Cornell acceptance rate 2024

© 2020–2022 Top Tier Admissions

Ivy League – Early Action and Early Decision Acceptance Rates – Entering Fall 2020

Early Rounds 2024 2023 2022 Ivies Admit Applied % Admit Applied % Admit Applied % Total Ivies 7,340 41,191 17.33 7,139 42,747 16.70 7,403 41,014 18.05
Brown ED 800 4,562 17.5 769 4,230 18.18 738 3,501 21.08
Columbia ED 650 4,461 14.57 650 4,085 15.91
Cornell ED 1,576 6,615 22.6 1,395 6,159 22.65 1,533 6,319 24.26
Dartmouth ED 526 2,069 26.4 574 2,474 23.20 565 2,270 24.89
Harvard SCEA 895 6,424 13.9 935 6,958 13.44 964 6,630 14.54
Penn ED 1,269 6,453 19.7 1,279 7,110 17.99 1,312 7,074 18.55
Princeton SCEA 791 743 5,335 13.93 799 5,402 14.79
MIT EA 687 9,291 7.4 707 9,600 7.36 664 9,557 6.95
Yale SCEA 796 5,777 13.8 794 6,020 13.19 842 5,733 14.69

Brown University accepted 800 students [a record low 17.5 percent] of the 4,562 early decision applicants to the Class of 2024. The number of applications rose by 8 percent. 17 percent identify as first-generation and 44 percent of students self-identify as students of color. Students come from 43 countries and 40 states. 45 students were accepted through QuestBridge. These acceptances comprise roughly 45 percent of Brown’s incoming class. Dean of Admissions Logan Powell cites The Brown Promise – a new initiative which replaces all loans in University financial aid packages – as having a major impact on the size and composition of the early pool. 62 percent of those admitted to Brown in early decision applied for financial aid, up from just 50 percent two years ago. Brown continues to push to diversify their student body, which is especially evident in the five percentage point increase in the number of first gen students in the ED admit group [17 percent this year versus 12 percent last year].

Cornell University admitted 1,576 out of 6,615 early decision applicants [a 7 percent increase over the past year’s ED applicant numbers], for a 23.8 percent acceptance rate [a 1.2 percent increase over last year]. Those admitted are estimated to comprise 49 percent of the Class of 2024. Interestingly, the number of women admitted this year decreased by four percentage points to 51.6 percent. Hard to know exactly what to make of this statistic—other than perhaps Cornell was concerned that it might be approaching a tipping point with respect to gender balance. Students of color comprise 39.7 percent of admitted students. 22.1 percent are legacy and 12.1 percent are athletes.

Dartmouth Collegehas offered admission to 526 students from a pool of 2,069 early decision applicants. They also offered places to 21 applicants through QuestBridge resulting in an acceptance rate of 26 percent. The 547 acceptances will make up about 46 percent of the Class of 2024. Legacy students make up 15 percent and recruited athletes make up 25 percent. 15 percent are first-generation students and 12 percent are international students. 95 percent rank among the top 10 percent of their senior class. The mean SAT score is 1481 and ACT composite is 33.

Harvard University accepted 895 students to the Class of 2024 from a pool of 6,424 who applied early action for a rate of 13.9 percent. 9.6 percent of the admitted students are international and 10.1 percent are first-generation students. For the first time since the fall of 2013, the university’s early action pool posted a decline, with its early action pool decreasing by 7.7 percent. The 13.9 percent acceptance rate represents a 0.5 percent increase from last year. The early admission acceptance rate has not increased year-over-year since 2013. Dean Fitzsimmons takes a global view to explain the decrease, pointing to everything from wildfires in California [the number of early applicants from California declined nearly 17 percent] to school shootings and economic uncertainty to declining numbers of high school seniors. Women comprise 51.7 percent of the admitted class thus far, slightly more than last year, when women made up 51.3 percent of the early admit class. It seems that Harvard tipped in favor of women who are interested in the physical sciences and computer science. This year, 57.4 percent of admitted students who said they intend to concentrate in the physical sciences are women, compared to 52.9 percent last year and 33 percent the year before. For computer science, 49.1 percent of interested students are women, an increase from 42.9 percent last year, and 29 percent the year before.

The Massachusetts Institute of Technology  offered early admission to 687 from a pool of 9,291 students to the Class of 2024, a 7.4 percent acceptance rate.

The University of Pennsylvania accepted 1,269 [19.7 percent] of the 6,453 ED applications it received this year, down 9 percent from last year. These students make up about 53 percent of the total class. 24 percent are legacy [up from 23% last year] and 10 percent are first-generation students. They come from 46 states and 50 countries. Of those who are United States citizens or permanent residents, 52 percent identify as students of a minority group, an increase from 48 percent last year. Similarly, 54 percent of admitted students identified as female, an increase from 51 percent last cycle. 10 percent of admitted students are first-generation college students, a slight decrease from last year’s 11 percent. Explaining the drop in ED application volume, Dean Eric Furda in an interview in the student paper seems to suggest a return to “normal” after a “bump” caused by higher scores on the redesigned SAT and students who therefore saw themselves as stronger. He, too, seems to raise the notion that natural disasters, power outages, and teacher strikes impacted the number s of students applying ED.

