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College Admissions Transparency Index

By Rona Aydin

College Admissions Transparency Index 2026 - Oriel Admissions
TL;DR: The College Admissions Transparency Index grades 50 of the most selective universities in the United States on how openly, quickly, and accessibly they disclose admissions data and how clearly they explain their process to applicants. In the 2026 edition, Yale, MIT, and Georgia Tech tie for the top score (96, A), eight universities go dark at decision time, and four of the eight Ivy League universities earn a D (Oriel Admissions College Admissions Transparency Index, July 2026). Scores combine a five-pillar data-disclosure axis (70 percent) and a seven-item applicant-guidance checklist (30 percent), built entirely from public, first-party sources.

The 2026 Rankings

RankUniversityTypeScoreGrade
1Georgia Institute of TechnologyPublic96A
1Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyPrivate96A
1Yale UniversityPrivate96A
4University of GeorgiaPublic93A
5Rice UniversityPrivate92A
5University of Southern CaliforniaPrivate92A
5University of VirginiaPublic92A
8Vanderbilt UniversityPrivate90A
9Dartmouth CollegePrivate89B
10Boston CollegePrivate88B
10Brown UniversityPrivate88B
12Johns Hopkins UniversityPrivate87B
12University of FloridaPublic87B
14Georgetown UniversityPrivate84B
14University of Notre DamePrivate84B
16University of California, BerkeleyPublic82B
16University of California, DavisPublic82B
16University of California, IrvinePublic82B
16University of California, Los AngelesPublic82B
16University of California, San DiegoPublic82B
16University of California, Santa BarbaraPublic82B
22Boston UniversityPrivate81B
22Tulane UniversityPrivate81B
24Emory UniversityPrivate80B
24University of MiamiPrivate80B
24University of North Carolina at Chapel HillPublic80B
27Duke UniversityPrivate77B
27College of William & MaryPublic77B
29Tufts UniversityPrivate75B
30University of MichiganPublic68C
31University of PennsylvaniaPrivate67C
32University of Texas at AustinPublic66C
33University of WashingtonPublic65C
34Northwestern UniversityPrivate63C
34Carnegie Mellon UniversityPrivate63C
34Wake Forest UniversityPrivate63C
37University of Illinois Urbana-ChampaignPublic60C
38Washington University in St. LouisPrivate59D
38University of MarylandPublic59D
40Columbia UniversityPrivate58D
41California Institute of TechnologyPrivate57D
42Cornell UniversityPrivate56D
42University of Wisconsin-MadisonPublic56D
42New York UniversityPrivate56D
45Harvard UniversityPrivate50D
46Princeton UniversityPrivate49D
46Stanford UniversityPrivate49D
46Case Western Reserve UniversityPrivate49D
49Northeastern UniversityPrivate35F
50University of ChicagoPrivate28F

Grades: A = 90 or above, B = 75 to 89, C = 60 to 74, D = 45 to 59, F = below 45.

The Full Dataset: Every Pillar, Every School

An index about college admissions transparency should not hide its own subscores. The table below shows the rating behind every composite: the five data pillars, the guidance score, and the final result. The complete dataset is also available as a download: college-admissions-transparency-index-2026.csv. Data and grades may be cited with attribution to the Oriel Admissions College Admissions Transparency Index and a link to this page.

