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SAT Score Ranges for the Ivy League: Middle 50% Bands and Strategy

By Rona Aydin

Columbia University Butler Library - SAT score ranges for the Ivy League
TL;DR: The middle-50% SAT range across the eight Ivy League schools spans 1470-1580 (Common Data Set, 2023-2024). The lowest 25th percentile is at Cornell (1470); the highest 75th percentile is at Harvard, Yale, Princeton (1580). For unhooked competitive positioning, target 1560+ at any Ivy League school. For Ivy League SAT strategy, schedule a consultation with Oriel Admissions.

What Are the SAT Score Ranges Across the Ivy League?

The eight Ivy League schools cluster tightly in SAT score ranges, with the middle-50% admitted-student bands spanning approximately 1470 to 1580 across the cohort. Harvard, Yale, and Princeton report the highest 75th percentiles (1580); Cornell reports the lowest 25th percentile (1470) due to its multi-college admissions structure. The table below shows the middle-50% bands at each Ivy League institution alongside competitive targets for unhooked applicants.

Ivy League SchoolSAT 25th PercentileSAT 75th PercentileMedian (Approx.)Competitive Target
Harvard1490158015401560+
Yale1500158015401560+
Princeton1500158015401560+
Columbia1490157015301550+
UPenn1500157015301550+
Brown1500156015301550+
Dartmouth1490156015301540+
Cornell1470155015101530+
Source: Common Data Set reports for 2023-2024 admission cycle. Median values are approximate, calculated from published middle-50% boundaries. Competitive target reflects the 75th percentile (or above) of admitted students for unhooked positioning.

How Should Families Use Ivy League SAT Ranges Strategically?

The middle-50% range is misleading without context. By definition, 50% of admitted students score within the range, 25% score below the 25th percentile, and 25% score above the 75th percentile. The 25% below the 25th percentile is heavily concentrated in hooked applicants (recruited athletes, legacies, institutional priorities, first-generation, underrepresented minority status), not unhooked applicants. For unhooked applicants, the practical SAT floor is closer to the 50th percentile of the admitted-student range.

This dynamic is why unhooked applicants should target the 75th percentile of the admitted-student range as the competitive positioning standard. A 1560 SAT positions an unhooked applicant at Harvard, Yale, or Princeton roughly where a 1540 positions a legacy applicant or a 1510 positions a recruited athlete with strong academic index. For Ivy League athletic recruiting, see our Academic Index calculator.

Which Ivy League School Has the Highest SAT Range?

Harvard, Yale, and Princeton report the highest 75th percentile SAT scores in the Ivy League at 1580. These three schools also report the highest 25th percentiles at 1490-1500. MIT (not Ivy League but peer institution) has the highest 25th percentile of any elite school at 1530.

The Ivy League schools cluster tightly in SAT ranges; the practical strategic difference between targeting Harvard vs Brown is minimal at the score level. The differentiator is application strength elsewhere: essays, recommendations, extracurricular distinction, and major-fit alignment matter far more across the Ivy League than minor score-band variation.

Which Ivy League School Has the Lowest SAT Range?

Cornell reports the lowest middle-50% SAT range in the Ivy League at 1470-1550. This reflects Cornell’s multi-college structure: the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences (CALS), College of Human Ecology, and Industrial and Labor Relations (ILR) admit on different academic profiles than the College of Engineering, College of Arts and Sciences, or School of Hotel Administration (Nolan).

Applicants to Cornell’s engineering or arts and sciences colleges face higher practical SAT expectations than the institution-wide ranges suggest. Cornell Engineering applicants should target 1550+ regardless of published institution-wide ranges.

How Have Ivy League SAT Ranges Changed Recently?

Ivy League SAT ranges have shifted upward over the past five years, with the 75th percentile at most schools moving from approximately 1560 to 1580. This compression reflects two trends: pandemic-era test-optional policies caused submitted-score applicants to self-select for stronger scores, raising the reported ranges; and admit rates have continued to fall as application volumes climb, with higher acceptance bars necessarily.

Yale, Dartmouth, Brown, and Cornell have reinstated test requirements as of 2024-2025 admission cycle. Harvard, Princeton, Columbia, and Penn maintain test-optional policies as of the 2025-2026 cycle but have signaled future policy reviews. For test-optional strategy implications, see our test-optional analysis.

How Do Ivy League SAT Ranges Compare to Peer Elite Institutions?

Ivy League SAT ranges align closely with peer elite institutions. Stanford (1500-1580), MIT (1530-1580), Duke (1500-1570), Northwestern (1490-1560), UChicago (1510-1570), Caltech (typically 1530+ historically), Vanderbilt (1490-1560), and Johns Hopkins (1500-1570) report middle-50% ranges comparable to Ivy League schools.

