Advanced Placement Class of 2026

Academic Year 2022-2023 - Class of 2026

The advanced placement policy at Princeton is designed to give recognition to college-level work prior to matriculation and to allow you to pursue your studies at a level appropriate to your preparation. If you have been granted sufficient advanced placement units in the appropriate number of subject areas you may be eligible for advanced standing, which will permit you to graduate in either three years or with three and one-half years of study.

Our primary concern is that students be placed appropriately for success in our sequenced courses, and so some language and science departments will require incoming students to take a Princeton test to confirm course placement and credit.

Some academic departments have changed their credit policies for standardized exams (AP, IB, A-level, SAT) administered in spring of 2020 and after. The AP Credit Reference Table lists the credit and placement recommendations of academic departments which award advanced placement credit. The values on the table apply to all tests administered in 2019 or earlier, and to tests in the following subjects administered in spring of 2020 and after: Mathematics, Spanish, German, Hebrew, Biology, Economics, History.

The academic departments below require additional verification for exam scores awarded in of spring 2020 and after:

  • The department of Chemistry will require students seeking to confirm AP credit to take a departmental placement test.
  • The department of Physics will require students seeking to confirm AP credit for purposes of fulfilling pre-requisite courses in physics (PHY103-104 or PHY101-102) to take a departmental placement test. Students who intend to major in PHY forfeit their AP credit and thus do not need to take a PHY placement test (unless they are seeking to demonstrate placement into PHY205).
  • Some languages included in the AP table - French, Italian, and Latin - will require students seeking to confirm AP credit and/or continue their study of one of these languages to confirm placement and credit through a departmental placement test.
The credit and placement policies described above also apply to IB, A-level, and SAT subject scores.

Below is some general information concerning advanced placement and advanced standing at Princeton. The assistant dean in your residential college and the Class of 2026 Academic Guide can provide further guidance in exploring the options available to you.


I. Earning Advanced Placement

Individual departments award advanced placement on one or more of the following bases:

  1. official score reports from Advanced Placement examinations, SAT Reasoning Tests and SAT Subject Tests, the International Baccalaureate (higher level), and British A-level examinations (see table for minimum scores accepted);

  2. results of placement tests offered by departments at Princeton. Placement tests are offered in languages taught at Princeton, physics, chemistry, and math. (AP credit in math may also be conferred through the successful completion of a subsequent course in the calculus sequence in Fall 2021.) 

You are not eligible for AP credit for college courses taken prior to matriculation unless you take an approved standardized examination or a placement test offered by Princeton in the subject.

At the beginning of the fall term, you will receive a report of all units of advanced placement earned according to the above criteria, at the time of your matriculation. Please review this report carefully and immediately inform your assistant dean if our records are not accurate. In the middle of the term, you will receive a second report, which will reflect advancement placement that has been awarded, via official standardized test score reports or results of Princeton placement tests, that have been received during the intervening weeks.


II. Uses of Advanced Placement

You can use advanced placement in the following ways:

  1. to enter upper-level courses;
  2. to fulfill the language requirement;
  3. to become eligible for graduation in three years or with three and one-half years of study (advanced standing);
  4. to fulfill B.S.E. general requirements in math, physics, and chemistry.
  5. to fulfill some requirements for concentrations and certificates

Please note that you CANNOT use advanced placement:

  1. to fulfill the writing requirement;
  2. to make up course deficiencies;
  3. to reduce your course load in a given term;
  4. to fulfill the distribution requirements.

III. Counting Advanced Placement Units for Advanced Standing

When adding up your AP units, please remember the following points:

  1. Each AP unit replaces one Princeton course.
  2. The maximum number of AP units per subject is two.
  3. All advanced placement awarded at matriculation is recorded on your transcript. You forfeit the use of your AP for advanced standing if you take courses deemed equivalent to or below ones for which advanced placement was granted. In the case of foreign language, if you were awarded two units of advanced placement credit at matriculation, you forfeit both units if you enroll in any 100-level course in the language for which AP was granted.

IV. AP Units and Subjects Required for Advanced Standing

  1. Requirements for graduation in three years (by becoming a sophomore in the spring of the first year or a junior in the fall of the second year):

    • A.B. candidates:
      • need eight advanced placement units (equivalent to eight Princeton courses) distributed in at least three of the following subject areas in which AP is granted: foreign languages, historical analysis, literature and the arts, quantitative reasoning, science and technology, and social analysis.
      • need a minimum of 23 courses to graduate, of which a maximum of two may be taken away from Princeton with prior approval.

