Cornell vs Michigan vs Georgia Tech: Which Engineering Powerhouse Is Right for Your STEM Student?
By Rona Aydin
Why Are These Three Schools Constantly Compared for Engineering?
Cornell, Michigan, and Georgia Tech represent the three dominant models of elite engineering education in the United States. Cornell is the Ivy League option – the only Ivy with a standalone College of Engineering that admits by school, with deep research connections and the prestige of the Ivy brand on every diploma. Michigan is the public Ivy powerhouse – a massive research university with top-5 ranked engineering programs, a 115,000-applicant pool, and an alumni network of over 600,000 that dominates the automotive, aerospace, and tech industries. Georgia Tech is the pure engineering institution – the school where engineering is not a department but the identity, with cooperative education (co-op) programs that embed students in industry before they graduate and a location in Atlanta’s growing technology corridor. For a broader comparison of top engineering programs, see our best colleges for engineering guide.
How Do the Acceptance Rates and Selectivity Compare?
| Factor | Cornell Engineering | Michigan Engineering | Georgia Tech |
|---|---|---|---|
| Overall University Rate | ~8.4% (C/O 2029) | ~12.5% (C/O 2030) | ~15% (C/O 2029) |
| Engineering-Specific Rate | ~8-10% (varies by major) | ~15-20% in-state, ~10-15% OOS | ~15% overall, ~9% OOS |
| CS-Specific Selectivity | Single-digit % | ~8% (CSE direct admit) | Most competitive major |
| Total Applications | ~67,000 | ~115,000 | ~68,000 |
| Undergrad Engineering Enrollment | ~3,300 | ~6,500 | ~16,000 |
| Middle 50% SAT | 1510-1560 | 1470-1550 (Eng) | 1430-1540 |
| Early Round | ED (~22%) | EA (non-binding) | EA I and EA II |
| Annual Cost (OOS/Private) | ~$88,000 | ~$60,000 OOS | ~$45,000 OOS |
Sources: Cornell CDS 2024-2025, University of Michigan Office of Enrollment Management (2026), Georgia Tech institutional data (2025-2026). CS-specific rates are estimates based on published departmental data and student newspaper reporting. Cost figures include tuition, fees, room, and board.
The cost differential is where this comparison gets interesting for affluent families. A Cornell engineering degree costs roughly $352,000 over four years at full price. Michigan costs approximately $240,000 out-of-state. Georgia Tech costs approximately $180,000 out-of-state. The question families must answer is whether Cornell’s Ivy League diploma and smaller class sizes justify a $112,000 to $172,000 premium over four years – especially when all three schools place graduates into the same top employers. For how to evaluate these cost differences against financial aid offers, see our financial aid comparison guide.
What Are the Key Academic and Program Differences?
Cornell Engineering is the smallest and most research-intensive of the three at the undergraduate level. With roughly 3,300 engineering undergrads and a student-faculty ratio of 9:1, Cornell offers the closest faculty mentorship and the most direct path to undergraduate research. Cornell’s College of Engineering includes 14 departments, and students benefit from being embedded within a comprehensive Ivy League university – meaning an engineering student can take courses in Cornell’s top-ranked Hotel School, Johnson Business School, or College of Arts and Sciences without transferring. Cornell also admits by college, so applying to Engineering vs Arts and Sciences is a distinct admissions decision. For more on this, see our How to Get Into Cornell guide.
Michigan Engineering is a massive operation. With approximately 6,500 engineering undergrads across the College of Engineering, Michigan offers unmatched breadth – 19 degree programs, hundreds of student project teams (including the Solar Car Team, Michigan Autonomous Aerial Vehicles, and a nationally competitive Formula SAE team), and a co-op program that places students at Ford, GM, Boeing, Google, and Amazon. Michigan’s greatest strength for engineering students is its scale: the sheer number of corporate partnerships, research labs, and alumni connections means that no matter what sub-field of engineering your child pursues, Michigan has an established pipeline. Ross School of Business also offers a popular dual-degree with Engineering. For more, see our How to Get Into Michigan guide.
Georgia Tech is engineering-first in a way that neither Cornell nor Michigan can claim. Approximately 60% of Georgia Tech’s undergraduate population is in engineering or computing. This concentration creates a culture where engineering is not just a department but the dominant identity of the institution. Georgia Tech’s cooperative education program is one of the oldest and largest in the country – students alternate semesters of coursework with full-time paid industry positions, graduating with 12-18 months of professional experience. Georgia Tech’s location in Atlanta’s Technology Square puts students within walking distance of offices for NCR, AT&T, Coca-Cola’s tech operations, and dozens of startups. For more, see our How to Get Into Georgia Tech guide.
How Do Career Outcomes and Starting Salaries Compare?
