<p>This is self-explanatory.</p>
<p>Well the engineering majors will be the hardest. I applied to econ, a limited major, and got in with relatively average (for Cal and esp, CC) stats (2030, 3.8 UC GPA), so I don’t think the other majors really increase/decrease your chances.</p>
<p>I thought engineering majors were the hardest, but I somehow got in.</p>
<p>EECS for sure… </p>
<p>Rejected from it ;A;</p>
<p>the hardest major to get in is definitely engineering (EECS to be more specific).</p>
<p>L&S does not admit you to a major, you get admitted undeclared</p>
<p>everyone thinks that EECS is the hardest major to get into. NOT TRUE. undeclared engineering is actually the hardest. then bioE. then maybe EECS. for some reason, the difficulty of EECS is overblown, probably because it’s way bigger than the other two engineering majors, which are harder but less known about.</p>
<p>I remember asking my professor about it (last year I think) and he said the EECS has the fewest enrollment spots but the highest number of applicants, so its admittance rate is the lowest. I don’t know about this year, but for the year in which I got in (2 years ago), EECS is definitely the hardest to get in (I even saw some statistics on it, I will see if I can find it).</p>
<p>I remember reading that College of Natural Resources was the easiest to get into college, so I’m guessing any major in CNR would be easiest.</p>
<p>As for hardest, it’s probably Undeclared Engineering and Bioengineering, with EECS not far behind. One of the CS professors during orientation (I think it was Garcia) said they accepted around 350 applicants out of 2000 or so, which is 17-18%. I’m fairly certain that undeclared engineering and bioengineering hover around 16%.</p>
<p>yea tough tough</p>
<p>I heard College of Chemistry was pretty hard.</p>
<p>What about Architecture?</p>
<p>I have a friend who got in, and he has D’s and C’s.</p>