The Class of 2030 admissions cycle has produced the most competitive numbers in the history of American higher education. With application volumes surging past 8 million submissions through the Common Application and freshman class sizes remaining flat, acceptance rates at the country’s most selective institutions have reached unprecedented lows. This comprehensive guide compares admissions statistics for every Top 25 school — from the Ivy League to Stanford, MIT, and the most selective universities outside the traditional elite — giving families a single, definitive resource for understanding where the landscape stands and how to navigate it.
Top 25 Schools: Class of 2030 Acceptance Rates at a Glance
The table below ranks the 25 most selective colleges and universities in the United States by acceptance rate for the Class of 2030 (fall 2026 entering class). Where official Class of 2030 figures have not yet been released, we include the most recent confirmed data alongside projected directional trends. SAT score ranges reflect the 25th–75th percentile of enrolled students.
| Rank | School | Class of 2030 Acceptance Rate | SAT Range (25th–75th) | Applications (Est.) | Oriel Admissions Guide |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Harvard University | ~3% | 1500–1580 | ~56,000 | How to Get Into Harvard |
| 2 | California Institute of Technology | ~3% | 1530–1580 | ~18,000 | — |
| 3 | Princeton University | ~4% | 1510–1570 | ~41,000 | How to Get Into Princeton |
| 4 | Columbia University | ~4% | 1500–1570 | ~59,000 | How to Get Into Columbia |
| 5 | Stanford University | ~4% | 1510–1570 | ~56,000 | How to Get Into Stanford |
| 6 | MIT | ~4% | 1510–1580 | ~28,000 | How to Get Into MIT |
| 7 | Yale University | ~5% | 1500–1570 | ~54,000 | How to Get Into Yale |
| 8 | University of Chicago | ~5% | 1510–1570 | ~40,000 | How to Get Into UChicago |
| 9 | Brown University | ~5% | 1490–1560 | ~53,000 | How to Get Into Brown |
| 10 | Duke University | ~5% | 1500–1570 | ~54,000 | How to Get Into Duke |
| 11 | Dartmouth College | ~6% | 1490–1560 | ~30,000 | How to Get Into Dartmouth |
| 12 | University of Pennsylvania | ~6% | 1500–1560 | ~68,000 | How to Get Into Penn |
| 13 | Northwestern University | ~7% | 1490–1560 | ~55,000 | Northwestern Class of 2030 |
| 14 | Vanderbilt University | ~6% | 1490–1560 | ~48,000 | How to Get Into Vanderbilt |
| 15 | Rice University | ~7% | 1490–1560 | ~32,000 | — |
| 16 | Cornell University | ~8% | 1470–1560 | ~75,000 | How to Get Into Cornell |
| 17 | Johns Hopkins University | ~8% | 1490–1560 | ~38,000 | — |
| 18 | Pomona College | ~7% | 1470–1550 | ~13,000 | — |
| 19 | NYU | ~8% | 1450–1550 | ~125,000 | How to Get Into NYU |
| 20 | Northeastern University | ~6% | 1450–1550 | ~96,000 | — |
| 21 | USC | ~10% | 1440–1540 | ~90,000 | USC Class of 2030 |
| 22 | Georgetown University | ~12% | 1430–1540 | ~28,000 | Georgetown Class of 2030 |
| 23 | Tulane University | ~11% | 1400–1520 | ~48,000 | Tulane Class of 2030 |
| 24 | Colby College | ~7% | 1430–1530 | ~18,000 | — |
| 25 | University of Virginia | ~16% | 1390–1520 | ~56,000 | — |
Ivy League Acceptance Rates: Five-Year Trends
The eight Ivy League universities remain the benchmark for selectivity in American higher education. For the Class of 2030, every Ivy League school posted an acceptance rate below 9% — a threshold that would have seemed implausible just ten years ago. The table below tracks how these rates have shifted over the past five admissions cycles, revealing a clear pattern of compression.
| School | Class of 2026 | Class of 2027 | Class of 2028 | Class of 2029 | Class of 2030 (Proj.) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Harvard | 3.2% | 3.4% | 3.6% | 3.6% | ~3% |
| Columbia | 3.7% | 3.9% | 3.9% | 3.9% | ~4% |
| Princeton | 4.0% | 4.7% | 4.5% | 4.5% | ~4% |
| Yale | 4.5% | 4.4% | 3.7% | 4.6% | ~5% |
| Brown | 5.0% | 5.1% | 5.2% | 5.2% | ~5% |
| Penn | 6.5% | 5.8% | 5.6% | 5.4% | ~6% |
| Dartmouth | 6.2% | 6.2% | 6.2% | 6.0% | ~6% |
| Cornell | 7.3% | 7.4% | 7.9% | 7.9% | ~8% |
The overarching story is one of compression. A decade ago, the gap between the most and least selective Ivy stretched roughly six percentage points. Today, that gap has narrowed to approximately five points, and every school sits firmly below 9%. For a deeper analysis of each Ivy’s admissions trajectory, see our complete Ivy League Acceptance Rates for the Class of 2030 breakdown.
