<p>Okay, sorry if that title seems overly dramatic. But I've gotten mixed reviews on competitiveness for In-State vs. competitiveness for Out of State. Which one is actually harder? Sorry if it seems like I'm obsessing, but the mixed reviews are killing me. Not calling anyone out, just wondering.</p>
<p>[Local</a> News | Why straight-A’s may not get you into UW this year | Seattle Times Newspaper](<a href=“http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/localnews/2014670294_admissions03m.html]Local”>http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/localnews/2014670294_admissions03m.html)</p>
<p>"Although the UW’s numbers might suggest otherwise, nonresidents need a stronger academic record than in-state students to gain admission, Ballinger said.</p>
<p>Out-of-state students tend to have slightly lower GPAs, but that’s because many come from top public and private schools where there’s less grade inflation. And their SAT scores are usually higher.</p>
<p>International students often have math SAT scores that outpace all U.S. students — scoring 700 points or more out of 800 — and many get a perfect score."</p>
<p>You can also ask the UW administration for this kind of information. It shouldn’t be secret.</p>
<p>thanks for the info. I did e-mail the UW admissions office, and they gave me a link that I believe I posted, and it gave admissions rates for last year, and stats, but the stats weren’t specific to in state and out of state.</p>