Admission stats

<p>I can't find any recent admission stats on the UM website. I am looking for recent GPA and ACT scores of admitted applicants. They have links on the website and when you click on them it does not provide any statistics?</p>

<p>See link below and then click on the statistics that is bolded, it will take you to a page that has general info about academics but no indication of GPA/ACT scores. </p>

<p><a href="https://umich.custhelp.com/app/answers/detail/a_id/28%5B/url%5D"&gt;https://umich.custhelp.com/app/answers/detail/a_id/28&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p>

<p>Is this info somewhere else?</p>

<p>NVM. I found the common data set with all the info I was looking for…</p>

<p><a href=“Office of Budget and Planning”>Office of Budget and Planning;

<p>The CDS for last year is not yet out. It will be published in 2 months. Look for an acceptance rate of ~40%, a mid 50% SAT of 1250-1450 and a mid 50% ACT of 28-32.</p>

<p>Is this what you are looking for?
[About</a> Our Applicants | University of Michigan Office of Admissions](<a href=“http://www.admissions.umich.edu/drupal/about-our-applicants]About”>http://www.admissions.umich.edu/drupal/about-our-applicants)</p>

<p>Good link GoBlue, since the OP was asking for the stats of admitted students.</p>

<p>Thanks for the replies!</p>

<p>It appears that the CA has already significantly upped the ACT testing scores of incoming students.</p>

<p>Sorry, I feel like I should have created a new thread but is the admissions rate going to dip to around 30% this year? I’ve been hearing talk of a massive increase in applications.</p>

<p>Last year, the first year of Michigan joining the common application, the University’s acceptance rate dropped from ~50% to ~40%. Most universities experience the largest surge in applications as a result of joining the common application the second and third years. All indications from the admissions office point to Michigan being no exception. It is expected that Michigan will receive anywhere from 46,000-50,000 applicants this year. Assuming the University receives 48,000, a 32% acceptance rate is to be expected for the current admissions cycle. In 3-4 years, Michigan will have a 20%-25% admit rate.</p>

<p>Ah, okay. Hope I don’t get rejected as an OOS applicant with solid EC’s/rigor, 3.86 GPA 2260 SAT.</p>

<p>With your stats, Michigan is a safe match. I would not count on an acceptance, but I would be surprised if you were not admitted. Pretty good feeling knowing that you have a solid shot at a top 10 university, eh! ;)</p>

<p>[University</a> of Michigan News Service | U-M Ann Arbor overall enrollment, freshman applications at all-time high this fall](<a href=“http://ns.umich.edu/new/releases/8631-u-m-ann-arbor-overall-enrollment-freshman-applications-at-all-time-high-this-fall]University”>U-M Ann Arbor overall enrollment, freshman applications at all-time high this fall | University of Michigan News)</p>

<p>why is the admission information here different from what GoBlue posted? The link I’m posting says that there are like 39584 applicants and 16073 acceptances for an acceptance rate of 40.6%. The link that GoBlue posted says differently. Acceptance rate there is 39.9%</p>

<p>avatar, the two sets of figures are similar and neither of the two is official. We will know the final numbers when the CDS is released in January.</p>

<p>ohh nice. well we do know it’ll be ~40% anyways. I’m an International applicant. gonna enter U-M for the winter of 2012! yay me! :smiley: It’s so heartening as a future student of UMich to know that Michigan’s selectivity will probably rise cause of the shift to CommonApp. An image boost for the school as well. And an answer to all those naysayers who think that Mich is probably easy with its admissions. :)</p>

<p>Yeah it definitely is! I hope I can get into Ross pre-admit as well, but that is always tough. My strength is in the more subjective parts of the application and I have excelled in business areas in HS (also a paid marketing intern at Microsoft this year 15hrs/wk, 20 get hired out of >250 applicants)</p>