TL;DR: Brown is the more selective overall, admitting 5.35% for the Class of 2030 versus Cornell’s most recent official 8.38% (Class of 2029, withheld for 2030); Cornell admits by college, so its top divisions run lower. The defining contrast is curriculum and scale: Brown is a mid-sized university with a fully open curriculum and no requirements, while Cornell is the largest Ivy with specialized colleges. Both meet full need with no loans (Brown Daily Herald, 2026; Cornell Daily Sun, 2025).
Is Brown or Cornell harder to get into?
Brown is the more selective at the institution level, admitting 5.35% of applicants to the Class of 2030 against Cornell’s most recent official 8.38% for the Class of 2029; Cornell withheld official Class of 2030 figures, with trackers estimating roughly 7% (Brown Daily Herald, 2026; Cornell Daily Sun, 2025). On the surface, Brown looks notably harder to enter.
The Cornell caveat applies here as well. Cornell admits students to one of its eight undergraduate colleges, and the rates vary widely. Its most in-demand colleges and programs, in engineering, computer science, and business, run well below the university-wide figure, closer to Brown’s range. A student applying to a high-demand Cornell college faces a tougher bar than the headline number suggests, which narrows the real gap between the two.
| Dimension | Brown | Cornell |
|---|---|---|
| Acceptance rate | 5.35% (Class of 2030) | 8.38% (Class of 2029; 2030 withheld) |
| Admissions structure | Single university-wide pool | Apply by college; rates vary widely |
| Curriculum | Open Curriculum; no requirements | College-specific requirements |
| Early-round policy | Early Decision (binding) | Early Decision (binding) |
| Undergraduate enrollment | ~7,200 | ~15,700 (largest Ivy) |
| Setting | Providence, RI (small city) | Ithaca, NY (rural) |
| Signature strengths | Open Curriculum, humanities, applied math, biology, CS | Engineering, CS, agriculture and life sciences, business, hotel |
| Financial aid | Meets 100% of need, no-loan | Meets 100% of need, no-loan |
Brown vs Cornell: how do academics and programs compare?
Brown’s defining feature is the Open Curriculum: there are no general-education or distribution requirements, students design their own course of study, and they may take any class pass/fail. It is a mid-sized university with strength in the humanities, applied mathematics, biology, and computer science, and the model is built for intellectual exploration and self-direction. Brown rewards a student who wants freedom to range across fields and shape an individualized path.
Cornell is the largest and most varied Ivy, a hybrid private and land-grant university organized into specialized undergraduate colleges, each with its own requirements and focus. It is exceptionally strong across applied and pre-professional fields: engineering, computer science, agriculture and life sciences, business through the Dyson School, hotel administration, and architecture. Students apply directly to a college and study within its structure. The contrast is stark: Brown offers maximal curricular freedom, while Cornell offers structured depth within a chosen specialized college. For program detail, see our guides to getting into Brown and getting into Cornell.
Does Brown or Cornell give better financial aid for high-income families?
The two are closely matched. Both meet 100% of demonstrated financial need with no-loan packages, so admitted families are never asked to borrow to cover assessed need, and for lower- and middle-income families the net cost at either can be low. Neither has announced the $200,000 free-tuition threshold now offered by Harvard, Yale, and Penn, so for high earners both sit a tier below the most aggressive Ivy aid.
For a family earning $200,000 or more, both schools will generally expect a contribution, assessed individually based on assets, home equity, the number of children in college, and one-time income events. Because two schools that both meet full need can still produce materially different bills for the same family, the practical step for high earners is to run each net price calculator early rather than assuming parity. For how high-earner aid math works, see our analysis of financial aid for high-earning families.
| Family income (typical assets) | Brown | Cornell |
|---|---|---|
| Under $100,000 | Typically low net cost (full need met) | Typically low net cost (full need met) |
| $100,000-$200,000 | Need-based aid, partial to substantial | Need-based aid; tuition contribution likely |
| $200,000-$400,000 | Contribution expected; assessed individually | Contribution expected; assessed individually |
| Above $400,000 | Typically full-pay (~$90,000+/yr) | Typically full-pay (~$90,000+/yr) |
Brown vs Cornell: campus culture and student experience
Both have a relaxed reputation relative to some peers, but the settings differ. Brown sits in Providence, a small, walkable city in Rhode Island, and its culture is shaped by the Open Curriculum: students are independent, intellectually exploratory, and known for a collaborative, low-pressure-on-paper ethos. With roughly 7,200 undergraduates, the community is mid-sized and tight enough to feel cohesive.