All three schools produce engineering graduates who enter the same top-tier employers, according to NACAC career outcome research. Google, Amazon, Microsoft, Apple, Goldman Sachs, McKinsey, and every major defense contractor recruit at all three campuses. The starting salary differences are surprisingly narrow. According to institutional career outcome reports and the College Scorecard, median starting salaries for engineering graduates from all three schools fall in the $80,000 to $95,000 range, with CS graduates at the high end and civil engineering at the lower end. The real difference is not the starting salary but the cost of getting there: a Georgia Tech CS graduate who paid $180,000 total and a Cornell CS graduate who paid $352,000 total may start at the same $110,000 software engineering job at Google – but the Georgia Tech graduate reaches positive ROI years earlier.
Where Cornell has a measurable edge is graduate school placement. Cornell engineering graduates are admitted to top PhD programs, MBA programs, and medical schools at rates that exceed both Michigan and Georgia Tech, in part because of the Ivy League credential and in part because of the depth of undergraduate research opportunities in a smaller program. For families whose child plans to pursue a PhD or academic career in engineering, Cornell’s advantage is real and worth the premium. For families whose child plans to enter industry directly after undergrad, the ROI gap between the three schools is harder to justify.
Which School Should Your STEM Student Target?
Choose Cornell if your child wants the Ivy League credential, plans to pursue graduate school, values undergraduate research and small class sizes, or wants the flexibility to explore non-engineering subjects within a comprehensive university. Cornell’s ED acceptance rate of approximately 22% for Engineering makes it one of the most accessible Ivy League early options for STEM students. For ED strategy across the Ivies, see our Columbia vs Cornell vs Penn ED comparison.
Choose Michigan if your child wants the Big Ten campus experience, values project teams and hands-on learning at scale, wants access to a dual Engineering-Business degree through Ross, or if your family qualifies for in-state tuition (making Michigan the best value of the three by a wide margin). Michigan’s non-binding Early Action allows students to apply early without the binding commitment of Cornell’s ED.
Choose Georgia Tech if your child is certain about engineering or CS, values the co-op model and wants professional experience before graduating, prioritizes cost-efficiency, or wants to be in the Southeast’s fastest-growing tech ecosystem. Georgia Tech’s EA I and EA II rounds provide two early application opportunities without binding commitment. For a complete breakdown of how many schools to apply to and how to balance reach, match, and safety, see our how many colleges to apply to guide.
Final Thoughts
The Cornell vs Michigan vs Georgia Tech decision is ultimately a question about what kind of engineering education your child wants – and what your family is willing to pay for it. All three schools open the same doors. The Ivy League name on Cornell’s diploma carries weight in finance, consulting, and graduate admissions. Michigan’s scale and alumni network create lifelong professional advantages. Georgia Tech’s co-op culture means graduates enter the workforce with more experience than almost any peer. The right choice depends on your child’s goals, not on rankings. At Oriel Admissions, we help STEM-focused families build school lists that maximize admissions probability across reach, match, and safety tiers. Schedule a consultation to discuss your child’s engineering or CS admissions strategy.
Frequently Asked Questions
MIT’s overall acceptance rate (~3.5%) is significantly lower than Cornell Engineering (~8-10%). However, Cornell admits by college, and the Engineering applicant pool is self-selecting. Both have middle 50% SAT ranges above 1500. MIT evaluates all applicants in one pool while Cornell separates Engineering from Arts and Sciences.
Google recruits heavily at both schools. Starting salary at Google would be identical regardless of which school you attended. The difference is cost: Georgia Tech’s four-year OOS cost of roughly $180,000 is about half of Cornell’s $352,000. For industry employment at top tech companies, Georgia Tech offers comparable placement at lower cost.
Yes, for out-of-state applicants. Michigan received over 115,000 applications for the Class of 2030 with an OOS rate of approximately 15%. For competitive programs like CS Engineering, the effective OOS rate is estimated at 8-10% for direct admit. Treat Michigan Engineering as a reach for OOS applicants.
Internal transfer is possible but increasingly competitive. Students need specific prerequisites, a strong GPA (typically 3.5+), and available capacity. Admission is not automatic. Students confident about engineering should apply directly to the College of Engineering.
At $300,000, Cornell will likely expect near-full payment ($88,000/year). Michigan OOS ($60,000/year) offers limited aid to high-income OOS families. Georgia Tech OOS ($45,000/year) is most affordable regardless of aid. The cost gap favors Georgia Tech and Michigan by $28,000 to $43,000 per year.
Georgia Tech alternates coursework semesters with full-time paid work, producing graduates with 12-18 months of experience. Michigan has a smaller co-op program. Cornell has no formal co-op but offers strong internship placement. Co-op extends time to degree by roughly one year.
Georgia Tech’s overall rate (~15%) is higher than Cornell’s (~8.4%), but GT’s CS program is its most competitive major with lower effective rates. For OOS CS applicants, GT drops to ~9% or lower. Cornell CS is similarly single-digit. Neither is easy for CS, and the rates converge for competitive applicants.
If Cornell is the genuine first choice regardless of cost, ED at ~22% is nearly three times the RD rate. If cost matters, EA to Michigan and Georgia Tech preserves flexibility. You can apply EA to both publics while also applying ED to Cornell, since public EA is permitted alongside private ED.