UniversityAdmit-rate disclosureTimelinessEarly-roundWaitlistCDS availabilityGuidanceScore
Georgia Institute of TechnologyFullFullFullFullFull8696 A
Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyFullFullFullFullFull8696 A
Yale UniversityFullFullFullFullFull8696 A
University of GeorgiaFullFullFullStrongStrong10093 A
Rice UniversityFullFullFullFullStrong8692 A
University of Southern CaliforniaFullFullFullN/AStrong8692 A
University of VirginiaFullFullFullFullStrong8692 A
Vanderbilt UniversityFullFullPartialFullStrong10090 A
Dartmouth CollegeFullFullPartialFullFull8689 B
Boston CollegeFullFullFullFullStrong7188 B
Brown UniversityFullFullFullStrongFull7188 B
Johns Hopkins UniversityFullFullFullFullFull5787 B
University of FloridaFullStrongN/AStrongStrong10087 B
Georgetown UniversityFullFullFullFullStrong5784 B
University of Notre DameFullFullFullFullStrong5784 B
University of California, BerkeleyFullPartialN/AFullStrong8682 B
University of California, DavisFullPartialN/AFullStrong8682 B
University of California, IrvineFullPartialN/AFullStrong8682 B
University of California, Los AngelesFullPartialN/AFullStrong8682 B
University of California, San DiegoFullPartialN/AFullStrong8682 B
University of California, Santa BarbaraFullPartialN/AFullStrong8682 B
Boston UniversityFullFullPartialFullStrong7181 B
Tulane UniversityFullFullPartialFullStrong7181 B
Emory UniversityFullFullStrongFullStrong5780 B
University of MiamiFullFullFullStrongStrong5780 B
University of North Carolina at Chapel HillFullStrongFullFullStrong5780 B
College of William & MaryFullFullPartialStrongFull5777 B
Duke UniversityFullFullFullPartialStrong5777 B
Tufts UniversityFullFullNoneStrongStrong8675 B
University of MichiganStrongPartialNoneFullStrong8668 C
University of PennsylvaniaFullPartialNoneFullStrong7167 C
University of Texas at AustinFullFullMinimalPartialStrong5766 C
University of WashingtonPartialPartialN/AStrongStrong7165 C
Carnegie Mellon UniversityPartialPartialPartialFullStrong5763 C
Northwestern UniversityPartialPartialMinimalFullStrong7163 C
Wake Forest UniversityFullFullNonePartialStrong5763 C
University of Illinois Urbana-ChampaignStrongPartialNoneStrongStrong7160 C
University of Maryland, College ParkPartialPartialPartialStrongStrong5759 D
Washington University in St. LouisPartialPartialPartialStrongStrong5759 D
Columbia UniversityFullFullPartialMinimalPartial4358 D
California Institute of TechnologyPartialNoneNoneFullStrong8657 D
Cornell UniversityPartialNonePartialFullStrong5756 D
New York UniversityFullFullNoneNoneStrong5756 D
University of Wisconsin-MadisonPartialPartialNoneStrongStrong7156 D
Harvard UniversityPartialNoneNonePartialStrong8650 D
Case Western Reserve UniversityPartialNoneMinimalStrongStrong5749 D
Princeton UniversityPartialNoneNoneFullStrong5749 D
Stanford UniversityPartialNoneNoneFullStrong5749 D
Northeastern UniversityPartialNoneMinimalNonePartial5735 F
University of ChicagoMinimalNoneNoneNonePartial5728 F

Pillar values: Full, Strong, Partial, Minimal, None; N/A pillars are excluded from the average. Test-data reporting is included in the downloadable file.

Key Findings on College Admissions Transparency

The state of college admissions transparency in 2026: more than one in four of the most selective universities in the country earns a D or F – 13 of the 50 institutions scored. These are schools that collectively receive well over a million applications each cycle, yet publish less about their own decisions than any other consequential institution families deal with.

The Ivy League splits sharply. Yale ties for the highest score in the Index at 96, publishing its overall and early results on decision day, every year, with a full statistical profile. Dartmouth (89) and Brown (88) each earn a B. Penn earns a C (67) after announcing its Class of 2030 acceptance rate in June 2026, weeks after the national enrollment deadline. Columbia (58), Cornell (56), Harvard (50), and Princeton (49) all earn a D. For the full decision-day picture, see our Ivy Day 2026 results recap.

Public universities outperform wealthy private institutions. The 18 public universities in the Index average a score of 77 (B), while the 32 privates average 71 (C). Two-thirds of the publics earn an A or B, versus about half of the privates. The pattern is not subtle: on college admissions transparency, institutions accountable to legislatures and taxpayers disclose more than institutions accountable to no one.

Eight universities earn an A: Yale, MIT, and Georgia Tech (96 each), the University of Georgia (93), the University of Virginia, USC, and Rice (92 each), and Vanderbilt (90). Three of the eight are public flagships.

The Eight Universities That Go Dark

Eight universities withhold their acceptance rate when decisions are released, and the rate for the most recent completed cycle appears nowhere the school publishes: Princeton, Harvard, Stanford, Caltech, Cornell, the University of Chicago, Northeastern, and Case Western Reserve.

Going dark does not mean saying nothing. Cornell published a decision-day story announcing that 5,776 students were admitted to the Class of 2030 – with no applicant total and no rate (Cornell Chronicle, March 2026). Caltech announced 428 admits the same way. A count without a denominator is not disclosure: no applicant can compute their odds from it. The Index draws its line at the rate, because the rate is what lets a family assess reality.

