Skip to content
  • Solutions
    Our Services
    Admissions Committee Review
    BS/MD & Pre-Med Admissions
    Business School Admissions
    College Prep for Neurodiverse Students
    Computer Science & Engineering
    Essay Advising and Review
    Gap Year Admissions
    Graduate School Admissions
    Middle School College Prep
    Subject Tutoring
    Test Prep
    ACT Test Prep
    SAT Test Prep
    Transfer Admissions
  • About Us
    Our Story
    Our Technology
    Why Us
    Success Stories
    Contact Us
  • Programs
    AI Scholar Program
    Research Scholar Program
    Startup Internship Program
    Passion Project Program
  • Resources
    Blog
    College Insights
    Ebooks & Guides
    Empowerly ScoreĀ®
    Referrals
    Webinars
    Upcoming Webinars
    Webinar Recordings
  • For Organizations
    Partnerships & Affiliates
    Empowerly for Employers
    Community Organizations
Sign In
Free Consultation
Book a Free Consultation
Login
  • Blog > Applications

USC acceptance rate Class of 2030: applications dipped, but admissions odds stayed punishing

Picture of Austin Gorman

Austin Gorman

  • June 15, 2026

The University of Southern California’s (USC’s) acceptance rate for the Class of 2030 was 11.7%. USC admitted 9,251 students from a pool of 79,290 applicants. The Early Action round came in at 9.5%, with the university expecting to admit roughly 5,000 more in the Regular Decision Round. Sources: USC Daily Trojan and the USC Office of Admissions.

An 11.7% acceptance rate works out to about 1 in 9 applicants. Here’s the wrinkle with USC admissions: applying early reduces your odds of admission. 

Because merit scholarship reviews are bundled into the early round, USC’s strongest candidates front-load in Early Action. This pushes the EA rate below the Regular Decision rate — the opposite of how Early Action typically works.

USC remains test-optional. Among recently enrolled students who chose to submit scores, the middle 50% of SAT scores ranged from 1450 to 1550. USC considers the rigor of coursework, GPA, standardized test scores, application essays, and recommendations among its most important admissions factors.

If USC is on your list, one question remains top of mind: How many hopeful Trojans actually get the nod?

Quick answer: USC admitted 11.7% of applicants for the Class of 2030, offering spots to 9,251 students out of 79,290 applicants.

A quick housekeeping note before we get into the numbers from L.A.

USC publishes its full applicant profile (test scores, financial aid, and what it weighs in review) through its Common Data Set.

So the round-by-round admit numbers below are current (Class of 2029 and 2030), while the deeper profile data comes from USC’s most recent complete CDS, which covers the enrolled Class of 2028. We label these throughout.

One more thing worth flagging: USC reports a fall-only admit rate and a broader rate that folds into spring admits, so you’ll see different percentages floating around online. We use the fall figures USC and the Daily Trojan report, keeping the year-over-year comparison consistent.

While the acceptance rate ticked up a bit since we last reported numbers for the Class of 2029, USC hasn’t softened its standards. USC is one of the most selective public universities in the country, and the story of its increasing admission rate is about application volume.

USC acceptance rates at a glance

NumberClass of 2030Class of 2029
Overall acceptance11.7%11.2%
Total applications79,29083,500
Students admitted9,2519,345
Early Action rate9.5%8.37%
Regular Decision rateTBD14.07%

The real story here isn’t the slight increase in admits. It’s the inverted gap between Early Action and Regular Decision, which is the opposite of other selective schools.

Why Early Action is the harder round at USC

Most highly selective schools reward applying early. Early applicant pools tend to post higher admit rates than Regular Decision — partly because of things like legacy admissions and partly because these students have stronger profiles.

USC flips that script.

For the Class of 2030, USC received more than 40,000 Early Action applications and admitted 3,800 (9.5%). Last cycle, the EA rate was 8.37%, while Regular Decision was 14.07%.

The reason is structural. USC ties merit scholarship consideration into the Early Action round, so applicants who want a shot at a Trustee or Presidential award apply early.

What does this mean for you? If you have a strong profile and a legitimate chance at receiving a merit scholarship, Early Action is where it’s at.

For a fuller breakdown of how early rounds shape your odds, read our article on how Early Action improves your chances.

USC acceptance rates: historical trends

USC’s acceptance rate compressed over the past decade as applications surged. The Class of 2030 is the exception that proves the rule: applications fell about 5% year-over-year.

Entering classOverall acceptance rateApplications
Class of 202612.5%69,000
Class of 20279.8%80,000
Class of 20289.8%82,027
Class of 2029 11.2%83,500
Class of 203011.7%79,290

Strip out 2030, and the trend is clear: five years ago, USC admitted 1 in 6 applicants. Today, it sits closer to 1 in 9 — with a record-high admitted-class GPA of 3.92 to match.

