What Is NYU’s Acceptance Rate for the Class of 2030?
NYU has not yet released full Class of 2030 admissions statistics. The most recent confirmed cycle is the Class of 2029, which closed at 7.7% (approximately 9,288 admits from 120,633 applications), the most selective year in NYU’s history (Washington Square News, March 2025). The applicant pool was the largest of any private American university and represented an increase from the Class of 2028, which admitted at 8% from approximately 118,000 applications. NYU’s overall acceptance rate has dropped from 9.23% (Class of 2027) to 7.7% (Class of 2029) over two cycles, a steeper trajectory than at most peer private universities.
| Class | Applications | Acceptance Rate | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Class of 2030 | Not released | Not released | Cycle in progress |
| Class of 2029 | ~120,633 | 7.7% | Largest applicant pool of any private US university; most selective year in NYU history |
| Class of 2028 | ~118,000 | ~8% | Prior record applicant pool |
| Class of 2027 | ~105,000 | 9.23% | Prior CDS year |
| Class of 2026 | ~105,000 | ~12.2% | Higher rate before recent volume surge |
Three of NYU’s undergraduate schools now admit at rates below 5%: the College of Arts and Science (CAS), the Stern School of Business, and the Rory Meyers College of Nursing. Stern’s acceptance rate, estimated near 3%, makes it among the most selective undergraduate business programs in the United States, comparable to or more selective than Wharton at Penn. The aggregate NYU acceptance rate masks substantial school-level variation, and applicants are evaluated against the specific selectivity of the school they apply to. For broader context on how NYU compares to peer selective universities, see our analysis of the most competitive colleges.
How Do NYU’s Undergraduate Schools Differ in Admissions?
NYU admits to ten undergraduate schools, each with its own admissions criteria, supplemental focus, and selectivity. Applicants choose one school on the application and are evaluated against that school’s specific criteria. NYU does not publish school-by-school acceptance rates, but the schools cluster into three tiers of selectivity. Three schools (CAS, Stern, and Rory Meyers Nursing) admit at sub-5% rates. Tisch School of the Arts admits at single-digit rates with portfolio-driven evaluation that runs largely independent of the broader academic profile. The remaining schools (Tandon, Steinhardt, Gallatin, Silver, Liberal Studies, Global Public Health) admit at higher rates, with aggregate selectivity in the 8% to 15% range depending on the school and intended major.
| School | Focus | Estimated Acceptance Rate | Application Emphasis |
|---|---|---|---|
| Stern School of Business | Business, finance, economics | ~3% | Quantitative profile, leadership in business contexts |
| College of Arts and Science (CAS) | Liberal arts, humanities, sciences | ~4-5% | Intellectual breadth, writing strength |
| Rory Meyers College of Nursing | Nursing science and clinical practice | ~4-5% | Healthcare experience, science preparation |
| Tisch School of the Arts | Drama, film, dance, performing arts | ~5-15% (portfolio-dependent) | Audition or portfolio; demonstrated artistic depth |
| Tandon School of Engineering | Engineering, computer science | ~10-15% | Calculus through BC, physics, programming or research |
| Steinhardt School | Education, communication, applied sciences | ~12-18% | Pre-professional focus tied to specific major |
| Gallatin School | Individualized study | ~10-15% | Self-directed intellectual project |
| Silver School of Social Work | Social work, applied policy | ~12-15% | Demonstrated commitment to service or policy |
| Liberal Studies | Two-year liberal arts gateway | ~25-35% | Alternative entry point with later transfer to CAS |
| Global Public Health | Public health, health policy | ~12-15% | Health-related experience, policy interest |
The strategic implication is that the school choice should reflect genuine academic interest and demonstrated preparation. Applicants who choose Steinhardt, Gallatin, or Liberal Studies because they perceive these schools as easier to enter consistently underperform applicants who chose those schools with documented interest in the specific curricular structure. NYU admissions readers can detect strategic school selection within seconds, and a generic essay that does not engage with the specific school’s mission consistently underperforms. Internal transfer between NYU schools is institutionally complex and not guaranteed.
What GPA and Test Scores Do You Need for NYU?