Penn is the boundary case worth understanding. Penn released nothing on Ivy Day and nothing through the May 1 enrollment deadline – every admitted student committed without knowing the acceptance rate. The number finally arrived on June 12, when the dean of admissions told the Board of Trustees that Penn admitted 3,575 of 61,264 applicants, or 5.8 percent (The Daily Pennsylvanian, June 2026). Because the school itself published within the cycle, Penn exits the go-dark list and earns partial timeliness credit. Late is better than never. It is still late.

The University of Chicago records the lowest score in the Index (28, F). Its two most recent acceptance rates have never been released, its newest Common Data Set is a cycle stale, and it has never published early-round or waitlist figures.

What Transparent Disclosure Looks Like

College admissions transparency is not a resource question – several schools on modest budgets outscore the wealthiest institutions in the country. It is a choice, and the top of the Index shows what choosing it looks like.

Yale announces its results on decision day with counts, rates, and early-action figures published each December. The University of Georgia announces at decision with rates broken out by residency, and its admissions office runs one of the most candid officer-written blogs in the country. Georgia Tech documents its entire review pipeline publicly – who reads files, in what order, and how the committee shapes the class. MIT publishes a selection page describing its committee process, including what it does not consider. And Rice explains that every application is read by a pair of admission officers in dialogue, one focused on academics and one on the personal record – the single clearest description of a review process any school in the Index publishes.

How We Score College Admissions Transparency

The data axis scores five pillars: overall admit-rate disclosure, disclosure timeliness, early-round breakout, waitlist transparency, and Common Data Set availability and findability. Each pillar is scored Full (1.0), Strong (0.75), Partial (0.5), Minimal (0.25), or None (0), with non-applicable pillars excluded. Timeliness is enforced: a school that withholds its rate at decision and lets it surface only through a Common Data Set filing months later is marked down on both disclosure and timeliness. Announcing an admit count without an applicant total is not rate disclosure.

The guidance axis is a seven-item checklist scoring whether a school explains its review process, names and prioritizes its evaluation factors, discloses who decides, publishes an admitted-class profile, gives specific coursework guidance, provides actionable testing advice, and offers tailored guidance for different applicant types. Each item is a binary judgment verifiable at a published URL. Official podcasts, admissions-officer blogs, and official publications count when the cited content itself contains the disclosure.

Two independent coders score every institution from official sources, each data point is tied to a source URL, disputed scores are reconciled before publication, and challenged codings are documented with their resolution. The Index measures college admissions transparency as a practice, not institutional quality, and will be updated annually.

The Codebook: What Earns Each Rating

Every pillar value maps to a fixed anchor. Admit-rate disclosure: Full means the school announces the overall rate through an official channel, on decision day or in an annual statistics release; Strong means the rate is published prominently on a class profile or news page without a formal release; Partial means the rate appears only in the current Common Data Set; Minimal means only figures two or more cycles old, or raw counts without a rate; None means the rate is not published at all.

Disclosure timeliness: Full means the most recent completed cycle has a rate that was public at or around decision time; Partial means no decision-day number, but the school itself publishes within the same cycle; None means the school withholds at decision and the most recent cycle has no published rate anywhere. Early-round breakout: Full requires separate admit rates for every early path for a recent cycle; Strong is a single combined early rate; Partial is an early rate available only through the Common Data Set; Minimal is early volume mentioned with no rate; None means the school runs early rounds and discloses no rate. Waitlist transparency: Full requires all three components for a recent cycle – offered, accepted a place, and admitted from the waitlist; Strong is two of three; Partial is one of three or an older cycle; None means the school maintains a waitlist and discloses nothing. Schools with no early program or no waitlist are marked N/A and excluded from the average.

Each rating converts to a value – Full 1.0, Strong 0.75, Partial 0.5, Minimal 0.25, None 0 – and the data score is the average across applicable pillars, scaled to 100. Announcing an admit count without an applicant total is not rate disclosure: Cornell announced 5,776 admits for the Class of 2030 and Caltech announced 428, neither with a denominator, and both remain Partial on disclosure and None on timeliness. A dean-stated rate with both numbers, even months late, as Penn provided in June 2026, upgrades disclosure to Full and timeliness to Partial.

The seven guidance items, each a binary judgment verifiable at a published URL: the school explains the stages of its review process (a bare statement of holistic review does not qualify); names its evaluation factors and states their relative priority (listing factors alone does not qualify); discloses who evaluates applications, such as committee structure or faculty involvement; publishes an admitted-class profile; gives specific coursework guidance with named subjects or units; provides a test policy with actionable submit-or-not advice; and offers tailored guidance for distinct applicant types. The guidance score is the yes-count out of seven, scaled to 100. A school that does not disclose its read process cannot score above 74 on guidance. Stale archives that predate current practice do not earn credit.