Cornell’s Ithaca campus is large and rural, spread across a dramatic landscape, and its roughly 15,700 undergraduates support an enormous range of clubs, Greek life, and academic communities. The scale means more of everything, and students carve out their own niche within a big, decentralized place. The honest question is whether the student wants Brown’s open, exploratory, mid-sized environment in a small city or Cornell’s expansive, varied university in a rural setting.
Brown vs Cornell: outcomes, graduate school, and ROI
Both produce strong outcomes and feed top graduate and professional schools. Brown’s graduates do well across consulting, technology, medicine, and the arts, and its distinctive culture and network are assets in creative and entrepreneurial fields. Cornell’s applied and pre-professional programs feed directly into engineering, technology, finance, agriculture, and hospitality, and its large alumni base is broad and well-distributed across industries.
For a high-income family, neither is a stronger investment in pure earnings terms; both sit near the top of the outcomes distribution. The more useful lens is curriculum and field: Cornell favors a student with a clear applied or technical direction who wants structured depth, while Brown favors a student who wants freedom to explore and an individualized path.
Should you apply early to Brown or Cornell?
Both Brown and Cornell use binding Early Decision, and a student can apply ED to only one school. Because both fill a meaningful share of their classes early and the early round carries a real statistical advantage, applying ED to a clear first choice is the strongest lever available here. The trade-off is the binding commitment: a family agrees to enroll if admitted, before seeing the financial-aid package, so ED suits families confident in both the choice and its affordability.
Since both are Early Decision schools rather than restrictive early action, the question is not which to apply to early in a non-binding sense; it is whether one is a clear enough first choice, or in Cornell’s case a specific college, to commit to outright. Families uncertain about cost should weigh that carefully before choosing the binding round.
Which should you choose: Brown or Cornell?
Choose Brown if the student wants maximal curricular freedom through the Open Curriculum, values exploration over early specialization, and prefers a mid-sized university in a small, walkable city. Choose Cornell if the student has a clear applied or pre-professional direction, engineering, computer science, business, agriculture and life sciences, or hospitality, and wants the structured depth, breadth, and resources of the largest Ivy.
For high-income families, the financial picture is similar at both: each meets full need with no loans and generally expects a contribution above $200,000. The decision is overwhelmingly about curriculum and fit, and the clearest way to resolve it is whether the student wants the freedom of Brown’s open model or the specialized structure of a Cornell college.
Related Ivy League Comparisons
For more side-by-side comparisons, see Brown vs Dartmouth, Cornell vs Yale, Cornell vs Dartmouth, and Princeton vs Cornell. If you are deciding when to apply, our guide to Early Action vs Early Decision breaks down the early-round options.
Frequently Asked Questions About Brown vs Cornell
Brown is more selective overall, admitting 5.35% for the Class of 2030 versus Cornell’s 8.38% for the Class of 2029 (Cornell withheld 2030). But Cornell admits by college, and its top divisions run below the headline rate, narrowing the gap for competitive programs.
Brown’s Open Curriculum has no general-education requirements, letting students design their own path and take courses pass/fail. Cornell students apply to and study within a specific college, each with its own requirements and focus.
They are similar. Both meet 100% of demonstrated need with no loans, and neither offers the $200,000 free-tuition threshold of Harvard, Yale, or Penn. Above $200,000 both expect a contribution assessed case by case.
Apply ED only to a clear first choice, since it is binding and can be used at just one school. Both carry a strong early-round advantage, but commit only if ready to enroll without comparing aid offers.
Cornell, by structure and reputation, with a dedicated engineering college and deep CS strength. Brown has solid engineering and CS programs within a liberal-arts framework, but Cornell is the more natural fit for those fields.
Curriculum and scale. Brown is a mid-sized university with a fully open curriculum and no requirements; Cornell is the largest Ivy with specialized colleges and structured, applied programs.
Brown, for many. Its Open Curriculum is built for exploration without required courses. Cornell asks students to commit to a college at application, which suits those with a clearer direction.
No. Both use binding Early Decision, which permits only one binding application, so you must choose one of them for the early round.
Sources: Brown Undergraduate Admission, Cornell Undergraduate Admissions, NCES College Navigator, Brown Common Data Set, Cornell Common Data Set, NACAC.
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