     

    • B.S.E. candidates:
      • need eight advanced placement units, among them two in physics, two in mathematics, and one in chemistry.
      • need a minimum of 28 courses to graduate, of which a maximum of three may be taken away from Princeton with prior approval.
  2. Requirements for graduation with three and one-half years of study (by taking off one term of the sophomore year)
    • A.B. candidates:
      • need four advanced placement units in at least two subject areas (described above).
      • need a minimum of 27 courses to graduate, of which a maximum of two may be taken away from Princeton with prior approval.
    • B.S.E. candidates:
      • need four advanced placement units, including two in physics, one in mathematics, and one in chemistry.
      • need a minimum of 32 courses to graduate, of which a maximum of three may be taken away from Princeton with prior approval.

V. Eligibility for Advanced Standing

  1. Eligibility to graduate in three years:

    In addition to presenting the appropriate number of advanced placement units in the required subject areas, you are required to:

    1. have fulfilled all prerequisites for a major;
    2. propose a plan of study in a major, approved by the appropriate departmental representative;
    3. indicate how you will fulfill all remaining University requirements; and
    4. have earned a B average (with no grade lower than a C) prior to the start of junior year.

    Eligibility to graduate with three and one-half years of study:

    In addition to presenting the appropriate number of advanced placement units in the required subject areas, you are required to:

    1. have a B- average (with no grade lower than a C) prior to your leave;
    2. indicate your choice of major and how you will fulfill the prerequisites for it.

    The Faculty Committee on Examinations and Standing, which formally grants advanced standing, may also rescind it if, in its judgment, you have not made satisfactory progress toward the degree.


VI. Notification of Eligibility and Application Procedures

You will be notified by your assistant dean of your eligibility for a year or a term of advanced standing

For a year of advanced standing you must submit an application by the beginning of the first day of the spring term of the first year. You should be choosing courses for the spring term with a three-year degree in mind.

If you plan to take the fall term of sophomore year on advanced standing, you should meet with your assistant dean by April 1 to discuss your plans. If you plan to take the spring term of the sophomore year on advanced standing, you should meet with your assistant dean by December 1 to discuss your plans. B.S.E. candidates should also discuss their plans with the associate dean of the School of Engineering and Applied Science to determine whether it is feasible to interrupt the sequence of courses in some departments.

During your term away, you will officially be on a leave of absence. Before leaving campus, you must see your residential college dean to arrange for the leave.


VII. Reverting from Advanced Standing

If you decide to take a year of advanced standing and then decide to stay the full four years, you may revert and join your original class any time prior to the start of your senior year. If you do not change your concentration, your junior independent work will count. If you are on financial aid, you will still be eligible for a full four years of aid.



VIII. Reference Table for AP Credit Accepted at Princeton

Provisional for Academic Year 2022-23 - Class of 2026

The values on the table below apply to all exams administered in 2019 or earlier, and to exams in the following subjects administered in 2020 and after: Mathematics, Spanish, German, Hebrew, Biology, Economics, History.

The academic departments below require additional verification for exam scores awarded in spring of 2020 and after:

  • The department of Chemistry will require students to seeking to confirm AP credit to take a departmental placement test.
  • The department of Physics will require students seeking to confirm AP credit for purposes of fulfilling pre-requisite courses in physics (PHY103-104 or PHY101-102) to take a departmental placement test. Students who intend to major in PHY forfeit their AP credit and thus do not need to take a PHY placement test (unless they are seeking to demonstrate placement into PHY205).
  • Some languages included in the AP table - French, Italian, and Latin - will require students seeking to confirm AP credit and/or continue their study of one of these languages to confirm placement and credit through a departmental placement test. 

The credit and placement policies described above also apply to IB, A-level, and SAT scores.


Reference AP Table Note:

  1. Note that a score 7 on the IB (higher level) or a grade of A on the completed British A-level is considered the equivalent of a score of 5 on the AP test in most subjects; a score of 6 on the IB (higher level) or a grade of B on the completed British A-level is considered the equivalent of a score of 4 on the AP test. SAT I math scores are for the new SAT administered beginning in March 2016. IB and A level score reports for 2020 and 2021 will be used for placement purposes only.
  2. If students choose to take courses for which they were granted AP credit, they will forfeit the use of the AP credit for those credits for advanced standing purposes. In foreign languages, students who enroll in a 100-level course forfeit the use of both units of AP.