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AP Environmental Science · Exam Format

AP Environmental Science Exam Format & Section Breakdown

A complete walk-through of the AP Environmental Science exam, drawn from the College Board AP Course and Exam Description: total timing, per-section breakdown, official unit weightings, and the FRQ types you will see on test day.

Section breakdown and timing

SectionItemsTimeWeight
Section I — Multiple Choice80 questions90 minutes60% of score
Section II — Free Response3 questions70 minutes40% of score

Total exam length: 2 hours 40 minutes.

The AP Environmental Science exam runs 2 hours 40 minutes end to end and is split into the following sections:

  • Section I — Multiple Choice — 80 questions, 90 minutes, 60% of score.
  • Section II — Free Response — 3 questions, 70 minutes, 40% of score.

The College Board publishes the full Course and Exam Description (CED) for AP Environmental Science on AP Central, including the official unit weightings reproduced below, sample multiple-choice items, and at least one full set of released free-response questions with scoring guidelines. ExamEdge US treats that CED as the source of truth for what is testable; every unit guide on this site corresponds to a unit in the official framework, and every FRQ walkthrough on this site mirrors the structure of a real released question.

Understanding the section breakdown is itself a score-lift technique. Many students who report "I knew the content but ran out of time" did not budget per-question time before walking in. Use the per-question time implied by the table above as a hard pacing limit during practice — for example, if Section II of AP Environmental Science gives you 90 minutes for 6 free-response questions, your average is 15 minutes per FRQ, and any FRQ that you have not at least sketched in 15 minutes should be skipped to the next so that you maximize point capture across all six.

The unit weightings below indicate the percentage of multiple-choice questions drawn from each unit in a typical release. Two practical implications: first, no unit is small enough to skip — even a 5–7% unit will contribute a measurable number of multiple-choice points. Second, the highest-weight unit on the exam deserves at least one full study session per week from week 2 onward, because a 17–20% unit will materially move your final score in either direction.

For each section above, the College Board publishes targeted skills (in AP Biology these are called Science Practices; in AP US History they are Historical Reasoning Skills; in AP Chemistry they are Science Practices). The skills do not change between exam years, so a student who masters the skill list will be able to answer next year's questions even though the specific stimuli will differ.

Official unit weightings

The percentages below come from the College Board AP Course and Exam Description for AP Environmental Science. They indicate the share of multiple-choice questions drawn from each unit on a typical exam release.

UnitExam weight
Unit 1: The Living World — Ecosystems6–8%
Unit 2: The Living World — Biodiversity6–8%
Unit 3: Populations10–15%
Unit 4: Earth Systems and Resources10–15%
Unit 5: Land and Water Use10–15%
Unit 6: Energy Resources and Consumption10–15%
Unit 7: Atmospheric Pollution7–10%
Unit 8: Aquatic and Terrestrial Pollution7–10%
Unit 9: Global Change15–20%

Free-response question types

Every AP Environmental Science FRQ falls into one of the published types below. ExamEdge US has a full annotated walkthrough for each one — open any link to see a representative prompt, the College Board-style scoring rubric, a sample student response, and grader commentary on where the points are typically won and lost.

  • FRQ 1: FRQ 1 — Design an Investigation
    FRQ 1 — Design an Investigation — Annotated walkthrough of an AP Environmental Science FRQ 1 — Design an Investigation free-response question, with prompt, scoring rubric, sample student response, and grader commentary.
  • FRQ 2: FRQ 2 — Analyze an Environmental Problem and Propose a Solution
    FRQ 2 — Analyze an Environmental Problem and Propose a Solution — Annotated walkthrough of an AP Environmental Science FRQ 2 — Analyze an Environmental Problem and Propose a Solution free-response question, with prompt, scoring rubric, sample student response, and grader commentary.
  • FRQ 3: FRQ 3 — Analyze an Environmental Problem and Propose a Solution Doing Calculations
    FRQ 3 — Analyze an Environmental Problem and Propose a Solution Doing Calculations — Annotated walkthrough of an AP Environmental Science FRQ 3 — Analyze an Environmental Problem and Propose a Solution Doing Calculations free-response question, with prompt, scoring rubric, sample student response, and grader commentary.
  • FRQ 4: Quantitative Skills — Dimensional Analysis
    Quantitative Skills — Dimensional Analysis — Annotated walkthrough of an AP Environmental Science Quantitative Skills — Dimensional Analysis free-response question, with prompt, scoring rubric, sample student response, and grader commentary.
  • FRQ 5: Quantitative Skills — Percent Change
    Quantitative Skills — Percent Change — Annotated walkthrough of an AP Environmental Science Quantitative Skills — Percent Change free-response question, with prompt, scoring rubric, sample student response, and grader commentary.
  • FRQ 6: Quantitative Skills — Scientific Notation
    Quantitative Skills — Scientific Notation — Annotated walkthrough of an AP Environmental Science Quantitative Skills — Scientific Notation free-response question, with prompt, scoring rubric, sample student response, and grader commentary.
Next: read the AP Environmental Science scoring rubric breakdown to learn how the multiple-choice and FRQ raw scores combine into a final 1–5, then open the tips-for-a-5 checklist to translate this format into a study plan.