The mid-50% SAT range for enrolled NYU first-years is approximately 1480 to 1550, with an average composite of 1520 (NYU Common Data Set, 2024-2025). The mid-50% ACT is 34 to 35. The average enrolled-student GPA is approximately 3.81 on a 4.0 unweighted scale, with 18% of admits reporting GPAs of 4.0 or higher and 54% reporting GPAs between 3.75 and 3.99. Approximately 90% of admits ranked in the top 10% of their high school graduating class.
| Metric | 25th Percentile | 75th Percentile |
|---|---|---|
| SAT Composite | 1480 | 1550 |
| ACT Composite | 34 | 35 |
School-level expectations vary substantially. Stern applicants need near-perfect quantitative scores (SAT Math typically 770 or above, ACT Math 35) and calculus through BC level. CAS applicants have wider acceptable score ranges. Tandon applicants need calculus through BC, physics through advanced level, and ideally programming or applied research. Course rigor matters more than raw GPA; admitted NYU students typically take seven to twelve AP, IB, or post-AP courses by graduation. For a tool that estimates how your child’s record stacks up, see our Ivy League Academic Index Calculator.
What Is NYU’s Test Policy for 2026-2027?
NYU operates a test-flexible policy: applicants may submit the SAT, the ACT, three AP exams, three IB Higher Level exams, an IB Diploma score, or a national equivalent (such as A-Levels or the Indian Standard XII Examination). The flexibility distinguishes NYU from peer private universities that have either reinstated SAT/ACT requirements (Harvard, Yale, MIT, Stanford, Penn, Cornell, Dartmouth, Brown, Caltech) or remained traditionally test-optional with SAT/ACT as the only options. NYU’s CDS reports that approximately 28% of enrolled students submitted SAT scores and 10% submitted ACT scores; the remainder submitted alternative qualifying credentials or applied without scores.
The strategic implication for NYU applicants is that test policy is genuinely flexible: strong AP or IB scores can substitute for SAT/ACT submission. Stern and CAS applicants benefit from submitting SAT or ACT scores within or above the 1480 to 1550 range; the math expectation at Stern is high, and demonstrated quantitative aptitude through scores is one of the most reliable signals available to readers. Applicants without strong SAT or ACT scores but with strong AP or IB performance should submit those scores instead. Applicants with no qualifying scores at all face a higher bar and need unusually strong academic, essay, and recommendation evidence. For a deeper look at the NYU testing decision in the broader landscape, see our 2026-2027 testing policy guide.
Does Applying Early Decision to NYU Give an Admissions Advantage?
Yes, and the advantage is among the most meaningful at any selective American university. NYU offers two binding Early Decision rounds: ED I (November 1 deadline) and ED II (January 1 deadline). Approximately 25,000 students applied through ED I and ED II combined for the Class of 2029, a record that represents a 10% year-over-year increase. ED admits fill more than 50% of NYU’s incoming class. NYU does not publish ED-specific acceptance rates, but the ED round runs at meaningfully higher selectivity for school-specific reasons: the strongest applicants to Stern and CAS apply ED, and the ED pool is particularly concentrated for those schools.
NYU ED is binding: applicants commit to enroll if admitted to the specific NYU school they applied to. ED II applicants who are deferred or denied may still apply to other schools through Regular Decision, but ED I and ED II applicants must withdraw all other applications if accepted. NYU will release applicants from the binding commitment only when financial aid does not allow attendance. The strategic implication is that ED I or ED II is the highest-probability pathway for genuinely interested applicants whose academic profile is fully built by November 1 (ED I) or January 1 (ED II). Demonstrated interest matters at NYU more than at most peer institutions; ED applications are the strongest possible signal of demonstrated interest.
What Does NYU Look for Beyond Grades and Scores?
NYU’s Common Data Set lists rigor of secondary school record, GPA, application essays, recommendations, character and personal qualities, and extracurricular activities as factors rated “Very Important” in admissions decisions, with standardized test scores rated “Considered” reflecting NYU’s flexible test policy (NYU Common Data Set, 2024-2025). Demonstrated interest is rated “Considered” at NYU, a distinction from most peer institutions where demonstrated interest is “Not Considered.”
