AMC10 is an international authoritative mathematics competition sponsored by the Mathematical Association of America (MAA) for students in grade 10 and below. In recent years, its popularity has soared—not only because it serves as a stepping stone to higher-level competitions (such as AIME and USAMO), but also because it has become a "hard currency" for applying to the world's top universities and entering science classes in prestigious domestic high schools.
This article will systematically answer:
✅ What is AMC10?
✅ Why is it so highly valued?
✅ Why is the top 1% (DHR) so difficult to achieve?
✅ How can beginners prepare scientifically for the competition?
I. AMC10 Basic Information at a Glance
| Item | Details |
|---|---|
| Organizer | Mathematical Association of America (MAA) |
| Eligibility | Grade 10 and below, and age ≤ 17.5 years |
| Exam Date | November each year (A and B versions; candidates can take either or both) |
| Exam Duration | 75 minutes |
| Question Type & Scoring | 25 multiple-choice questions; Correct: +6 points | Omitted: +1.5 points | Incorrect: 0 points; Total: 150 points |
| Language | Bilingual Chinese-English test papers (very friendly to Chinese students) |
| Core Modules | Algebra, Geometry, Number Theory, Combinatorics (the four pillars; recent years have seen an increased proportion of number theory/combinatorics in the final problems) |
II. Why Do So Many Students Participate? The Five Core Values of AMC10
1. The "Golden Ticket" for Ivy League & G5 Universities
Recent admissions data shows: Over 45% of admitted STEM students at Ivy League / Oxford / Cambridge have AMC participation experience; MIT, Stanford, Cambridge and others explicitly consider AMC/AIME scores in the Common App; AMC10 top 1% (DHR) ≈ international math proficiency certification, far exceeding high scores in regular school curriculum.
2. A Selection Tool for "Science & Technology / Science Classes" in Top Domestic High Schools
No.2 High School of East China Normal University, Shanghai High School, Fudan High School: AMC10 110+ points can directly lead to interviews; Qibao High School, Jianping High School, Nanyang Model High School: top 25% (about 100 points) get priority in independent admissions, some "score line reached, admission guaranteed"; Entrance exam of Guanghua Cambridge: Question 9 directly uses an AMC10 original question; World Foreign Language Academy even tests AMC12 difficulty.
3. The "First Building Block" of the International Competition Pyramid
Top 2.5% (approx. 103–110 points) → Advance to AIME; High AIME score → USAMO → IMO national team; AMC10 is the starting point for IMO and the essential path for most international competition participants.
4. Skill Enhancement: Highly Synergistic with IB/AP/A-Level
The problems emphasize logical reasoning, modeling ability, and creative solutions; content highly overlaps with IB Math AA/AI, AP Calculus, and A-Level Further Math; preparation can enhance school performance, achieving a win-win for "competition + coursework."
5. Global Recognition, Lifetime Validity of Certificate
Officially issued by the MAA, widely recognized by global universities, summer schools, and research projects; one high score can serve as proof of academic ability for life
III. Why is the AMC10 Top 1% (DHR) So Hard to Achieve?
1. Intense Time Pressure
75 minutes / 25 questions = average 3 minutes per question; the first 15 questions must be completed within 30 minutes to leave enough time for the last 10 questions (especially the final problems 21–25); beginners often run out of time for the final problems due to slow reading, slow calculation, or hesitation.
2. Fierce Global Competition
Over 30,000 candidates worldwide each year, but the top 1% is only about 300 people; students from China, South Korea, India, etc., are generally trained systematically; the era of unprepared testing is over; the cutoff scores keep rising: in recent years, DHR has stabilized at 130+ points (out of 150).
3. Numerous Traps in Problems
AMC10 is known for "seemingly simple, yet full of hidden traps": unit confusion, ignoring boundary conditions, misleading diagrams (non-standard drawings); many students "feel they got it right, but the answer is wrong," essentially due to shallow understanding and lack of rigorous thinking.
4. Very Low Tolerance for Errors
130 points ≈ at most 1–2 mistakes; moreover, at least 3–4 of questions 21–25 must be correct (each worth 6 points, determining whether you enter DHR); this means not only a solid foundation is needed, but advanced thinking must also be excellent.
IV. Award Categories and Cutoff Score References (Recent Trends)
| Award | Requirement | Cutoff Score (Reference) |
|---|---|---|
| Perfect Score | 150 points | Very few |
| Distinguished Honor Roll (DHR) | Top 1% | ≥130 points |
| Honor Roll | Top 5% | ≥103–110 points |
| Achievement Roll | Grade 8 or below & ≥90 points | — |
AMC10 Preparation Courses
Our instructors are graduates from top global universities. With precise curriculum planning and comprehensive learning tracking, we ensure your score improvement and award-winning success!
| Class Type | Hours | Class Size | Start Date |
|---|---|---|---|
| Winter Break Class | 30H | 3–8 students | Consult teacher for details |
| Systematic Course | 20H | 1v1 / 3–8 students | Consult teacher for details |
| Problem-Solving Class | 20H | 1v1 / 3–8 students | Consult teacher for details |



