What Is Rice’s Waitlist Acceptance Rate?
Rice’s waitlist is one of the most unpredictable among elite schools (Rice Admissions). Unlike Tufts, which uses its waitlist generously, or Yale, which barely uses it at all, Rice falls somewhere in between with extreme year-to-year variation. The university has admitted as few as 1 student and as many as several hundred from the waitlist in different cycles. For the Class of 2027, Rice admitted zero students from the waitlist – the first time in 17 years. For complete data across all top schools, see our waitlist rates comparison.
| Class | Waitlisted | Admitted | Notable |
|---|---|---|---|
| Class of 2029 | TBD | TBD | Data pending |
| Class of 2028 | ~1,500 | ~50 | Small but active |
| Class of 2027 | ~1,400 | 0 | First 0 in 17 years |
| Class of 2026 | ~1,200 | ~4 | Near-zero year |
| Class of 2024 | ~1,000 | ~150 | Pandemic yield uncertainty |
Source: Rice CDS, 2020-2025.
When Does Rice Notify Waitlisted Students?
Rice typically releases waitlist decisions between mid-May and late June, after the May 1 enrollment deposit deadline. Regular Decision results for the Class of 2030 were released on April 1, 2026. If Rice needs to use its waitlist, initial offers go out in mid-to-late May. Additional offers may continue on a rolling basis through June.
How to Write a Rice LOCI That Works
Rice values collaborative culture, intellectual curiosity, and community engagement. Your LOCI should reference specific aspects of Rice’s residential college system, its 6:1 student-to-faculty ratio, or specific academic programs that connect to your interests. Houston’s growing tech, energy, and medical ecosystems are legitimate draws worth mentioning if relevant to your career interests. Include one meaningful update and state clearly that Rice is your first choice. For a template, see our LOCI guide. For Rice-specific admissions data, see our Rice acceptance rate analysis.
Final Thoughts: Your Rice Waitlist Action Plan
Accept your waitlist spot. Write a culture-focused LOCI within 7-10 days. Commit to your alternative by May 1. Rice’s waitlist is unpredictable, but when it moves, it can move significantly. For personalized strategy, schedule a consultation with Oriel Admissions.
How Does Rice’s Waitlist Compare to Peer Schools?
| School | WL Pattern | Notable |
|---|---|---|
| Rice | 0 to 150+ | First 0 in 17 years (2027) |
| MIT | 0-62 | Skips ~1/3 of years |
| Notre Dame | 0-275 | 13.19% historical avg |
| Duke | ~50-200 | Moderately active |
Source: Common Data Sets, 2020-2025.
For complete waitlist data across all top schools, see our waitlist rates comparison. For Rice-specific admissions data, see our Rice acceptance rate analysis. For broader waitlist strategy, see our complete waitlist guide and recommendation letter guide.
What Should You Write in Your Rice LOCI?
Rice’s admissions team values three things above all: intellectual vitality, collaborative spirit, and genuine fit with the residential college culture. Your LOCI should reflect all three. Reference a specific residential college tradition, a faculty member’s research, or a program like the Rice Undergraduate Scholars Program (RUSP) that connects to your academic interests. Mention Houston’s growing innovation ecosystem if relevant to your career goals – the Texas Medical Center, the energy corridor, or the tech startup scene.
Include one meaningful update since your application – a new research finding, competition result, or project milestone. State clearly that Rice is your first choice and that you will enroll if admitted. Keep the letter under 500 words. The strongest LOCIs are specific, authentic, and demonstrate the same collaborative curiosity that defines Rice’s culture. For a detailed template, see our LOCI template. For essay strategy, see our Common App essay guide. For building your profile, see our guides on summer programs and high school internships.
Usually, but not always. Over 17 years of data, Rice used its waitlist in all but one year (Class of 2027). However, the number admitted varies enormously, from 1 student to several hundred. Rice’s small class size (~1,100) makes the waitlist highly sensitive to yield fluctuations.
It depends on the year. Rice has historically used its waitlist more consistently than MIT (which skips it entirely in ~1/3 of years). However, MIT tends to admit more students (avg 31) when it does use the waitlist, while Rice’s numbers are less predictable.
Yes. The residential college system is central to the Rice experience. Demonstrating knowledge of how it works and expressing genuine interest in that community-based living model shows you understand Rice’s culture, not just its rankings.
Yes. Rice meets 100% of demonstrated financial need for all admitted students, including those admitted from the waitlist. Your financial aid package is determined after admission, using the same process as all other students.
High yield. When a sufficient number of admitted students accept their offers and enroll, the class fills without needing to draw from the waitlist. The Class of 2027 was the first time in 17 years this happened at Rice, suggesting it was an unusual yield year rather than a policy change.
Typically mid-May to late June, after the May 1 deposit deadline. Rice needs to see how many admitted students enroll before deciding whether to use the waitlist. If you have not heard by late June, the likelihood drops significantly.
One additional recommendation from someone who knows a different dimension of you can help. But do not flood the admissions office with multiple letters, emails, or phone calls. One LOCI and one supplementary recommendation is the right level of engagement.
Not directly. Rice does not discriminate by geography in waitlist decisions. However, Rice’s student body historically skews toward Texas and the South, so East Coast students may add geographic diversity that the class needs, which could work in your favor during waitlist review.