Big changes coming: USC adds binding Early Decision (ED) for the Class of 2031

This matters if you’re a sophomore or junior with your sights set on USC.

In February 2026, USC’s Provost announced the university will add a binding Early Decision option for Fall 2027 applicants. The change follows a successful Early Decision pilot program from the Marshall School of Business for the Class of 2030.

Performance-based programs (Kaufman School of Dance, Thornton School of Music, and the School of Dramatic Arts) won’t offer ED.

At peer schools, binding ED rounds tend to post admit rates at least 2x to 3x higher than Regular Decision. If USC follows that pattern, ED could become the highest-probability pathway for students. The current EA-for-merit, RD-for-flexibility will look meaningfully different in future admissions cycles.

See also: USC expands Early Decision for Class of 2027

Who gets in: a look at the enrolled Class of 2028

The figures below describe USC’s enrolled Class of 2028, the most recent class for which USC published a complete Common Data Set. That class came out of a pool of 82,027 applicants, with 8,050 admitted.

Test scores

USC has been test-optional for several cycles, and potential Trojans take that policy at its word more than students at peer schools do. For the Class of 2028, only 30% of enrolled students submitted SAT scores, while another 12% submitted ACT scores.

The ranges were high among submitters.

Test25th percentile50th percentile75th percentile
SAT Evidence-Based Reading and Writing710740760
SAT Math740780790
SAT Composite (derived)145015201550
ACT Composite323335

A note on the SAT composite line: USC leaves the combined SAT figure blank in its CDS. The composite range above is derived by adding the scores from each SAT section.

Even so, the picture is unmistakable. Among SAT submitters, 90.5% scored above 700 on the Math section, and 83.3% did so on the Evidence-Based Reading and Writing section. On the ACT, 95.1% of submitters posted a composite of 30 or higher.

Scores like these are not merely competitive — they’re near the ceiling.

Here’s our honest assessment: USC’s low submission rate indicates that non-submission is more of an option than at other selective schools. At the same time, a strong score helps.

When applicants submit a score, USC weighs them heavily (see more below). If your numbers meet or beat the published ranges above, send them. If they fall short, the rest of your file has to carry more of the load.

For a broader picture on testing at selective schools, read our latest article: SAT/ACT now required. Is the era of test-optional admissions over?

Class rank and GPA

USC reports an average GPA for enrolled students. For the Class of 2028, the average GPA was 3.80. The incoming Class of 2030 pushed this figure to an all-time high of 3.92.

Digging deeper into GPA distribution and concentration is striking:

  • 27.1% of enrolled students had a 4.0
  • 51% landed between 3.75 and 3.99
  • So roughly 78% of enrolled students had a GPA of 3.75 or above

Class rank tells the same story for the minority of students at schools who still report it.

  • 73% ranked in the top tenth of their class
  • 94% ranked in the top quarter
  • 99% ranked in the top half

What USC weighs most in admissions

This is the section worth the closest examination. It tells you what USC considers when reading your application.

FactorImportance
Rigor of secondary schoolVery important
Academic GPAVery Important
Standardized test scoresVery Important
Application essayVery important
RecommendationsVery important
Extracurricular activitiesImportant
Talent/abilityImportant
Character/personal qualitiesImportant
First-generation statusConsidered
Alumi/ae relationsConsidered
Volunteer workConsidered
Work experienceConsidered
Class rankNot considered
InterviewNot considered
Level of applicant’s interestNot considered
Geographic/state residenceNot considered
Religious affiliationNot considered

A few things stand out here. Unlike similar highly selective schools, USC treats extracurriculars, talent/ability, and character/personal qualities as merely ā€œimportantā€ rather than ā€œvery important.ā€ This indicates USC gives students’ traditional academic profiles more weight compared to similar institutions.

Second, USC considers essays ā€œvery important.ā€ This is similar to other selective schools, but the supplements also carry real weight. The ā€œWhy USCā€ prompt gives applicants an opportunity to name specific programs and professors that appeal to them, helping set their applications apart from the pack.

Lastly, standardized test scores are also ā€œvery important,ā€ despite USC’s test-optional status. While students aren’t required to submit scores, high scores on the SAT or ACT really benefit applicants in the admissions process.

Cost of attendance and financial aid at USC

USC’s sticker price is steep. But its aid program is built to take a large bite out of that number for families who qualify. Additionally, its merit awards add a layer that need-only schools don’t offer.