Beyond the Ivies: Stanford, MIT, Caltech, Duke, and Chicago
Several elite private universities outside the Ivy League are just as selective — and in some cases more so. Caltech and Stanford both posted acceptance rates around 3–4% for the Class of 2030, placing them alongside Harvard and Princeton at the very top of the selectivity spectrum. MIT admitted approximately 4% of applicants, continuing its tradition of intense selectivity with a strong STEM emphasis. The University of Chicago, which saw dramatic declines in its acceptance rate after expanding outreach and going test-optional, now admits about 5% of applicants.
Duke University sits at roughly 5%, while Vanderbilt University has emerged as one of the most surprising selectivity stories in recent years, dropping to approximately 6%. Northwestern (7%), Rice (7%), and Johns Hopkins (8%) round out the group of ultra-selective private institutions now firmly in single-digit territory. For students targeting any of these schools, the application strategy mirrors what is required for the Ivies: impeccable academics, meaningful extracurricular depth, and a compelling personal narrative delivered through polished essays.
For school-specific strategies, explore our detailed admissions guides for Stanford, MIT, Duke, Vanderbilt, and UChicago.
What SAT and ACT Scores Do You Need for the Top 25?
Despite the persistence of test-optional policies at some institutions, standardized test scores remain a powerful differentiator at the most competitive colleges. The vast majority of admitted students at Top 25 schools submitted SAT or ACT scores — and those scores were overwhelmingly strong.
At schools like Harvard, MIT, Caltech, and Princeton, the middle 50% SAT range sits between 1500 and 1580, meaning the 25th percentile admitted student scored at least a 1500 — already in the 98th percentile nationally. ACT composites at these schools cluster between 34 and 36. Moving further down the Top 25, schools like Cornell, Georgetown, and NYU see ranges of approximately 1430–1560 on the SAT and 33–35 on the ACT.
The practical takeaway is clear: if you are applying to any Top 10 school on this list, a score below 1500 on the SAT places you below the median admitted student. That does not make admission impossible under holistic review, but it does place your application at a statistical disadvantage in the academic dimension. For students deciding whether to submit scores under a test-optional policy, the general consensus among admissions professionals is to submit if your score falls within or above the school’s middle 50% range.
Early Decision and Early Action: The Biggest Strategic Lever
Across the Top 25, applying early — whether through binding Early Decision or non-binding Early Action — remains the single most impactful strategic move available to applicants. At schools with binding ED programs, admit rates are often two to three times the Regular Decision rate. Columbia, Penn, Brown, Duke, Vanderbilt, and Northwestern all filled 40–50% of their incoming classes through Early Decision for the Class of 2030.
For schools that offer Restrictive Early Action — including Harvard, Yale, Princeton, and Stanford — the early advantage is smaller but still meaningful. The key is that early applications signal genuine interest and commitment, which helps admissions offices manage yield. For a detailed comparison of ED and EA admit rates at every Ivy League school and other top universities, see our Early Decision vs. Regular Decision acceptance rates breakdown.
What Is Driving These Record-Low Acceptance Rates?
Several structural forces are converging to push acceptance rates lower each year across the Top 25. Understanding these forces helps families make more informed strategic decisions about where and how to apply.
The most significant factor is the continued growth in application volumes. The Common Application reported over 8 million submissions in the 2025–2026 cycle, up from 7.1 million the year before and 6.6 million the year before that. Much of this growth is driven by students applying to more schools per cycle — often 15 to 25 — which inflates the denominator for every school’s acceptance rate without changing the number of available seats.
Test-optional and test-free policies, adopted during the pandemic and continued by many schools, initially lowered the perceived barrier to applying. Though several elite institutions have since reinstated testing requirements — including Dartmouth, Yale, Brown, Harvard, and MIT — application volumes have not declined as a result. International applicant growth has also been substantial, with non-U.S. applicants now accounting for roughly 15–20% of the applicant pool at most Top 25 schools. Finally, growing awareness of financial aid availability at these institutions, all of which meet 100% of demonstrated financial need for admitted domestic students, has broadened the pool further.
