College Admissions Statistics Class of 2021: Early and Regular Decision Acceptance Rates

I couldn’t find anything about CMU or Michigan. CMU published something later in the spring last year; Michigan typically does not provide any EA admissions data.

Re Northwestern Daily article, @kitts95, the article doesn’t really provide much more information about ED than what we already had, so I’m not changing any of the information contained in the entry below which corresponds roughly to the new information in the article. It does suggest that NU accepted significantly fewer (~10%) ED applicants this year vs. last year (~963 vs. 1061), which is surprising to me.

MIT EA 657 out of 8394 (7.8%) (def=69.7%, rej=22.4%)
Georgetown EA 931 out of 7822 (11.9%)(def=88.1%)
Harvard SCEA 938 out of 6473 (14.5%)
Princeton SCEA 70 out of 5003 (15.4%)
Yale SCEA 871 out of 5086 (17.1%) (def=52.7%, rej=28.6%)
Brown ED 695 out of 3170 (21.9%)(def=60%, rej=18%)
Penn ED 1354 out of 6147 (22.0%)
Notre Dame REA 1470 out of 6020 (24.4%) (893 def=14.8%)
Duke ED 861 out of 3516 (24.5%)(def,671=19.1%)
Cornell ED ~1379 out of 5384 (25.6%)(def=20.9%, rej=53.5%)
Northwestern ED ~963 out of 3736 (~25.7%)
Dartmouth ED 555 out of 1999 (27.8%)
Tulane EA 6480 out of 22,256 (29.1%)
Johns Hopkins ED 591 out of 1934 (30.6%)
Emory ED: 474 out of 1493 (31.7%)
Williams ED 257 out of 728 (35.3%)
Middlebury ED1 343 out of 673 (51.0%) (def,60=8.9%, rej,270=40.1%)
University of Georgia EA 8059 out of 15,614 (51.6%)

Just a guess, @spayurpets, but it could be that the Questbridge kids aren’t included in the ED total - it’s not clear from the article (which also doesn’t say how many there are). Another thought: maybe NU accepted fewer ED applicants because they were worried about the RD admit rate dropping too far and scaring applicants off.

I doubt that though. NU has a pretty simple college application unlike other schools (just the common app essay and Why Northwestern essay), so its always worth a shot.

OK, I’m pretty much grasping at straws right now to find any new information while colleges, their PR departments , and school papers remain out on break, but here is a Tufts blog by the Dean that states that Tufts admitted 574 students ED1. If history is any guide, then Tufts will admit approximately another 100 students in ED2. (This is all just rank speculation based on the fact, that Tufts in the past has accepted roughly 1/2 of the class early, and 1/2 of 1340 is 670. Apologies if I got this wrong, but it’s the risk that Tufts runs if it’s going to only put out bits and pieces of data.)

http://admissions.tufts.edu/blogs/inside-admissions/post/congratulations-class-of-2021/

Dartmouth today: http://www.thedartmouth.com/article/2017/01/early-decision-students-to-comprise-47-percent-of-class

@spayurpets what was CMU’s ED rate last year?

@WashUH0peful 29%

Here’s the post where CMU’s data last year was discussed. I don’t recall an ED admissions rate, so I don’t know where @WashUH0peful got a number. But I do recall that each school has vastly different acceptance rates, so the overall acceptance rate is not all that useful; you should go to their site and review the specific school data because Dietrich College (humanities) and the College of Fine Arts have very different admission rates from, say, the Tepper School of Business or the School of Computer Science.

http://talk.qa.collegeconfidential.com/discussion/comment/19669115/#Comment_19669115

@spayurpets I got the ED % from US NEWS, since there was none in your data from last year.

Nice post

Tufts tweet from earlier today:

We received a record number of applications for the undergraduate Class of 2021! tuft.su/2k0UOds #Tufts2021

Here we go: http://now.tufts.edu/articles/tufts-applications-hit-new-high

It’s turning out to be more difficult to figure out a Tufts ED admission rate from this article. We know that the Dean blogged that 574 ED1 applications were accepted, but the article combined application numbers for ED1 and ED2 together, so we don’t get a clear ED1 app number. Anyone know the number of Tufts ED1 applications either this year or last year?

Right now we can estimate that the overall ED1/ED2 acceptance rate will be ~675 out of 2310 = ~29.2%. I’ll go with this number if I don’t get any further information but it’ll be a bit strange because it will taking into account acceptances that have not yet occurred.

Georgia Tech announcement (h/t College Kickstart). Interesting data point: Georgia residents have much higher acceptance rate (49%) than out-of-state (21%).

http://www.news.gatech.edu/2017/01/14/4380-students-welcomed-tech-early-action

@spayurpets,

Just wanted to thank you for this awesome work that you are doing here.

@hebegebe You’re welcome.

