The Shortest Path to an AP 5
Much like “SAT Cheating,” the vast majority of AP exams can also yield a perfect score through cheating. AP and SAT share many commonalities, such as the same organizing body (College Board) and the same testing software (Bluebook). However, there are subtle differences between the two that allow certain methods—which might be impractical or flawed for the SAT—to be applied perfectly to AP exams.
Ready for a score that opens every Ivy League door?
Two Approaches, One Clear Decision
Method 1: Obtaining Exam Questions in Advance
In “SAT (Time Zones),” you can learn about how the SAT—the AP exam’s close relative—could once be exploited using time zone differences, and why that is no longer a perfect solution today.
For AP exams, the situation is slightly different: it is possible to exploit time zones to obtain nearly 100% accurate questions up to 24 hours in advance! The reason is that although AP exams, like the SAT, draw questions from a question bank, the AP bank is significantly smaller. The SAT offers seven testing windows per year and, for anti-cheating purposes, utilizes 3–8 completely different sets of papers for every single session. It is very common for your exam to differ from those of your neighbor and the student next to them. Even if you and your neighbor happen to get the same set, there is a high probability that the question order will be scrambled.
In contrast, the AP exam occurs only once a year and requires registration through a school or official test center via an AP coordinator. Consequently, the AP question bank is more than an order of magnitude smaller than the SAT’s.
This means AP questions are much easier to predict . For example, to predict the AP questions for the Eastern United States, “test-takers” can be dispatched to the Middle East, Asia, or Australia to take the exam early and collect the questions. By comparing these with the question bank, we can identify which are new (not in the bank) and which have already appeared in other regions (and thus usually won’t appear in the U.S.), allowing us to determine the most likely questions for the U.S. East Coast.
However, it is worth noting that while AP predictions are considerably more accurate than those for the SAT, this is still not a foolproof method. “Human errors” can occur, such as students purchasing fake questions. Additionally, if the College Board notices a leak in another region, they may swap the target region’s exam for an entirely new set of questions at the last minute. These scenarios are rare, but they are not unprecedented.
Pros
- Off-site preparation: The actual act of “cheating” does not take place inside the examination room.
- No technical setup: The computer used for the exam does not require any special configuration or debugging.
- Signal immunity: There is no need to worry about hardware-level network jamming or shielding technologies that may be present in certain test centers.
Cons
- Potential for error: In rare cases, predictions may be inaccurate.
- Academic threshold: If a student’s foundation is too weak, they may struggle to memorize the questions in a short time or may forget them during the exam.
- Advance payment: Since the service (the exam questions) is delivered before the test begins, full payment is required upfront.
Method 2: Real-time Assistance via Zero-Intervention Trojan
This is a 100% successful solution with no exceptions. Through our specially developed Trojan software, students can receive real-time assistance during the AP exam. Our software is meticulously designed so that even if a proctor is standing directly behind you, they will not notice anything unusual. For specific instructions and requirements regarding the Zero-Intervention Trojan, please refer to SAT Zero-Intervention Trojan.Pros
Adaptive to changes: No fear of last-minute exam swaps; 100% guarantee of reaching the target score.
Zero preparation: Students do not need to memorize any questions in advance, and there are no requirements regarding the student’s academic level.
Low commitment: Only a minimal deposit is required.
Cons
- Hardware requirements: For test centers that may employ hardware-level network shielding, students must use a laptop mailed to them by ELPIS to conduct the exam.
.
If you are unsure which AP cheating solution to choose, please feel free to contact ELPIS customer service for a consultation at any time.
Scam Alert
Always be wary of low-priced "predicted questions"
Very few organizations can provide real-time assistance during an AP exam (as we do) because most lack the technology to bypass Bluebook. Because ELPIS possesses this technology, we can collect AP questions on a massive scale for prediction, making us an “upstream source” in the industry. While we do sell predicted questions to downstream distributors who lack technical capabilities, we are extremely selective and employ rigorous measures to ensure these questions do not leak. In fact, no responsible source agency would ever allow a group of students to “pool their money to buy a set of questions.” If someone gives you a very cheap quote, it is almost certainly a scam.
For providers, selling "predicted questions" is more profitable than "real-time assistance"
The logic is simple: predicted questions can be sold in bulk to many students and distributors. “Real-time assistance” cannot be scaled this way. Because AP exams start at a fixed time, one expert test-taker can only handle one exam at a time. The volume is limited by the number of experts available. Therefore, if an agency’s only channel is “predicted questions,” you should know two things: 1) They are definitely not the original source, and 2) The reliability of their questions is not guaranteed.
Using "Screenshot-to-Al" plugins will get you banned
Don’t be naive-Bluebook is professional, high-security proctoring software with robust detection capabilities. Do not expect a Chrome extension or any other screenshot tool that helps you cheat on Canvas to work for the SAT. It simply does not work that way. (For a security analysis of Bluebook, please see this articlel). At the end of the day, you will find these tools unusable during the exam, and you will be caught 100% of the time. Scammers selling these tools often send screenshots or videos showing their software overlaying Bluebook, capturing the screen, and sending it to an Al for answers as “proof.” In reality, the questions in these videos are all from Bluebook’s SAT Practice Exams. Anyone can open a Practice Exam; the interface is nearly identical to the official test. To untrained eyes, it’s impossible to tell it’s a Practice Exam from just a few screenshots. However, in Practice Exam mode, Bluebook’s full proctoring measures are not activated! Do not be fooled. Demand real footage from an actual testing window or screenshots of pages that only appear during a live exam.
The consequences of buying fake questions are more serious than you think. A student won’t know if the questions they bought are real until they walk into the exam. Some think that if the questions are fake and they perform poorly, they can just cancel their score and act as if the exam “never happened.” This is not the case. Although the record won’t appear on your AP portal, transcript, or be sent to colleges, the College Board retains it internally. If that student takes the test again the following year and performs exceptionally well, they will be flagged as suspicious due to the extreme score increase.