What is Rice’s acceptance rate for the Class of 2029?
Rice admitted 2,852 of 36,777 applicants for the Class of 2029, an overall rate of 7.8% (Rice Office of Admission, March 2025). This represented Rice’s largest applicant pool in history and a slight rise from the prior year’s record-low 7.5%. Early Decision I admitted 391 of 2,970 applicants for a 13.2% rate, while the inaugural Early Decision II round admitted 151 of 2,513 applicants for a 6% rate. Combined ED admitted 649 of 5,483 applicants (11.84%). Regular Decision admitted 2,310 of 31,294 applicants for a rate of 7.34%. The Class of 2030 cycle continued the compression, with 38,603 applicants and a 7.73% overall acceptance rate.
| Round | Applications | Admits | Acceptance Rate |
|---|---|---|---|
| Early Decision I | 2,970 | 391 | 13.2% |
| Early Decision II (inaugural) | 2,513 | 151 | 6% |
| ED Combined | 5,483 | 649 | 11.84% |
| Regular Decision | 31,294 | 2,310 | 7.34% |
| Overall Class of 2029 | 36,777 | 2,852 | 7.8% |
For broader admissions context, see our most competitive colleges in America overview.
Why does the Rice residential college system matter for admissions?
Rice’s residential college system – 11 colleges where students are randomly assigned, live and dine for all four years, and develop traditions distinct to each college – is the central organizing structure of undergraduate life at Rice. Unlike most peer institutions where housing is determined annually or where students leave on-campus residence after sophomore year, Rice students remain affiliated with their college throughout their time at the university. The system creates intense, sustained social bonds and is a frequently cited reason students enroll over peer schools.
For applicants, this structure has practical implications for the supplement and the demonstrated interest narrative. The strongest essays we see show genuine engagement with what the residential college system means – through campus visits, conversations with current students, or specific knowledge of college traditions and cultures. Generic references to “Rice’s strong community” without naming any specific aspect of the residential college system weaken the file. Applicants are not asked to indicate a preferred college on the application; assignment happens randomly after admission to ensure each college reflects the diversity of the entering class.
What does Rice actually look for in applicants?
Rice’s holistic review weights nine factors as “very important” on its Common Data Set: rigor of secondary school record, class rank, GPA, standardized test scores (when submitted), application essays, recommendations, extracurricular activities, character/personal qualities, and talent/ability. The university values intellectual curiosity that translates into action, demonstrated engagement with the residential college system, and contributions to a small undergraduate community of approximately 4,500 students.
Beyond academics, Rice’s “considered” factors offer interesting strategic information for applicants: an interview, first-generation status, geographical residence, state residency, volunteer work, paid work, and the level of an applicant’s interest in Rice. The level-of-interest factor is unusual at peer institutions and creates a meaningful demonstrated interest dimension – campus visits, virtual sessions, and substantive engagement with admissions counselors all matter.
What GPA and course rigor does Rice expect?
Rice’s admitted-student academic profile maps to a 3.95+ unweighted GPA at a competitive high school, with at least 8-10 AP, IB Higher Level, or post-AP courses by senior year. The transcript narrative matters: admissions readers expect deliberate course selection that signals intellectual focus aligned with the applicant’s likely undergraduate concentration. An engineering-track applicant who has not taken calculus by junior year is at a structural disadvantage; a humanities-track applicant should show depth in language and writing courses.
For applicants from feeder schools (Stuyvesant, Bronx Science, Phillips Exeter, Andover, St. John’s, Greenhill, St. Mark’s, Trinity), the bar effectively rises – the comparison set is the strongest students from those schools, not the national applicant pool. For more on academic positioning, see our Academic Index calculator for elite admissions.
What test scores does Rice expect from applicants?
Rice remains test-optional through the current cycle but explicitly recommends test submission when scores are available. Approximately 52% of admitted Class of 2027 students submitted test scores. The mid-50% SAT range for admitted students sits at approximately 1500-1570, with ACT composite scores typically 34-35.
| Test | 25th Percentile | 75th Percentile | Recommended Target |
|---|---|---|---|
| SAT Composite | 1500 | 1570 | 1540+ |
| SAT EBRW | 740 | 790 | 770+ |
| SAT Math | 770 | 800 | 790+ |
| ACT Composite | 34 | 35 | 35+ |
For testing strategy details, see which colleges now require the SAT or ACT, our SAT vs ACT decision guide, our junior year testing strategy, and whether test-optional is really optional in elite admissions.
