One of the most common misconceptions about AP Physics is that because the College Board provides a reference sheet of equations and constants during the exam, you don't need to know the formulas. Nearly every experienced AP teacher will tell you the opposite: the sheet is most useful to the students who need it least. Understanding why — and adjusting how you study — can meaningfully change your score.

What the equation sheet actually contains

The College Board publishes reference information for each AP Physics course (AP Physics 1, AP Physics 2, and AP Physics C). Broadly, the sheets include:

Note that the AP Physics 1 curriculum added a fluids unit in recent years, and the reference sheet was updated to match — a reminder to always practice with the current year's sheet from the College Board website rather than an old PDF that may be missing content.

What the sheet deliberately leaves out

Here is what surprises students on exam day. The sheet does not include:

The core insight: the AP exam is time-pressured. If you have to search the sheet, you are slow. If you use it only to confirm what you already recalled, you are fast. Train for confirmation, not discovery.

A training method that actually works

Phase 1 — Learn without the sheet

During initial studying, keep the sheet closed. Learn each formula with its variable definitions, units, and conditions of validity. Work through at least one derivation per topic so that related equations feel connected rather than arbitrary. Retrieval practice — writing formulas from memory and then checking — beats re-reading by a wide margin.

Phase 2 — Rehearse with the sheet

In the weeks before the exam, do full practice sets with the current official sheet beside you, exactly as you'll have it on exam day. Your goals in this phase:

  1. Learn the sheet's layout so your eyes go to the right region instantly.
  2. Notice which equations you reach for that are not on the sheet — those go on your personal must-memorize list.
  3. Practice translating the sheet's notation into the notation your teacher used, if they differ.

Phase 3 — Simulate exam conditions

At least twice before the real exam, complete a timed section with only the allowed references. Time pressure changes how you think; rehearsing under it is the only way to know whether your formula fluency is real.

Common traps to avoid

Beyond the exam: building a personal reference

The official sheet is a lowest-common-denominator document — the same for every student. Strong students build their own layer on top of it: annotated formulas, notes about when each applies, flags on the ones they routinely confuse, and worked examples of the special cases the sheet omits. That personal reference keeps paying off in later courses, where no sheet is provided at all.

How PhysRef helps AP students

PhysRef is a free, fully offline iOS formula reference that covers content from AP Physics 1, AP Physics 2, AP Physics C, and IB Physics, plus introductory university courses. Where the exam sheet gives you a bare equation, PhysRef gives each formula variable definitions, units, related concepts, and step-by-step derivations — exactly the context the sheet leaves out. You can add personal notes to any formula (your "when does this apply" annotations live right next to the equation), bookmark the ones you keep missing, and use built-in calculators to check practice-problem answers. It's ad-free with no tracking, so study sessions stay focused.

Get PhysRef free on the App Store or see all features.