Ivy League Waitlist 2026: Every School Compared with Acceptance Rates and Strategy
By Rona Aydin
How Do Ivy League Waitlists Compare in 2026?
Not all Ivy League waitlists are created equal. Some schools use their waitlists generously every year, while others have admitted zero students for multiple consecutive cycles. The table below compares the most recent waitlist data across all eight Ivies, plus top peer schools. Data is from each school’s Common Data Set (2024-2025) and institutional announcements.
| School | Recent WL Rate | Avg Admits/Year | Pattern | Full Guide |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Columbia | 6-17% | ~150-300 | Most active Ivy | Guide |
| Cornell | 4-6% | ~100-200 | Consistently active | Guide |
| Penn | 2-8% | ~50-150 | Moderately active | Guide |
| Harvard | 3-9% | ~50-100 | Usually active, small #s | Guide |
| Dartmouth | 0-15% | ~0-150 | Volatile | Guide |
| Brown | 1-7% | ~20-80 | Occasionally active | Guide |
| Princeton | 0-15% | ~0-100 | Unreliable | Guide |
| Yale | 0% | 0 | Not used in 3+ years | Guide |
Source: Common Data Sets, institutional announcements, 2020-2025. For individual school details, click the guide links.
Which Ivy League School Has the Best Waitlist Odds?
Columbia is the clear winner. With recent waitlist acceptance rates of 6-17% and an average of 150-300 admits per year, Columbia uses its waitlist more aggressively than any other Ivy. Cornell is second, with consistent 4-6% rates and 100-200 admits annually. At the other end, Yale has admitted zero students from the waitlist for three or more consecutive years. If you are waitlisted at multiple Ivies, your odds are statistically best at Columbia and worst at Yale.
How Do Ivy League Waitlists Compare to Top Non-Ivy Schools?
| School | Recent WL Rate | Better or Worse Than Avg Ivy? |
|---|---|---|
| Tufts | 35.72% | Far better than any Ivy |
| Notre Dame | 2.47% (13.19% avg) | Historical avg better |
| Vanderbilt | 5-10% | Comparable |
| MIT | 0-12% | Skips 1/3 of years |
| Johns Hopkins | 1.51% | Worse than most Ivies |
| Boston College | 0.16-8.5% | Extremely volatile |
| Rice | 0-15% | Unpredictable |
Source: Common Data Sets, 2020-2025.
When Do Ivy League Waitlist Decisions Come Out?
All eight Ivies follow a similar timeline. RD decisions are released in late March or early April. Waitlisted students confirm their interest by mid-April. The May 1 deposit deadline passes. Waitlist offers, if any, go out from mid-May through June. Some schools (Columbia, Cornell) may continue making offers into July. Yale typically does not use its waitlist at all. For complete timeline details, see each school’s individual waitlist guide linked in the table above.
How to Write an Ivy League LOCI That Works
The core principles are the same across all eight schools: state the school is your first choice, provide one meaningful update since your application, reference specific programs or aspects of the university, and keep it concise. The most common mistake is writing a generic letter that could be sent to any school. Each Ivy has a distinct culture, and your LOCI must reflect genuine knowledge of that specific institution. For a detailed template, see our complete LOCI guide. For essay strategy, see our Common App essay guide.
Should You Stay on Multiple Ivy Waitlists?
Yes, if you are genuinely willing to attend any of them. Staying on multiple waitlists is free and does not affect your enrollment at your committed school. However, you should write a separate, school-specific LOCI for each. A generic letter sent to multiple schools is easily detected and counterproductive. Prioritize writing your strongest LOCI for the school you most want to attend, then write separate letters for the others. For broader waitlist strategy, see our complete waitlist strategy guide.
Final Thoughts: Your Ivy League Waitlist Strategy
Accept every waitlist spot you are willing to act on. Write school-specific LOCIs within 7-10 days. Commit to your best alternative by May 1. Then wait. The data shows your odds are best at Columbia and Cornell, moderate at Penn and Harvard, volatile at Dartmouth and Princeton, and near-zero at Yale. For personalized waitlist strategy from former admissions officers, schedule a consultation with Oriel Admissions.
Columbia, by a significant margin. Columbia’s recent waitlist acceptance rates (6-17%) and volume (150-300 admits per year) make it the most active Ivy League waitlist. Cornell is second with consistent 4-6% rates.
Not in recent years. Yale has admitted zero students from the waitlist for three or more consecutive cycles. If you are waitlisted at Yale, your realistic odds of admission are effectively zero based on recent data.
Statistically, no. Tufts’ 35.72% waitlist rate for the Class of 2029 is dramatically higher than any Ivy. Even Columbia’s best recent year (17%) is half of Tufts’ rate. If you are choosing between staying on an Ivy waitlist and committing to Tufts, the data favors Tufts.
Yes. There is no rule against staying on multiple waitlists simultaneously. You must commit to one school by May 1 and pay the deposit. If admitted off a waitlist later, you withdraw from your committed school and forfeit the deposit.
Absolutely. Each Ivy has a distinct culture and set of programs. A generic LOCI is easily detected and counterproductive. Write a school-specific letter for each waitlist you want to stay on. Reference specific professors, programs, or campus traditions.
Typically mid-May to late June, after the May 1 deposit deadline. Some schools (Columbia, Cornell) may continue making offers into July. If you have not heard by early July, your chances drop significantly.
Yes. Waitlisted students are found admissible by the committee. The waitlist exists because schools cannot predict exactly how many admitted students will enroll. Being waitlisted is not a soft rejection but it is not an acceptance either.
Rising ED fill rates. As more Ivies fill 45-55% of their class through binding Early Decision, fewer Regular Decision spots exist, which means fewer spots open up through the waitlist. This structural trend is unlikely to reverse.