How do Rice ED I and ED II work, and which should I apply to?
Rice introduced Early Decision II for the Class of 2029, joining schools like Vanderbilt, WashU, and Tufts in offering two binding early rounds. ED I has a November 1 deadline with decisions in mid-December; ED II has an early January deadline with decisions in mid-February. Both rounds are binding – admitted applicants must withdraw all other applications and enroll. For the Class of 2029, ED I admitted 391 applicants (13.2%), while ED II admitted just 151 (6%) – a noticeably lower rate that reflects the smaller, more competitive ED II pool.
The strategic implication is meaningful: the ED I rate (13.2%) is significantly higher than both the ED II rate (6%) and the Regular Decision rate (7.34%). For applicants whose academic file will be finalized by November 1, ED I offers the strongest statistical advantage. Apply ED II only if waiting for senior fall transcript or fall test scores would meaningfully strengthen the file. For broader ED strategy, see our Early Decision strategy guide.
What does Rice cost, and what financial aid is available?
For 2025-26, Rice’s total cost of attendance (tuition, room, board, and fees) is approximately $86,000. Rice meets 100% of demonstrated financial need without loans for all admitted students, including international applicants. The Rice Investment program announced in 2018 set explicit affordability commitments: families earning under $75,000 with typical assets pay nothing, and families earning $75,000-$200,000 receive substantial grant aid covering tuition.
| Family Income | Estimated Family Contribution | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Under $75,000 | $0 parent contribution | Full ride for typical asset levels |
| $75,000-$140,000 | $0 tuition (typical) | Need-based grants typical for this band |
| $140,000-$200,000 | Substantial grant aid | Tuition partially or fully covered |
| $200,000+ | Sliding scale to full pay | Aid possible with multiple students in college simultaneously |
For affluent families earning $300,000+ with significant assets, Rice typically expects full pay, though households with multiple students in college simultaneously sometimes qualify for need-based grants. Run the official Net Price Calculator before applying ED to confirm the estimate works.
How Should Applicants Approach Rice Supplemental Essays?
Rice’s supplemental essays carry significant weight in admissions decisions because they differentiate among academically qualified applicants. Strategy varies meaningfully by prompt, word limit, and the specific qualities Rice looks for. For complete prompts, strategic approach for each prompt, common rejection patterns, and the timeline applicants should follow, see our deep-dive guide: Rice Supplemental Essays Strategy.
What kind of extracurricular profile does Rice admit?
Rice values depth over breadth. The strongest admitted profiles concentrate sustained, substantive engagement in 2-3 areas. Concrete examples from recent admitted students: a published research paper with a faculty mentor; a varsity sport at the All-State or recruited level; founding and scaling a community nonprofit with measurable impact; sustained creative output (a portfolio, a published collection, a performance record); or competitive recognition at the regional, national, or international level (FIRST Robotics, ISEF, USAMO, national debate, Concord Review).
For applicants from competitive high schools, “club president” alone signals nothing distinctive in a pool where the median admit is in the top 5% of their class. The differentiating factor is what the applicant produced or built outside the institutional structures of the high school. For more on extracurricular positioning, see our summer planning guide for rising juniors and our analysis of why valedictorians get rejected from elite schools.
How does Rice compare to other elite universities for similar applicants?
For students choosing between Rice and peer institutions, Rice’s distinctive value proposition is the residential college system, the small size (4,500 undergraduates compared to 8,500+ at peers like Northwestern), the strong undergraduate engineering program (especially in fields like bioengineering, computer science, and materials science), and the Houston location with proximity to the Texas Medical Center. Compared to Vanderbilt, Rice is significantly smaller, more research-intensive, and less Greek-life-oriented. Compared to Duke, Rice has a more academically focused culture and lacks the major Division I sports presence. Compared to Northwestern, Rice does not require school-specific application but offers fewer pre-professional schools.
For deeper school-specific guidance, see our complete guides: Vanderbilt, Duke, WashU, Northwestern, Johns Hopkins, University of Chicago, and Cornell.
What is the Rice application timeline for Class of 2030 and 2031 applicants?
