What Is Wellesley’s Acceptance Rate for the Class of 2030?
Wellesley College has not yet released official Class of 2030 acceptance rate statistics. The full Common Data Set publication, including precise admit counts, applicant volume, and Early Decision and Regular Decision breakdowns, is expected in fall 2026 (Wellesley College Office of Admission). Based on Wellesley’s Class of 2029 admit rate of 13.70% and the consistency of Wellesley’s applicant pool over recent cycles, the Class of 2030 rate is likely to fall in the 13% to 14% range pending official publication.
Wellesley’s applicant pool has stayed relatively stable over recent cycles. The Class of 2028 received 8,714 applications; the Class of 2029 received 8,700. Both produced admitted classes of approximately 1,200 students. Wellesley’s institutional policy is to maintain a consistent first-year class size of approximately 600 enrolled students per cycle, which constrains admit counts and produces relatively stable acceptance rates from year to year.
What Were Wellesley’s Class of 2029 Admissions Numbers?
Wellesley admitted 1,192 students from 8,700 applicants for the Class of 2029, producing a 13.70% acceptance rate (Wellesley College Common Data Set 2024-2025). This was down from 14.05% for the Class of 2028, when Wellesley admitted 1,224 students from 8,714 applicants. The marginal tightening reflected a small reduction in admit count rather than a meaningful shift in applicant volume.
The Class of 2029 admitted student profile included a middle 50% SAT range of 1430 to 1550 and a middle 50% ACT range of 32 to 35. Wellesley’s first-year class is approximately 600 enrolled students, drawn from a national applicant pool with strong international representation (typically 13 to 15% of admitted students). The yield rate at Wellesley has historically run at approximately 50%, high for a women’s college and reflective of strong cross-admit performance against peer institutions.
How Has Wellesley’s Acceptance Rate Changed Over Time?
Wellesley’s acceptance rate has tightened gradually over the past decade. The Class of 2021 admitted 22.08% of applicants from a pool of 5,666. By the Class of 2025, the rate had narrowed to 16%, and by the Class of 2026 it dropped to a record-low 13.57%. Since then, the rate has hovered in the 13% to 14% range as Wellesley’s applicant pool stabilized around 8,700 per cycle.
The longer-term trajectory reflects Wellesley’s evolution from a regional women’s college into a nationally and internationally selective institution. Wellesley’s admit profile increasingly mirrors top-tier liberal arts colleges and Ivy League peers, with strong cross-admit competition against Brown, Yale, Williams, Amherst, and Smith for top admitted candidates.
How Does Wellesley Early Decision Compare to Regular Decision?
Wellesley’s Early Decision admit rate is approximately 2.5 times the Regular Decision rate. The most recent published ED data is from the Class of 2028, when Wellesley admitted 308 students from 1,033 ED applicants for a 29.82% ED rate. Regular Decision that cycle admitted 916 students from 7,681 applicants, producing an 11.9% RD rate. The structural ED advantage at Wellesley is substantial, and ED applicants make up a meaningful share of the entering class each year.
Wellesley offers two ED rounds: ED I with a November 1 deadline and decisions in mid-December, and ED II with a January 8 deadline and decisions in mid-February. ED I has historically produced the highest admit rates, while ED II offers a non-trivial advantage for applicants who develop confidence in Wellesley as their first choice during the fall application cycle. For comparative ED versus RD strategy across selective institutions, see our analysis of Early Decision versus Regular Decision acceptance rates.
Why Is Wellesley Still Test-Optional?
Wellesley remains test-optional through the Class of 2030 cycle, one of a shrinking number of selective liberal arts colleges to maintain test-optional admissions. The institutional rationale is rooted in research conducted by the Wellesley Office of Admission examining the predictive validity of standardized test scores for academic outcomes at Wellesley. The college has indicated it will continue to evaluate the policy on a multi-year basis (Wellesley College Office of Admission).
Despite the test-optional policy, approximately 55% of admitted Wellesley students submit standardized test scores. The middle 50% range for submitted SAT scores is 1430 to 1550, with the 75th percentile at 1550. For applicants whose scores fall within or above the middle 50% range, submitting scores typically strengthens the application. For applicants whose scores fall below the 25th percentile, withholding scores is generally strategically optimal. For institutional score data, the NCES College Navigator publishes published score ranges.