MIT has the highest 25th percentile (1530) of any elite institution due to its STEM-intensive applicant pool. Caltech historically reports similar levels though admit class size is small. For broader elite-college SAT positioning, see our what is a good SAT score guide.

What Section-Level SAT Patterns Matter at the Ivy League?

Section-level SAT scores carry strategic weight at the Ivy League beyond composite totals. Intended STEM and engineering majors at Cornell, Penn (Engineering), Princeton, and Columbia face higher Math expectations (target 790+). Intended humanities and social science majors at Yale, Brown, Columbia, and Penn face higher Reading and Writing expectations (target 760+).

Penn-Wharton specifically expects 790+ Math regardless of composite. Princeton SEAS (engineering) expects similar Math strength. The composite-only view obscures these signals; admissions officers see section detail and weight accordingly.

How Should Families Plan SAT Strategy Across Multiple Ivy League Applications?

For families targeting multiple Ivy League schools, set the SAT target at the highest 75th percentile of the target list. If targeting Harvard, Yale, Princeton, and Cornell, target 1580 to maximize positioning across all four. The marginal cost of higher score targeting is preparation time; the marginal benefit is competitive positioning at the most selective schools on the list.

For the broader strategy frame including ACT positioning, retake decisions, and section-level targeting, see our SAT and ACT strategy pillar. Oriel Admissions calibrates SAT targeting against each family’s specific Ivy League and peer-institution target list. Schedule a consultation to discuss your family’s Ivy League SAT strategy.

Frequently Asked Questions About Ivy League SAT Score Ranges

What is the SAT score range for the Ivy League?

The middle-50% SAT range across the eight Ivy League schools spans approximately 1470-1580 (Common Data Set, 2023-2024). The lowest 25th percentile is at Cornell (1470); the highest 75th percentile is at Harvard, Yale, Princeton (1580). For competitive positioning, target 1560+ at any Ivy League school as an unhooked applicant.

What SAT score do I need for Harvard?

Harvard’s middle-50% SAT range is 1490-1580 (Common Data Set, 2023-2024). Target 1560+ for competitive positioning at Harvard, with 1580+ representing the 75th percentile and maximum positioning. The median admitted student scores approximately 1540. Scores below 1490 are below the 25th percentile and require compelling compensating factors.

What SAT score do I need for Yale?

Yale’s middle-50% SAT range is 1500-1580 (Common Data Set, 2023-2024). Target 1560+ for competitive positioning at Yale. The 75th percentile is 1580, with approximately 25% of admitted students scoring at or above this threshold. Yale recently reinstated test requirements; submitted scores carry meaningful weight.

What SAT score do I need for Princeton?

Princeton’s middle-50% SAT range is 1500-1580 (Common Data Set, 2023-2024). Target 1560+ for competitive positioning at Princeton. The 75th percentile is 1580. The median admitted student at Princeton scores approximately 1540.

What SAT score do I need for Columbia?

Columbia’s middle-50% SAT range is 1490-1570 (Common Data Set, 2023-2024). Target 1550+ for competitive positioning at Columbia. The 75th percentile is 1570, with approximately 25% of admitted students scoring at or above. The median admitted student at Columbia scores approximately 1530.

What SAT score do I need for Penn?

Penn’s middle-50% SAT range is 1500-1570 (Common Data Set, 2023-2024). Target 1550+ for competitive positioning at Penn. The 75th percentile is 1570. Wharton School applicants face higher Math expectations specifically; target 790+ Math regardless of composite.

What SAT score do I need for Brown, Dartmouth, or Cornell?

Brown’s middle-50% SAT range is 1500-1560; Dartmouth’s is 1490-1560; Cornell’s is 1470-1550 (Common Data Set, 2023-2024). Target 1550+ for Brown and Dartmouth, 1540+ for Cornell. Cornell has the lowest 25th percentile in the Ivy League due to its multi-college structure (some colleges accept lower test ranges than others).

How do Ivy League SAT ranges compare to peer institutions?

Ivy League SAT ranges align closely with peer elite institutions. Stanford (1500-1580), MIT (1530-1580), Duke (1500-1570), Northwestern (1490-1560), and UChicago (1510-1570) report middle-50% ranges comparable to Ivy League schools. MIT has the highest 25th percentile (1530) due to STEM-intensive applicant pool; Caltech historically reports similar levels though has not always reported externally.

Sources: Common Data Set Initiative, College Board SAT Suite, NCES IPEDS, College Board BigFuture, NACAC, individual Ivy League Common Data Set reports for 2023-2024 admission cycle, and FairTest test-optional policy tracking.


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 leading Ivy League and top-ranked institutions. To discuss your family’s admissions strategy, schedule a consultation.


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