For students applying in the 2025-26 cycle (Class of 2030) or the 2026-27 cycle (Class of 2031), the operational timeline is consistent. ED I applications are due November 1 with decisions mid-December. ED II and Regular Decision applications are due January 4 with ED II decisions in mid-February and RD decisions in late March. The financial aid CSS Profile and FAFSA must be submitted by mid-November for ED I, by mid-January for ED II, and by early February for RD applicants.
| Milestone | ED I | ED II | Regular Decision |
|---|---|---|---|
| Application deadline | November 1 | January 4 | January 4 |
| Financial aid forms due | November 15 | January 15 | February 1 |
| Decision release | Mid-December | Mid-February | Late March |
| Reply deadline | Within ~2 weeks (binding) | Within ~2 weeks (binding) | May 1 |
For Class of 2030 applicants currently in junior year, the testing decision is critical: applicants submitting the SAT or ACT should plan to take the test by August or September of senior year so that scores can be reported in the ED file. Strong applicants from high-achievement high schools should plan to demonstrate engagement with Rice’s residential college system through visits, virtual sessions, or substantive correspondence. For Class of 2031 applicants currently in sophomore year, the priority is course selection for junior year and identifying 2-3 extracurricular areas where sustained depth is achievable through senior year.
Frequently Asked Questions About Rice Admissions
Rice is in Houston, Texas, on a tree-lined campus of several hundred acres in a leafy residential area near the Texas Medical Center and the city’s museum district. Its location in one of the largest and most diverse US cities offers strong access to industry, research, healthcare, and the arts. The combination of an attractive, contained campus and a major metropolitan setting shapes much of the Rice experience and its opportunities.
Rice is a private research university known for strength in engineering, the natural sciences, architecture, business, and music through the Shepherd School, all within an unusually small and selective student body. It is also recognized for generous financial aid and a collaborative culture. Among top universities it stands out for pairing research-university resources and STEM strength with the intimate scale and close faculty access of a much smaller institution.
No; Rice is not part of the Ivy League, a specific Northeastern athletic conference. It is a private research university widely regarded as comparably elite and highly selective, often ranked among the top national universities and sometimes called a ‘Southern Ivy,’ but it holds no Ivy membership. Families should evaluate Rice on its distinctive strengths, such as STEM excellence and small size, rather than on whether it carries an Ivy label.
Yes; Rice superscores, considering an applicant’s highest section results across multiple test dates to form the best composite, which rewards strategic retakes. The university accepts both the SAT and ACT and has shifted testing requirements in recent cycles, so applicants should confirm the current policy on its admissions site. Where scores are submitted, the superscoring practice benefits applicants who take a test more than once.
Yes, on a limited basis; Rice primarily awards need-based financial aid and meets full demonstrated need, but it also offers a number of competitive merit-based scholarships, unlike the Ivy League, which gives need-based aid only. Merit awards are selective and may require separate consideration. Most aid is need-based, so families should focus on that process while high-achieving applicants research the specific merit scholarship programs Rice makes available.
Rice is small for a research university, enrolling roughly 4,500 to 4,800 undergraduates with a comparatively modest graduate population. The intimate scale supports a low student-to-faculty ratio, small classes, and close faculty access uncommon at larger research universities. Students who want abundant research and STEM resources combined with the personal attention and tight-knit community more typical of a small college often find Rice’s scale especially appealing.
Rice is distinguished by its small size paired with research-university strength, a low student-to-faculty ratio, a collaborative rather than cutthroat culture, and a strong honor code governing academics. Its compact campus and emphasis on close faculty mentorship set it apart from larger peers. This blend of intimacy, academic rigor, generous aid, and a famously friendly, unpretentious community gives Rice a recognizable identity among elite universities.
Rice’s testing policy has shifted in recent admissions cycles, as at many selective universities, between test-optional and requiring scores, so applicants must confirm the current requirement on its admissions site. Where scores are submitted, strong results can help and the university superscores. Because policies have been in flux, Rice applicants should verify the rule for their specific cycle and decide whether submitting scores strengthens their particular application.
About Oriel Admissions
Oriel Admissions is a Princeton-based college admissions consulting firm advising families nationwide on elite university admissions strategy. Our team includes former admissions officers from Harvard, Princeton, and Columbia. To discuss your family’s admissions strategy, schedule a consultation.