Yale University accepted 796 students out of a total of 5,777 early action applicants to the Class of 2024 for a rate of 13.8 percent. This early application volume was down 4 percent from last year’s record-setting pool of 6,020 students. Although short on details about the admitted group, a news release points to an announcement earlier this year from Yale that the past several classes have all set records for socioeconomic diversity, with more than 1,000 undergraduates receiving Federal Pell grants. Of those, more than 600 are in the first-year and sophomore classes. Additionally, the number of students per class who will be the first in their families to graduate from college has increased by 75 percent in the past six years. A record 87 students were admitted through QuestBridge.

More Selective Schools – Early Action and Early Decision

Early Rounds 2024 2023 2022 Others Admit Applied % Admit Applied % Admit Applied %
Duke ED 887 4,300 20.6 882 4,852 18.18 875 4,090 21.39
Emory 730 1,812 40 559 1,910 29.27 503 1,623 30.99
Georgetown REA 856 7,305 11.7 919 7,802 11.78 1,002 8,383 11.95
J. Hopkins ED 682 2,399 28 641 2,068 31.00 610 2,037 29.95
Notre Dame REA 1,542 7,300 21 1,534 7,334 20.92 1,636 6,598 24.80

Duke 887 of the 4,300 early decision applicants to the Class of 2024 were accepted for an acceptance rate of 21 percent. These students will comprise 51 percent of the incoming class. Students of color comprise 46 percent of those admitted and international students make up another 6 percent.

Emory 730 from a pool of 1,812 students were accepted early decision to Emory College of Arts and Sciences, Oxford College or both for a rate of 40 percent. Emory College admitted 580 students and Oxford College admitted 295 students, with 145 admitted to both.

Georgetown The University offered admission to 856 out of 7,305 early action applicants for the Class of 2024. This reflects a record low admissions rate of 11.7 percent even with the number of overall early applicants decreasing for the second year in a row.

Johns Hopkins offered admission to 682 students during the ED round for the Class of 2024. The number of applications rose 16 percent from the past year.

Expected Percentage of Early Admissions in the Enrolled Class of 2024

The tables below present the percentage of early applicants to the projected enrollment.

Ivy League

Early % Class 2024 2023 2022 Ivies Admit Enroll Est % Early Admit Enroll Est % Early Admit Enroll Est % Early Total Ivies 7,139 15,475 51% 7,139 15,475 52% 7,403 15,673 52%
Brown ED 800 1,700 47.05 769 1,700 45.24 738 1,700 43.41
Columbia ED 1,400 650 1,400 46.43 650 1,400 46.43
Cornell ED 1,576 3,175 49.64 1,395 3,175 43.94 1,533 3,278 46.77
Dartmouth ED 526 1,200 47.83 574 1,200 47.83 565 1,200 47.08
Harvard SCEA 895 1,670 43.83 935 1,670 55.99 964 1,670 57.72
MIT EA 687 1,050 65.42 707 1,050 67.33 664 1,100 60.36
Penn ED 1,269 2,400 52.88 1,279 2,400 53.29 1,312 2,445 53.66
Princeton SCEA 791 1,300 60.85 743 1,300 57.15 799 1,300 61.46
Yale SCEA 687 1,580 43.48 794 1,580 50.25 842 1,580 53.29

More Selective Schools

Early % Class 2024 2023 2022 Others Admit Enroll Est % Early Admit Enroll Est % Early Admit Enroll Est % Early
Duke ED 887 1,720 51,57 882 1,720 51.28 875 1,720 50.87
Georgetown EA 856 1,600 53.5 919 1,600 57.44 1,002 1,575 63.62
J. Hopkins ED 682 1,300 52.46 641 1,300 49.31 610 1,350 45.19
MIT EA 687 1,050 65.42 707 1,050 67.33 664 1,100 60.36
Notre Dame REA 1,542 2,000 77.1 1,534 2,000 76.70 1,636 2,050 79.80

© 2020–2022 Top Tier Admissions

Which Cornell college is easiest to get into?

The Hotel School in the Cornell SC Johnson College of Business is the least competitive with an acceptance rate of 30% The School of Human Ecology has a 23 % acceptance rate, the second-highest acceptance rate of all the schools at Cornell.

Is Cornell harder than other Ivies?

Cornell University Students can choose from the more than 4,000 courses available. This means that they will surely find a field of study that they can focus on. Then there's also the fact that Cornell University is regarded as the easiest Ivy League school to get into.

Is getting into Cornell impressive?

Cornell University is very selective. For the entering class of 2023, the school received 49,114 applications. Out of those, it accepted 5,330 for an admissions rate of 10.9%. Out of the applicants, 6,150 applied through Cornell's early decision process.

Do you need straight A's to get into Cornell?

Cornell University requires you to be in the top 5%-10% of your high school classes. On average, accepted students have an average GPA of around 3.9. This means that successful applicants need to be at the top of their class and achieve straight A's in nearly all their subjects.

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