Data Integrity and Corrections

Data snapshot: June 9 through July 5, 2026, reflecting the Class of 2030 cycle. Scores are built entirely from public, first-party sources. No institution pays to participate, to be scored, or to improve a score, and client relationships play no role in coding. Institutions that believe a rating reflects outdated or incomplete information may submit a public URL to hello@orieladmissions.com; challenged codings are reviewed against the codebook and resolutions are documented. Several codings in this edition were revised through exactly this process during verification, in both directions.

The Case Against Publishing, and Our Answer

The strongest argument for withholding comes from the universities themselves. Announcing that early numbers would be withheld, Dartmouth admissions leadership explained the concern that a talented student might opt out of regular decision because they “prematurely decide that the odds are against them” (Dartmouth News, December 2025). Peer institutions describe the same goal: lowering the stress of applying by removing the most anxiety-inducing number from the room.

The concern is real and the remedy fails on its own terms. The number does not leave the ecosystem when a university stops publishing it – student newspapers estimate it, counselors circulate it, and families who pay for guidance obtain it. Withholding removes the rate only from the families who rely on what the school itself says. College admissions transparency is not about feeding a rankings culture; it is about whether the least-connected applicant has the same basic facts as the best-connected one. Every university in this Index already knows its numbers. Publishing them is a choice, and this page measures who makes it.

Frequently Asked Questions About College Admissions Transparency

Which colleges do not release their acceptance rates?

Eight of the 50 most selective universities go dark at decision time: Princeton, Harvard, Stanford, Caltech, Cornell, the University of Chicago, Northeastern, and Case Western Reserve. None has published its Class of 2030 acceptance rate as of July 2026.

What is the most transparent university in the United States?

Yale, MIT, and Georgia Tech tie for the top score in the 2026 College Admissions Transparency Index at 96 out of 100. All three announce their results promptly and explain how applications are actually reviewed.

Is Harvard transparent about its admissions data?

No. Harvard earns a D (50) in the 2026 Index. It has withheld its acceptance rate at decision time for two consecutive years, and its most recent rate is available only through a Common Data Set filing.

Does Stanford publish its acceptance rate?

Not at decision time. Stanford has not announced an acceptance rate since 2018. Its numbers surface roughly a year later through institutional reporting and the Common Data Set, which places Stanford among the eight go-dark schools in the Index.

Why do some universities hide their acceptance rates?

Universities that withhold numbers typically say they want to reduce application anxiety and discourage students from self-selecting out. The effect, however, is that families with independent counsel still find estimates while families without guidance are left to guess.

How can I find the real acceptance rate of a college?

Check the university admissions site first, then the Common Data Set (section C), which most universities file annually. Federal IPEDS data through the NCES College Navigator provides a lagging but reliable backstop for every accredited institution.

What is the Common Data Set?

The Common Data Set is a standardized disclosure document that most universities publish annually, covering admissions statistics, waitlist outcomes, test-score ranges, and enrollment figures. It is the single most reliable public source for admissions data, though it typically arrives months after decisions.

How does admissions transparency affect application strategy for high-achieving families?

Opacity raises the value of accurate information. When schools do not publish round-by-round rates, families cannot judge whether an early application meaningfully improves odds, how binding commitments compare across schools, or how a waitlist position should be weighed – decisions with six-figure financial consequences at the income levels these universities enroll.

For Media

The College Admissions Transparency Index is published by Oriel Admissions and updated annually. Journalists may cite scores, grades, and findings with attribution to the Oriel Admissions College Admissions Transparency Index and a link to this page. The full dataset is available above as a CSV download; the complete methodology appears on this page. Media contact: Rona Aydin, founder, hello@orieladmissions.com. The press release and interview availability are provided on request.

Sources: Cornell Chronicle, The Daily Pennsylvanian, Dartmouth News, University of California admissions data, Rice University Office of Admission, University of Illinois Undergraduate Admissions, Common Data Set Initiative, NCES College Navigator


About Oriel Admissions

Oriel Admissions is a Princeton-based college admissions consulting firm advising families nationwide on elite university admissions strategy. Our team supports students across every component of the application with a distinctive 360 approach spanning school selection, positioning, essays, and interviews. To discuss your strategy, schedule a consultation.


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