NYU’s institutional identity is more global, urban, and pre-professional than peer private universities, which influences what admissions officers prioritize beyond academic credentials. The Class of 2029 included students from 50 states and 128 countries, with approximately 1,000 students from New York City public schools. Twenty percent of the class received Pell Grants and 20% were first-generation college students. Successful applicants articulate genuine engagement with NYU’s distinctive context: the global network across New York, Abu Dhabi, and Shanghai; the urban integration with New York City as the campus; and the school-specific pre-professional or interdisciplinary focus. Generic answers about loving New York City or wanting an Ivy-equivalent experience consistently underperform.
How Should Applicants Approach the NYU Supplemental Essay?
NYU requires one supplemental essay (250 words maximum) for the 2025-2026 cycle, the “bridge builders” prompt that asks applicants to discuss something they have done that has helped bridge differences or build understanding among people with different perspectives, backgrounds, or experiences. The prompt replaced the prior multi-prompt supplement and is now the single school-specific essay across all NYU undergraduate schools. Tisch School of the Arts applicants additionally complete portfolio or audition components specific to the program of interest.
The bridge-builder essay is the highest-leverage component of the application beyond the academic record. Strong responses describe specific, concrete experiences with measurable outcomes: a sustained project, a leadership role with documented impact, or a recurring practice that crossed identifiable boundaries between people. Generic responses that describe vague commitments to diversity, that recap activities already listed elsewhere, or that frame the response as an abstract reflection on tolerance consistently underperform. Tisch applicants should treat the portfolio or audition with at least the same seriousness as the supplemental essay; admissions decisions at Tisch are heavily weighted toward demonstrated artistic depth, and a weaker portfolio cannot be offset by a strong essay.
How Generous Is NYU Financial Aid for High-Income Families?
NYU announced a major financial aid expansion in 2023 with the launch of the NYU Promise. Families earning under $100,000 with typical assets receive full tuition scholarships. NYU has met 100% of demonstrated financial need for all admitted students since 2021, a structural expansion of NYU’s aid commitment under President Linda Mills. NYU is need-blind for U.S. applicants and need-aware for international applicants, with most international aid concentrated in the most competitive applicant cohort.
| U.S. Family Income | Typical Aid Outcome |
|---|---|
| Under $100,000 | NYU Promise: full tuition scholarship; remaining costs based on need analysis |
| $100,000 to $150,000 | Significant grant aid for many families; expected parent contribution scales with income |
| $150,000 to $250,000 | Some grant aid for many families; primary home and retirement assets considered favorably |
| Above $250,000 | Grant aid possible based on assets, siblings in college, special circumstances; many families pay closer to full cost |
NYU’s aid policy lags peer private universities at the high-income end. Yale, Harvard, and Penn now offer free tuition up to $200,000 family income; Princeton’s threshold is $250,000. NYU’s $100,000 threshold places it closer to Brown and Dartmouth ($125,000) than to the Ivy League free-tuition leaders. For families weighing NYU against peer private universities on financial aid, the comparison favors most peer Ivies for incomes between $100,000 and $200,000. NYU compensates partially with merit-based scholarships available to a small portion of admits, including the prestigious AnBryce Scholarship and Tisch and Stern-specific merit awards.
What Makes NYU’s Three-Campus Global Network Distinctive?
NYU operates three degree-granting campuses: New York, Abu Dhabi, and Shanghai. Approximately 6,500 students are enrolled across all three campuses, with the New York campus serving the substantial majority of undergraduates. NYU Abu Dhabi (NYUAD) and NYU Shanghai (NYUSH) operate as fully residential campuses with their own admissions processes; admission to NYUAD or NYUSH is institutionally separate from admission to NYU New York and runs at meaningfully higher selectivity, with NYUAD frequently cited at sub-3% acceptance rates. NYU undergraduates at any campus may participate in the Global Network University study-away system, which allows students to study at NYU’s twelve global academic centers (London, Paris, Berlin, Madrid, Buenos Aires, Sydney, Tel Aviv, Florence, Prague, Accra, Washington DC, Los Angeles) for a semester or a year.
