What are my chances of getting into UNC Chapel Hill?

I recently got deferred from UNC, and I wanted to know what my chances are of getting in RD. I am an In-state applicant.

ACT (breakdown): 33 Comp, 35 Eng, 34 Sci, 32 Math, 30 Read
SAT II: Math II - 770
Unweighted GPA (out of 4.0): 3.6 (My UW is low because I got 4 Bs my freshmen year and 5 Bs my sophomore year. However, I feel like I made up for that by getting only 1 B and 7 As my junior year while taking 4 rigorous AP courses

  • I have taken a total of 10 APs throughout high school, including senior year. Also, my weighted GPA is a 4.6
    Rank (percentile if rank is unavailable): Top 25%
    Major Awards (USAMO, Intel etc.): Nationally ranked for table tennis, Guinness Book of world record holder (this is actually not a lie), Top 10 event finalist at the DECA state conference.

Subjective:

Extracurriculars (place leadership in parenthesis): DECA Club, Key Club, Math Club, Music Club where members played music at several retirement homes(Vice President), National Technical Honor Society, School Ambassador (Leadership), Student Council (Leadership), Track and Field (Captain for one of the three sections), Over 150 hours of community service.
Job/Work Experience: Cashier at a fast food restaurant for 8 months.
Volunteer/Community service: Over 150 hours of volunteering

Other

Applied for Financial Aid?: No
Intended Major and College: Statistics and Analytics
State (if domestic applicant): In-state
School Type: Public
Ethnicity: Indian / Asian (?)
Gender: Mate

Reflection

Strengths: Extracurriculars, Leadership, and standardized test scores
Weaknesses: UW GPA

UNC sent out acceptances to 6% of deferred applicants last year. Good Luck!

I think you will be fine.

Here is a link to FAQs regarding deferred applicants: https://admissions.unc.edu/admissions-blog/2018/01/26/faqs-students-whose-applications-deferred-regular-decision-2/. It states in pertinent part the following from the Admissions Office: “We ended up offering admission to 4 percent of deferred students last year and 10 percent the previous year.”