AP Precalculus Full Mock Practice Exams

Take all 10 AP Precalculus full mock exams covering MCQ and FRQ across all 4 units. Build exam confidence with structured score review and gap analysis.

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What Full Mock Tests Offer

Full mock tests are the closest preparation experience to sitting the actual AP Precalculus exam. Each mock covers all four units — polynomial and rational functions, exponential and logarithmic functions, trigonometric and polar functions, and functions involving parameters, vectors, and matrices — in a single timed session.

AP Precalculus Exam Structure

The AP Precalculus exam includes both multiple-choice and free-response sections, with calculator-permitted and non-calculator portions. Understanding this structure before your first mock is important:

Score Prediction and Performance Review

After each mock exam, your results are broken down by unit and question type so you can see not just your overall performance but where you are strongest and where you need more work. Over multiple mocks, tracking your score trend gives you a realistic picture of your exam readiness.

How to Review Mock Performance

  1. Review every incorrect answer — not just the ones you were unsure about
  2. Categorise errors: was it a content gap, a misread question, or a time management issue?
  3. Return to unit tests or sectional tests for any area where you see a pattern of errors
  4. Retake mocks periodically to measure improvement over time

Getting the Most from 10 Full Mocks

GradePerfect provides ten full AP Precalculus mock exams, each with a different focus and difficulty profile. Work through them progressively, using each result to refine your preparation strategy. By your final mock, you should be approaching the exam with both content confidence and timing fluency.

More in this test-group

Full Mock 1
Start your AP Precalculus full exam practice with Mock 1. Build format familiarity, establish a baseline score, and identify your strongest and weakest units.
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Full Mock 2
AP Precalculus Full Mock 2 focuses on multi-representation reasoning across graphical, tabular, and algebraic forms of functions across all 4 units.
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Full Mock 3
AP Precalculus Full Mock 3 tests multi-step reasoning through function compositions, inverse relationships, and transformation chains across all 4 units.
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Full Mock 4
AP Precalculus Full Mock 4 emphasises graphical interpretation across polynomial, exponential, trig, and parametric functions. Build visual reasoning for AP day.
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Full Mock 5
AP Precalculus Full Mock 5 offers balanced MCQ and FRQ coverage across all 4 units at moderate-to-high AP difficulty. Assess your overall exam readiness.
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Full Mock 6
AP Precalculus Full Mock 6 targets pacing and time management across calculator and non-calculator sections. Build timing confidence for the AP exam.
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Full Mock 7
AP Precalculus Full Mock 7 challenges advanced function reasoning, including inverses, complex transformations, and composition across all 4 units.
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Full Mock 8
AP Precalculus Full Mock 8 focuses on real-world modeling with exponential, sinusoidal, and parametric scenarios. Build applied reasoning skills for the AP exam.
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Full Mock 9
AP Precalculus Full Mock 9 targets asymptote errors, logarithm mistakes, and trig transformation pitfalls. Eliminate common error patterns before exam day.
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Full Mock 10
AP Precalculus Full Mock 10 is the ultimate pre-exam simulation covering all 4 units. Use it in your final week to confirm readiness and build exam confidence.
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Frequently asked questions

Full mock tests for AP Precalculus simulate the complete exam experience with both MCQ and FRQ sections under timed conditions. Each mock covers all four units and mirrors the structure of the actual AP Precalculus exam. Ten full mocks are available, giving you multiple opportunities to practice at exam difficulty and build pacing and stamina.
Full mocks cover the entire AP Precalculus curriculum, while sectional tests cover 30%, 50%, or 70%. Full mocks are longer, timed to match the real exam, and include all content including Unit 4 FRQ material. They simulate exam-day conditions, building the pacing and endurance needed for the actual AP Precalculus exam.
Taking three to five full mock tests before your AP Precalculus exam is a good goal. The key is to review each mock carefully — identifying patterns in MCQ errors and improving FRQ communication — rather than rushing through as many mocks as possible. Quality review of fewer mocks is more effective than completing many without reflection.
Score your MCQ section first and note which units produced the most errors. Then review your FRQ responses against scoring criteria, focusing on whether your reasoning was clearly communicated. Make a short list of topics to revisit before your next mock. Tracking performance across multiple mocks helps you see improvement and identify persistent weak areas.
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