The strategic implication for applicants is that the three-campus structure represents a genuine institutional commitment, not a marketing position. Applicants who articulate why one specific campus is the right fit (for example, NYUAD for global immersion, NYU Shanghai for the U.S.-China academic bridge, or NYU New York for the urban integration) outperform applicants who treat NYU as a single institution with three locations. The supplemental essay should reflect specific, concrete engagement with the chosen campus rather than generic admiration of NYU’s global network. Tisch, Stern, and CAS are based in New York; Tandon Engineering is based in Brooklyn; Liberal Studies is partly based in New York with optional study away.
What Are the Most Common Mistakes in NYU Applications?
Three patterns appear repeatedly in unsuccessful NYU applications from otherwise highly qualified candidates. The first is choosing the wrong undergraduate school. Applicants who choose Stern without the quantitative academic profile to support it (calculus through BC, near-perfect SAT Math, demonstrated business or finance leadership) consistently underperform applicants who chose CAS with the same overall record. The school choice should match the academic profile, not chase the prestige of Stern.
The second pattern is misjudging the test-flexible policy. Stern and CAS applicants who withhold SAT or ACT scores within or above the 1480 to 1550 range, hoping that the absence of scores will be neutral, consistently underperform applicants who submit. The flexibility is real, but admissions readers see scores when they are submitted, and the absence of scores from a strong applicant pool can raise questions when most peers are submitting some form of qualifying credential. Applicants without SAT or ACT scores should submit AP, IB, or A-Level scores instead; submitting nothing is the weakest option for the most selective NYU schools.
The third pattern is treating the NYU supplemental essay as a generic diversity statement. The bridge-builder prompt asks for specific, concrete experience that crossed identifiable boundaries between people, with measurable outcomes. Applicants who write abstract reflections on tolerance, who recap their resume in essay form, or who use the same content for multiple universities consistently underperform applicants who tell a specific, particular story. For a deeper analysis of why otherwise excellent students get rejected from top schools, see our analysis of valedictorians who were denied from elite institutions.
How Does NYU Compare to Other Top Private Universities?
NYU is not part of the Ivy League but admits at rates comparable to peer Ivies for its most selective schools. NYU differs from peer private universities in three institutionally meaningful ways. First, NYU operates as a global network with three degree-granting campuses, a structure no peer private university shares. Second, NYU’s school-by-school selectivity varies more than at peer institutions; Stern’s near-3% rate makes it more selective than several Ivy League schools, while NYU’s aggregate rate masks substantial variation. Third, NYU evaluates demonstrated interest, distinguishing it from Yale, Princeton, Harvard, and most peer Ivies that explicitly do not consider demonstrated interest in admissions.
| School | Class of 2029 Acceptance Rate | Early Plan | Free Tuition Income Threshold | Demonstrated Interest |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| NYU | 7.7% | ED I and ED II (binding) | $100,000 | Considered |
| Harvard | ~3.6% | REA (non-binding) | $200,000 | Not considered |
| Yale | 4.59% | SCEA (non-binding) | $200,000 | Not considered |
| Princeton | 4.4% | SCEA (non-binding) | $250,000 | Not considered |
| Penn | 4.9% | ED (binding) | $200,000 | Not considered |
| Columbia | 4.29% (revised to 4.9%) | ED (binding) | $150,000 | Not considered |
| Cornell | 8.38% | ED (binding) | $75,000 | Not considered |
| Duke | 4.8% | ED (binding) | $150,000 (Carolinas only) | Considered |
How Should Your Family Approach an NYU Application?
NYU is one of the most selective universities in the world for its top schools, but the path to a strong application is more concrete than the headline 7.7% aggregate acceptance rate suggests. Three commitments shape the high-probability path. First, choose the undergraduate school that matches the applicant’s documented academic and extracurricular profile, not the school the applicant perceives as easier to enter or the school with the strongest perceived prestige. Second, treat the bridge-builder supplemental essay as the highest-leverage portion of the application; allocate substantial time to identify a specific, concrete experience with measurable outcomes, and write a response that could not plausibly have been written for a peer university. Third, if NYU is genuinely the family’s first choice, the academic profile is fully built by November 1, and the family is prepared for a binding commitment, apply Early Decision I; ED I and ED II combined fill more than 50% of the incoming class.
