gets the end behavior right but the zeros wrong; this answer applies to the general function type but contradicts the given data. When you can name the exact error in each wrong answer, you can commit confidently to the one that remains.

How to Use These Drills

The drills below are organized by unit and cover all three examined units of the course across 30 drills. Each drill presents a function, data set, graph, or modeling context followed by five questions that mix procedural fluency, multiple representations, and reasoning tasks — the same mathematical practice blend you’ll encounter on the actual exam. Approach each drill as you would the real test: identify the task before reading the choices, use elimination with specific reasons, and flag questions that reveal gaps in your knowledge for targeted review.

After you finish each drill, read every explanation — not just for the questions you missed. The explanations walk through the specific flaw in each wrong answer choice, which is where most of the learning happens. Done consistently, these drills build the mathematical practice skills the AP® Precalculus exam actually rewards.


AP® Precalculus Drills by Unit

AP® Precalculus practice questions organized by unit. Each drill takes about 5–8 minutes and targets a specific skill the exam rewards. Each drill includes a function, data set, graph, or modeling context followed by five questions mixing procedural fluency, multiple representations, and reasoning tasks, with full explanations for every answer choice.

All drills contain original AP®-style practice questions with detailed explanations for every answer choice. Created by Brian Stewart, author of Barron’s SAT and ACT prep books — completely free.

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