How the Top 25 Public Universities Compare
While private universities dominate the lowest acceptance rates, several public flagships have become extraordinarily competitive — particularly for out-of-state applicants. UCLA and UC Berkeley each receive well over 100,000 applications per year. UCLA’s overall acceptance rate hovers around 9%, while Berkeley sits near 11%, but for out-of-state and international students, effective rates are significantly lower.
The University of Virginia, which rounds out our Top 25 at approximately 16% overall, has out-of-state admit rates in the low teens. Georgia Tech, the University of Michigan, and UNC Chapel Hill face similar dynamics. For families in states like New Jersey and New York — where the flagship public universities are less selective — these out-of-state publics often function as reach schools, not targets. Our New Jersey Ivy League admissions strategy guide covers how to position yourself for these schools in detail.
What This Means for Applicants: Strategies That Work
Given the extraordinary competitiveness reflected in the data above, students targeting the Top 25 need a strategic and proactive approach that begins well before senior year. The strongest applications are not assembled in the fall of twelfth grade — they are built over years of intentional planning.
Academic credentials remain the foundation. A rigorous course load including the most challenging AP or IB courses your school offers, strong grades, and competitive standardized test scores are table stakes at every school on this list. For guidance on course selection, our AP course strategy guide breaks down how to plan your curriculum by grade level.
Beyond grades and scores, what distinguishes admitted students is a compelling extracurricular profile that demonstrates depth, leadership, and genuine impact in a focused area. Admissions officers at 3–8% acceptance rate schools are looking for what our team calls an application “spike” — a clear theme that defines your candidacy and sets you apart from the tens of thousands of academically qualified applicants who are ultimately denied. For a detailed guide on how to build one, see our application spike strategy guide.
Strategic summer experiences — including competitive research programs, pre-professional internships, and meaningful community engagement — further differentiate top candidates. Our roundup of the best summer programs for college admissions provides recommendations for NJ and NYC students.
Finally, essays are where admissions decisions are won and lost at this level of selectivity. Your personal statement should offer an authentic window into how you think and what motivates you, while supplemental essays must demonstrate genuine research into each school. For guidance on preparing for the interview component, see our college interview preparation guide.
How Oriel Admissions Can Help
At Oriel Admissions, we have guided students to acceptances at every Ivy League school and the vast majority of the Top 25 universities on this list. Our approach is built on early, strategic planning — beginning in 9th or 10th grade — that positions students to present the strongest possible applications when the time comes.
Whether your family is in the Princeton area, Long Island, Westchester County, Manhattan, or anywhere else, our team provides comprehensive, data-driven counseling that covers every dimension of the admissions process — from course selection and extracurricular strategy to essay development and interview coaching. Contact us today to learn how we can help your student navigate the path to a Top 25 acceptance.
Frequently Asked Questions
Acceptance rates for the Top 25 colleges range from approximately 3% at Harvard and Caltech to 16% at the University of Virginia. All eight Ivy League schools admit fewer than 9% of applicants, and schools like Stanford, MIT, Duke, and the University of Chicago have acceptance rates between 4% and 5%. The full ranked table above compares every Top 25 school side by side.
Harvard University and the California Institute of Technology are tied as the most selective schools on this list, each with an acceptance rate of approximately 3% for the Class of 2030. Princeton, Columbia, and Stanford follow closely at about 4%. For school-specific admissions strategies, explore our guides to Harvard, Princeton, Columbia, and Stanford.
The middle 50% SAT range at Top 25 schools generally falls between 1430 and 1580. For the most selective schools on this list (Harvard, MIT, Princeton, Caltech), you should aim for 1500 or above to be competitive. At schools in the 7–12% acceptance rate range like Cornell, Georgetown, and Northwestern, scores of 1470–1560 are typical among admitted students.
Yes. Applying Early Decision provides a statistically significant advantage at most Top 25 schools that offer it. ED admit rates are typically two to three times higher than Regular Decision rates at schools like Columbia, Penn, Duke, Brown, Vanderbilt, and Northwestern. For schools offering Restrictive Early Action (Harvard, Yale, Princeton, Stanford), the early advantage is smaller but still meaningful. See our Early Decision vs. Regular Decision analysis for detailed school-by-school data.
Focus on building a compelling extracurricular spike, maintaining the most rigorous academic course load available to you, earning competitive standardized test scores, applying Early Decision or Early Action when possible, and investing serious time in your essays. Starting strategic planning in 9th or 10th grade — rather than waiting until junior year — gives you the time to build the depth of profile these schools require.