What Is the Transfer Acceptance Rate at Wellesley?
Wellesley’s transfer acceptance rate for Fall 2024 was 9.59%, slightly more competitive than the first-year rate (Wellesley College Common Data Set 2024-2025). Transfer admissions at Wellesley are highly selective and capacity-constrained: the college admits transfers only when residential and academic capacity opens, which happens in some years and not others. Strong transfer applicants typically have 3.7+ college GPAs and a clear academic rationale for the transfer.
Wellesley also operates the Davis Degree Program, designed for women aged 24 and older returning to higher education. The Davis program operates on a separate admissions track with distinct evaluation criteria.
How Does Wellesley’s Acceptance Rate Compare to Peer Schools?
Wellesley’s 13.70% Class of 2029 acceptance rate places it within range of peer top-tier liberal arts colleges and select universities. Smith College admits at approximately 25%, Mount Holyoke at approximately 38%, Bryn Mawr at approximately 32%, and Barnard at approximately 8%. Among coeducational LAC peers, Williams admits at 7.4%, Amherst at 6.78%, Swarthmore at 7.44%, and Pomona at approximately 7%.
The cross-admit dynamic for Wellesley applicants typically pits Wellesley against Brown, Yale, Williams, Amherst, Smith, and Barnard. Within women’s colleges, Wellesley’s selectivity is comparable to Barnard. For families weighing Wellesley against alternative women’s colleges, our Wellesley vs. Smith vs. Mount Holyoke comparison covers the strategic differences across the Seven Sisters institutions.
What These Numbers Mean for Your Family’s Wellesley Application
For families considering Wellesley, the 13.70% admit rate signals a highly selective application that requires strategic positioning. Strategic implications: applications should be calibrated to the academic profile of admitted students (top 10% of high school class typical, 1500+ SAT typical), the application narrative should articulate specific intellectual interest in a women’s college environment and Wellesley’s distinctive programs, and Early Decision should be considered carefully for applicants confident in their first choice.
Wellesley’s Plus 5 program with MIT, the cross-registration relationships with Babson and Olin, and the strong presence of women in STEM differentiate Wellesley from peer LACs. Applicants who articulate specific interest in these distinctive features typically read more compellingly than applicants whose essays emphasize generic women’s college themes. The supplemental essay quality matters disproportionately at Wellesley relative to peer institutions.
Frequently Asked Questions About Wellesley Admissions
Wellesley has not yet released official Class of 2030 statistics. Based on the Class of 2029 rate of 13.70% and consistent applicant volume, the Class of 2030 rate is likely to fall in the 13% to 14% range. Full Common Data Set publication is expected in fall 2026.
13.70%, with 1,192 students admitted from 8,700 applications. This was down from 14.05% for the Class of 2028.
Yes. Wellesley remains test-optional through the Class of 2030 cycle, one of a shrinking number of selective liberal arts colleges to maintain the policy. Approximately 55% of admitted students submit scores; the middle 50% SAT range is 1430-1550.
Apply ED to Wellesley only if it is your clear first choice. The most recent published ED rate (29.82% for Class of 2028) is approximately 2.5 times the Regular Decision rate. ED I has a November 1 deadline; ED II has a January 8 deadline.
Target a 1500 or higher SAT score to be competitive at Wellesley. The middle 50% SAT range for admitted students who submit scores is 1430-1550, with the 75th percentile at 1550. Submit scores if they fall at or above the middle 50% range.
Wellesley is the most selective of the Seven Sisters women’s colleges with a 13.70% admit rate, compared to Smith (~25%) and Mount Holyoke (~38%). Wellesley’s cross-admit competition pits it against Brown, Yale, Williams, Amherst, and Barnard rather than primarily against other women’s colleges.
9.59% for Fall 2024, slightly more competitive than the first-year rate. Transfer admissions are highly capacity-constrained at Wellesley, with admit counts varying by year based on residential and academic capacity.
Yes. Wellesley meets 100% of demonstrated financial need for admitted students through grants and work-study, without requiring loans for families with incomes below approximately $100,000. Wellesley is need-aware for international applicants.
Sources: Wellesley College Office of Admission; Common Data Set; NCES College Navigator; IPEDS; NACAC.
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