Skip to content
Back

UCLA Acceptance Rate

By Rona Aydin

UCLA
TL;DR: According to UCLA Academic Planning, UCLA admitted 13,659 students from 145,086 applicants for the Class of 2029, a 9.41% acceptance rate. UCLA is the most applied-to university in the United States. As part of the UC system, UCLA does not offer Early Decision or Early Action and is test-blind. Out-of-state applicants face a lower acceptance rate (~7-8% estimated). For families navigating UCLA admissions, schedule a consultation with Oriel Admissions

What Is UCLA’s Acceptance Rate for the Class of 2030?

UCLA has not yet released complete Class of 2030 data. Per UCLA’s CDS, the Class of 2029 acceptance rate was 9.41% (13,659 from 145,086). The Class of 2028 was 8.97%. UCLA’s rate has dropped from 16.10% for the Class of 2021 to under 10%, driven by the elimination of standardized testing (UC system is test-blind) and rising national interest. UCLA receives more applications than any university in the country, more than Harvard, Stanford, and MIT combined. For context, see our Top 25 admissions statistics.

ClassApplicationsAdmittedAcceptance Rate
Class of 2030TBD (~150,000 est.)TBD~8-9% (est.)
Class of 2029145,08613,6599.41%
Class of 2028145,90413,0818.97%
Class of 2026149,81512,8448.57%
Class of 2021102,24216,46116.10%

Source: UCLA CDS, UCLA Academic Planning and Budget, 2017-2026.

How Hard Is It to Get Into UCLA From Out of State?

Significantly harder. According to UCLA CDS data, the out-of-state acceptance rate is approximately 7-8%, lower than the overall 9.41%. International students face an even more selective 6.1% rate. As part of the UC system, UCLA prioritizes California residents. Approximately 63% of admits are California residents, 26% out-of-state, and 11% international. For NJ, NY, and CT families, UCLA should be treated as a reach, not a match. For how UCLA compares to other public schools, see our UVA acceptance rate analysis.

ResidencyAcceptance Rate (est.)% of Admits
California Residents~11%63%
Out-of-State~7-8%26%
International~6.1%11%

Source: UCLA CDS, UC Office of the President, 2024-2025.

Does UCLA Have Early Decision or Early Action?

No. As part of the University of California system, UCLA uses a single application cycle. All applicants apply through the UC Application between November 1 and November 30, with decisions released in March. There is no early round, which means every applicant competes in the same pool. This is a key strategic difference from private schools where ED can 2-3x your odds. For early strategy at private schools, see our ED vs RD guide.

Is UCLA Test-Blind?

Yes. The entire UC system is test-blind, meaning SAT and ACT scores are not reviewed even if submitted. This is a permanent policy, not a pandemic-era temporary measure. Admissions is based on GPA (weighted and unweighted), course rigor, personal insight questions (essays), and extracurricular involvement. The average admitted GPA is 3.93 unweighted, with 56% of enrolled students having a 4.0+. For testing strategy at non-UC schools, see our test strategy guide.

What Are UCLA’s Acceptance Rates by School?

UCLA SchoolAcceptance Rate (est.)
School of Nursing~1%
School of Theater, Film & TV~3%
School of Arts & Architecture~5%
Samueli School of Engineering~6%
College of Letters & Science~10%
Herb Alpert School of Music~19%

Source: UCLA CDS, Essays That Worked analysis, Class of 2026 data.

What Are Your Chances on UCLA’s Waitlist?

UCLA’s CDS data shows the waitlist acceptance rate for the Class of 2029 was 11.12% (1,211 admitted from approximately 9,200 who accepted their spot). This is unusually high for a school with a sub-10% overall rate. UCLA’s massive applicant pool creates yield unpredictability that the waitlist absorbs. However, UCLA explicitly states that additional materials not requested by the campus will not be considered, so do not send a traditional LOCI. For waitlist strategy at private schools, see our LOCI guide. For complete data, see our waitlist rates comparison.

How to Write UCLA’s Personal Insight Questions

According to the UC Application, UCLA requires four personal insight questions (PIQs) of up to 350 words each. Unlike the Common App essay, PIQs are shorter and more direct. The strongest PIQs for UCLA use specific examples and quantifiable outcomes rather than abstract statements. As reported by UCLA’s admissions review criteria, the university evaluates leadership, community service, overcoming hardship, and creative or intellectual achievement. Each PIQ should address a different dimension of your profile. Do not repeat themes across all four. For out-of-state applicants, at least one PIQ should address why you are drawn to California or UCLA specifically, though this is not a formal requirement. For essay strategy at Common App schools, see our Common App essay guide.

Common Mistakes in UCLA Applications

The most common mistakes for out-of-state UCLA applicants: treating the UC Application like a Common App supplement (the format and expectations are different), not understanding that UCLA is test-blind (submitting SAT/ACT scores has zero impact on your decision), writing PIQs that are too vague or abstract instead of using concrete examples with measurable outcomes, and underestimating the GPA threshold (3.93 average admitted). Another critical mistake is not researching the specific school within UCLA you are applying to. According to UCLA Academic Planning, acceptance rates vary from 1% (Nursing) to 19% (Music), and choosing the right school is a strategic decision that affects your odds.

How Does UCLA Compare to Other Top Schools?

UCLA’s 9.41% acceptance rate places it in the same selectivity tier as Notre Dame (9%), Tufts (10%), and UVA (12.53% overall, 10% out-of-state). Among public universities, UCLA and UC Berkeley are the most selective in the country. For the full Ivy League comparison, see our analysis.