Adding Tufts and Georgia Tech:

MIT EA 657 out of 8394 (7.8%) (def=69.7%, rej=22.4%)
Georgetown EA 931 out of 7822 (11.9%)(def=88.1%)
Harvard SCEA 938 out of 6473 (14.5%)
Princeton SCEA 70 out of 5003 (15.4%)
Yale SCEA 871 out of 5086 (17.1%) (def=52.7%, rej=28.6%)
Georgia Tech EA (OOS) ~2300 out of 11,515 (~21%)
Brown ED 695 out of 3170 (21.9%)(def=60%, rej=18%)
Penn ED 1354 out of 6147 (22.0%)
Notre Dame REA 1470 out of 6020 (24.4%) (893 def=14.8%)
Duke ED 861 out of 3516 (24.5%)(def,671=19.1%)
Cornell ED ~1379 out of 5384 (25.6%)(def=20.9%, rej=53.5%)
Northwestern ED ~963 out of 3736 (~25.7%)
Dartmouth ED 555 out of 1999 (27.8%)
Georgia Tech EA (IS/OOS) 4380 out of 15,715 (27.9%)
Tulane EA 6480 out of 22,256 (29.1%)
Tufts ED1/ED2 ~675 out of 2310 (~29.2%)
Johns Hopkins ED 591 out of 1934 (30.6%)
Emory ED: 474 out of 1493 (31.7%)
Williams ED 257 out of 728 (35.3%)
Middlebury ED1 343 out of 673 (51.0%) (def,60=8.9%, rej,270=40.1%)
Georgia Tech EA (IS) ~2080 out of 4200 (~49%)
University of Georgia EA 8059 out of 15,614 (51.6%)

Boston College

http://bcheights.com/2017/01/18/2900-admitted-class-2021-acceptance-rate-slightly-33-percent/

Adding BC:

MIT EA 657 out of 8394 (7.8%) (def=69.7%, rej=22.4%)
Georgetown EA 931 out of 7822 (11.9%)(def=88.1%)
Harvard SCEA 938 out of 6473 (14.5%)
Princeton SCEA 70 out of 5003 (15.4%)
Yale SCEA 871 out of 5086 (17.1%) (def=52.7%, rej=28.6%)
Georgia Tech EA (OOS) ~2300 out of 11,515 (~21%)
Brown ED 695 out of 3170 (21.9%)(def=60%, rej=18%)
Penn ED 1354 out of 6147 (22.0%)
Notre Dame REA 1470 out of 6020 (24.4%) (893 def=14.8%)
Duke ED 861 out of 3516 (24.5%)(def,671=19.1%)
Cornell ED ~1379 out of 5384 (25.6%)(def=20.9%, rej=53.5%)
Northwestern ED ~963 out of 3736 (~25.7%)
Dartmouth ED 555 out of 1999 (27.8%)
Georgia Tech EA (IS/OOS) 4380 out of 15,715 (27.9%)
Tulane EA 6480 out of 22,256 (29.1%)
Tufts ED1/ED2 ~675 out of 2310 (~29.2%)
Johns Hopkins ED 591 out of 1934 (30.6%)
Emory ED 474 out of 1493 (31.7%)
Boston College EA ~2900 out of 9000 (~33%)(def,3500=38.9%, rej,2500=27.8%)
Williams ED 257 out of 728 (35.3%)
Georgia Tech EA (IS) ~2080 out of 4200 (~49%)
Middlebury ED1 343 out of 673 (51.0%) (def,60=8.9%, rej,270=40.1%)
University of Georgia EA 8059 out of 15,614 (51.6%)

^ So, arguably BC could fill their entire freshman class (of c2,300 kids) from their EA class? I know this is highly unlikely as it is easy to apply EA to BC, ND, GU and 'Nova and many top Catholic high school apply to all four (and the overall BC yield rate was only 26% last year). Does anyone know what the typical yield rate (from EA admits only) is for these 4 schools? Thanks.

@londondad, Yes, BC will admit enough of EA applicants to potentially fill its class. Last year EA acceptances represented 117% of the potential class. See this post: http://talk.qa.collegeconfidential.com/discussion/comment/20144506/#Comment_20144506
This year, it looks like it will be more like 125%.

I don’t know of any school that discloses its EA yield rate. Here are some of the top 25 overall yield numbers from Class of 2020 data, but I didn’t include BC. My estimate is that it was around 25% based on this article: http://bcheights.com/2016/09/08/admissions-stats/ which states that BC accepted 32% of its total applicants, meaning that over 9250 acceptances were mailed out to yield a class of 2319. I think you can roughly figure that BC wants about 1/2 their class to come from EA, so based on that, you can estimate that their EA yield rate is around 40% (.5 x 2320 divided by 2900)

Class of 2020 Yield (based on estimated class size):
1.Stanford 82.8% (1750)
2.Harvard 79.2% (1667)
3.MIT 75.4% (1120)
4.Princeton 69.2% (1310)
5.Yale 69.0% (1360)
6.Penn 66.8% (2445)
7.University of Chicago 66.4% (1650)
8.Columbia 63.8% (1400)
9.Brown 56.9% (1660)
10.Notre Dame 56.4% (2010)
11.Dartmouth 54.0% (1175)
12.Cornell 52.2% (3275)
13.Duke 51.4% (1705)
14.Northwestern 51.3% (1925)
15.UC-Berkeley 48.2% (5900)
16.Vanderbilt University 48.1% (1600)
17.Tufts University 46.8% (1325)
18.Caltech 45.3% (245)
19.Johns Hopkins University 41.6% (1300)
20.UVA 39.3% (3675)
21.Georgetown 37.9% (1580)
22.Washington University in St.Louis 37.0% (1750)
23.Rice 35.3% (983)
24.Carnegie Mellon University 28.5% (1503)