Estimated direct costs

ItemCost
Tuition$66,640
Required fees$2,047
Room and board (on campus)$19,200

Direct billed total: $87,887

Add books, transportation, and personal expenses, and the full estimated cost of attendance comes in north of $91,000 per year.

Now the part that changes the math. USC’s most recent reported aid data shows:

  • USC meets 100% of demonstrated financial need for admitted students.
  • The average need-based aid package for first-year recipients was $71,169.
  • The average need-based scholarship/grant for first-year recipients was $55,261.
  • Only 32% of USC’s recent graduating class took out any loan, with an average debt of $27,678.

Then there are merit awards, where USC diverges from most selective schools.

Beyond need-based aid, USC awarded grants to nearly 1,000 first-year students, with an average of $20,703. It also offers scholarships such as the Trustee and Presidential awards that cover half of students’ tuition.

Look at USC’s financial aid tools to estimate your costs.

How to strengthen your USC application

Here is what the data above tells you to prioritize.

PriorityWhy it matters
Take hard courses and excelRigor and GPA are both ā€œvery important.ā€ The average GPA of enrolled students in the 2030 Class was 3.92.
Treat supplemental essays with careThe application essay is ā€œvery important.ā€ The ā€œWhy USCā€ prompt is where fit gets proven, so be specific about programs and people that interest you.
Choose your application round with intentionEA is the harder pool, but it’s also the gateway to merit aid. RD is more forgiving but potentially costlier. Choose your application round accordingly.
Take the testsScores are optional, but ā€œvery importantā€ when submitted. A high score performs wonders on your application, so take the tests.

Frequently asked questions

What is USC’s acceptance rate for the Class of 2030?

About 11.7% overall, with roughly 9,251 students admitted from 79,290 applicants. The Early Action rate was about 9.5%, and USC expects to admit around 5,000 more students when Regular Decision results land in April 2026.

Why is USC’s Early Action rate lower than its Regular Decision rate?

Because USC ties merit scholarship consideration to the Early Action round. That pulls the strongest, most credentialed applicants into EA, making the early pool more competitive and pushing its admit rate below the Regular Decision rate.

What GPA and test scores do I need for USC?

There is no minimum. For context, the enrolled Class of 2028 averaged a 3.80 GPA, the incoming Class of 2030 reportedly hit 3.92, and roughly 78% of enrolled students had a 3.75 or higher. Among score submitters, the SAT middle 50% ranged from about 1450 to 1550, and the ACT composite from 32 to 35. Aim for top grades in the most demanding curriculum your school offers.

Which factors matter most in USC admissions?

Per USC’s Common Data Set: rigor of coursework, GPA, standardized test scores, application essays, and recommendations are all “very important.” Extracurriculars, talent, and character are “important.” Class rank, interviews, and level of applicant’s interest are “not considered.”

Trying to figure out where you stand in a single-digit-feeling applicant pool? Empowerly’s counselors help students build the profile USC actually rewards. Book a consultation to map your strategy.

Share this post
College Internships
Picture of Austin Gorman

Austin Gorman

Related articles

Find the latest college admissions news, tips, resources and more.

USC acceptance rate Class of 2030: applications dipped, but admissions odds stayed punishing

How interdisciplinary interests can help in college admissions

Duke acceptance rate Class of 2030: a record number of applicants makes admission odds tougher than ever

Empowerly is a member of:
Menu
  • Services
  • Success Stories
  • Careers
  • Become a Counselor
  • Refer a Friend
  • Book a Consult
Contact Us
  • enrollment@empowerly.com
  • 800 491 6920
  • empowerly.com
Follow Us
  • LinkedIn
  • Instagram
  • Facebook
Subscribe to our Newsletter
Ā© 2026 Empowerly Inc | All Rights Reserved
Do Not Sell or Share My Personal Information

Terms & Conditions

Privacy Policy

Enter your email to view the webinar

Stay connected

Subscribe for weekly college tips, reminders, and essential resources!

Solutions
Our Services
Admissions Committee Review
BS/MD & Pre-Med Admissions
Business School Admissions
College Prep for Neurodiverse Students
Computer Science & Engineering
Essay Advising and Review
Gap Year Admissions
Graduate School Admissions
Middle School College Prep
Subject Tutoring
Test Prep
ACT Test Prep
SAT Test Prep
Transfer Admissions
About Us
Our Story
Our Technology
Why Us
Success Stories
Contact Us
Programs
AI Scholar Program
Research Scholar Program
Startup Internship Program
Resources
Blog
College Insights
Empowerly ScoreĀ®
Referrals
Webinars
Upcoming Webinars
Webinar Recordings
For Organizations
Partnerships & Affiliates
Empowerly for Employers
Community Organizations
Book a Free Consultation
Login