For families currently in the planning window, the most important variable is the quality of the academic and extracurricular profile that will exist by November of senior year. Demonstrated interest matters at NYU, so campus visits, information sessions, and engagement with NYU admissions communications are meaningful in a way they are not at most peer institutions. For broader strategy across selective American universities, see our analysis of the most competitive colleges, our Junior Year SAT and ACT Strategy guide, and our summer before junior year planning guide.
Frequently Asked Questions About NYU Admissions
NYU has not yet released full Class of 2030 admissions statistics. The most recent confirmed cycle is the Class of 2029, which closed at 7.7% (approximately 9,288 admits from 120,633 applications), the most selective year in NYU’s history (Washington Square News, March 2025). The applicant pool was the largest of any private American university. NYU’s aggregate rate masks substantial school-level variation: three schools (CAS, Stern, Rory Meyers Nursing) admit at sub-5% rates.
NYU operates a test-flexible policy: applicants may submit the SAT, the ACT, three AP exams, three IB Higher Level exams, an IB Diploma score, or a national equivalent (such as A-Levels). The flexibility distinguishes NYU from Ivy League schools that have either reinstated SAT/ACT requirements or remained traditionally test-optional. Approximately 28% of enrolled NYU students submitted SAT scores and 10% submitted ACT scores; the remainder submitted alternative qualifying credentials or applied without scores.
Stern’s acceptance rate is estimated near 3%, among the most selective undergraduate business programs in the United States, comparable to or more selective than Wharton at Penn. Stern applicants need near-perfect quantitative scores (SAT Math typically 770 or above, ACT Math 35), calculus through BC level, and demonstrated leadership in business, finance, or quantitative research contexts. Strong Stern supplements connect documented experience to specific Stern resources rather than naming Stern’s prestige generically.
The mid-50% SAT range for enrolled NYU students is approximately 1480 to 1550, average 1520 (NYU Common Data Set, 2024-2025). The mid-50% ACT is 34 to 35. School-level expectations vary: Stern applicants need near-perfect quantitative scores; CAS applicants have wider acceptable ranges; Tandon applicants need calculus through BC and physics through advanced level. Targeting 1480 or above is competitive; 1550 or higher places an applicant above the median admitted student.
Yes, if NYU is genuinely your first choice. NYU offers two binding Early Decision rounds (ED I and ED II), and ED admits fill more than 50% of the incoming class. ED applications also signal demonstrated interest, which matters at NYU more than at most peer institutions. Apply ED I if your academic profile is fully built by November 1; apply ED II if you need first-semester senior grades or additional credentials by January 1. NYU will release applicants from the binding commitment only when financial aid does not allow attendance.
The school choice should match the applicant’s documented academic and extracurricular profile. Stern requires strong quantitative profiles and business or finance focus. CAS is for liberal arts, humanities, and sciences applicants. Rory Meyers Nursing requires healthcare experience and science preparation. Tisch admits via portfolio or audition with demonstrated artistic depth. Tandon Engineering requires calculus through BC, physics, and ideally programming or research. Steinhardt, Gallatin, Silver, Liberal Studies, and Global Public Health serve specific pre-professional or interdisciplinary interests. Internal transfer between schools is institutionally complex and not guaranteed.
NYU Promise is NYU’s flagship financial aid commitment, launched in 2023 under President Linda Mills. Families earning under $100,000 with typical assets receive full tuition scholarships. NYU has met 100% of demonstrated financial need for all admitted students since 2021. NYU is need-blind for U.S. applicants and need-aware for international applicants. NYU’s $100,000 free-tuition threshold is lower than the Ivy League free-tuition leaders (Yale, Harvard, Penn at $200,000; Princeton at $250,000), but the policy is structurally meaningful for families earning under $100,000.
Yes. NYU rates demonstrated interest as ‘Considered’ in admissions decisions, distinguishing it from Yale, Princeton, Harvard, and most Ivy League schools that explicitly do not consider demonstrated interest. Practical implications: campus visits, information sessions, official NYU events, and engagement with NYU admissions communications are meaningful at NYU in a way they are not at most peer institutions. Early Decision applications are the strongest possible signal of demonstrated interest. The strongest applications also reflect NYU-specific knowledge in the supplemental essay and a specific, articulated reason for choosing one of NYU’s three campuses.
About Oriel Admissions
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