Final Thoughts: UCLA Admissions in 2026

UCLA receives more applications than any university in the country and admits under 10%. With no early round advantage and a test-blind policy, your GPA, personal insight questions, and extracurricular depth are everything. For out-of-state families, UCLA is a reach school that requires a strong application. At Oriel Admissions, our team of former admissions officers from Harvard, Princeton, and Columbia has helped students earn acceptances to UCLA and other top universities. Schedule a consultation to discuss how we can help. For essay strategy, see our essay guide. For summer programs, see our summer programs guide.

Frequently Asked Questions

UCLA gets 145,000 applications – how is it possible for admissions to read every one holistically?

UCLA employs over 100 application readers, and each application receives at least two independent reads. The UC system’s standardized format (no supplemental essays beyond four PIQs, no rec letters, test-blind) allows for more efficient evaluation than schools requiring 6-8 supplemental components. Each reader evaluates the application against 13 comprehensive review criteria in a structured rubric. The volume is real, but so is the infrastructure – UCLA has invested heavily in reader training and evaluation systems to manage the scale while maintaining holistic review.

My child has a 4.5 UC-weighted GPA but no test scores to submit – at a test-blind school, is GPA basically everything?

GPA is the dominant academic metric, but the Personal Insight Questions are the primary differentiator among applicants with similar GPAs. At the 4.5 UC-weighted level, thousands of applicants have comparable numbers. The PIQs are where UCLA separates applicants – they reveal intellectual curiosity, personal context, leadership, and community engagement that GPA alone cannot convey. Think of it as: GPA gets you into the competitive pool, PIQs get you admitted. A 4.5 GPA with generic PIQs will lose to a 4.3 GPA with exceptional, specific PIQs.

We are out-of-state and would pay $67K per year at UCLA – is that a good value compared to private schools at similar sticker prices?

UCLA’s OOS cost ($67,000 all-in) approaches private school sticker prices without the institutional financial aid that private schools offer. The value calculation depends on the specific program. For film (TFT), public health, and pre-med (proximity to Ronald Reagan Medical Center), UCLA offers unique resources that justify the premium. For general liberal arts or business, a private school with merit or need-based aid may deliver better net value. Always compare UCLA’s OOS cost against the net price (after aid) at private alternatives – many families are surprised that a private school’s actual cost is lower than UCLA OOS after institutional grants.

UCLA versus USC – which one is actually more selective now, and how should that affect our strategy?

UCLA (9.4%) is more selective than USC (12%) by acceptance rate, but the schools attract different applicant profiles. USC requires testing and rec letters, accepts the Common App, and offers ED. UCLA is test-blind, uses the UC Application with PIQs instead of rec letters, and has no early round. The strategic implication: apply to both since they use different application systems and neither affects the other. USC’s ED can provide an early acceptance that reduces stress during the UCLA wait (UCLA notifications come in mid-March). For specific programs, USC’s Marshall Business School and Annenberg Communications compete directly with UCLA’s Anderson and TFT.

Which UCLA programs are the hardest to get into – is the overall 9.4% rate misleading?

Yes, the 9.4% is an average that masks significant program-level variation. UCLA’s School of Theater, Film, and Television (TFT) admits 4-6% of applicants. Computer Science and Engineering (within the Samueli School) admits at lower rates than the university overall. Nursing is similarly competitive. The Letters and Science division (the largest) is closer to the headline rate. UCLA does not publish program-specific rates publicly, but internal data consistently shows 2-3x variation between the most and least selective programs. When categorizing UCLA on your school list, use the program-specific competitiveness, not the headline number.

Should California residents treat UCLA as a match school given the 14-15% in-state rate?

No. UCLA at 14-15% in-state is still a reach for the vast majority of California applicants. A ‘match’ school is one where your child’s profile places them at or above the 75th percentile and the acceptance rate exceeds 25%. Even with a 4.5 UC-weighted GPA, UCLA is a reach because thousands of California applicants have comparable or higher GPAs. The sheer volume of California applicants (100,000+) makes UCLA competitive at every GPA level. Treat UCLA as a strong reach and ensure your school list includes genuine UC matches (UCSD, UCI, UCSB) and safeties (UC Riverside, UC Merced).

Can I send a LOCI if I’m waitlisted at UCLA?

No. UCLA explicitly states that additional materials not requested by the campus will not be considered. Unlike private schools where a LOCI is essential, UCLA’s waitlist process is passive. You can only confirm your interest in remaining on the waitlist.

Should East Coast families apply to UCLA?

If you value the academic quality, campus culture, and West Coast career placement, absolutely. UCLA is a world-class university. However, out-of-state tuition (~$46,000 vs ~$14,000 in-state) makes the cost comparable to private schools. Run the net price calculator and compare financial aid offers before committing.


Latest Posts

Show all
Boston College library exterior

Scholarship & Merit Aid Finder: Top Awards at 25 Elite Schools

TL;DR: Most affluent families assume that elite universities only offer need-based financial aid and that merit scholarships are reserved for lower-income students. In reality, schools like Vanderbilt, Duke, USC, Emory, and WashU offer full-ride and half-tuition merit scholarships that go to high-achieving students regardless of family income. The Cornelius Vanderbilt Scholarship covers full tuition plus … Continued

Sign up for our newsletter