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  • Blog > Applications

NYU acceptance rates Class of 2029: how your application stacks up against the competition

Picture of Austin Gorman

Austin Gorman

  • June 2, 2026

NYU’s 2025 acceptance rate was 9.1%. Out of 114,125 applicants, 10,340 were admitted and 5,662 enrolled. Source: New York University Common Data Set 2025–2026.

NYU’s 9.1% acceptance rate means 1 in 11 applicants is admitted. Strong applicants typically score 1480–1550 on the SAT (27% of submitted scores) under NYU’s test-optional policy. They carry an average high school GPA of 3.81 (93% of enrolled students had a 3.5 or higher). NYU weighs course rigor, GPA, essays, recommendations, and test scores as its most important factors.

If NYU is in your college crosshairs, you likely want to know your chances of getting in.

Quick answer: NYU accepted 9.1% of applicants in 2025–2026. That’s 10,340 students out of the 114,125 who applied. In other words, roughly 1 out of 11 applicants.

NYU draws one of the largest applicant pools in the country (more than 114,000 students) and remains test-optional, so the score ranges below reflect only the quarter of students who chose to submit.

Let’s break down NYU’s complete numbers.

NYU acceptance at a glance (Class of 2029)

FigureNumber
Total Applications114,125
Admitted Students10,340
Total Enrolled5,662
Acceptance Rate9.1%
Percentage of Admitted Students Who Enrolled54.8%
First-Year Retention Rate96.1%
Student-to-Faculty Ratio12:1

Let’s look more closely at a couple of numbers.

First, 54.8% of admitted students enrolled. That’s a moderate yield, lower than Ivy and Ivy+ schools. Still, more than half of admitted students pick NYU over every other offer. A New York City address does a lot of recruiting on its own.

Because the yield is healthy but not high, NYU admits a larger share of applicants. This increases your chances of getting in, especially if you have a standout academic profile.

The student-to-faculty ratio is 12:1. That’s a normal figure for a large private research university like NYU, but wider than most Ivies and other top-tier schools. If small seminars are your priority, ask about ratios within your specific school by major, since NYU’s undergraduate colleges vary widely.

A note on residency: NYU only publishes the top-line number

If you search for ā€œNYU international acceptance rateā€ or ā€œout-of-state acceptance rate,ā€ you might receive a number. Be skeptical of it.

NYU’s Common Data Set leaves those cells blank. It only reports the totals: 114,125 applied, 10,340 admitted, 5,662 enrolled, for a single 9.1% rate that applies to everyone.

That means any residency-specific rate is an estimate or back-of-the-envelope guess, not an official NYU figure.

Two things we can say with confidence:

Once again, NYU’s applicant pool is enormous. With over 114,000 applications, NYU receives roughly twice as many applications as Harvard. Sheer scale (not residency quirks) is the defining feature of the NYU applicant pool.

NYU is a private university that resembles a large public flagship.

Test scores at NYU: Who gets in?

Test score ranges for NYU’s Class of 2029 require a careful read. NYU is test-optional, and only 37% of enrolled first-year students submitted any standardized scores — 27% submitted the SAT and 10% the ACT. The remaining enrolled students didn’t submit test scores.

At the same time, NYU considers test scores very important. So if you received a score above the 25th percentile, submitting scores works to your advantage.

See also: Which colleges are still test-optional in 2025?

SAT and ACT Score Ranges NYU (Class of 2029)

Test Section25th percentile50th percentile (median)75th percentile
SAT Composite148015201550
SAT Evidence-Based Reading and Writing730750770
SAT Math750780790
ACT Composite343536

Reading these scores: the 25th-75th percentile puts you in the middle 50% of enrolled students who submitted scores. A 1480 SAT puts you at the 25th percentile — three-quarters of NYU students scored 1480 or higher.

The range is tight and high. From a 1480 floor to a 1550 ceiling is a narrow band. Among those who submitted test scores, NYU’s middle 50% looks a lot like the middle 50% at more selective schools with far lower acceptance rates.

The SAT math median is 789. Half of the SAT test submitters scored at or above 780 on the math section. NYU’s strongest programs, particularly in STEM fields, pull this number up.

But remember NYU’s submission rate. Only about 1 in 3 enrolled students submitted any score. A strong application without scores is not a long shot at NYU. It’s how the majority of the 2029 Class applied.

GPA of NYU class 2025–2026

Your high school GPA carries real weight at NYU. The Common Data Set shows the percentage of students enrolled by GPA.

GPA rangePercentage of enrolled students
4.017.2%
3.75 – 3.9954.7
3.50 – 3.7421.4%
3.25 – 3.495.2%
3.00 – 3.241.0%
Below 3.00.5%

The average high school GPA of enrolled students was 3.81 on a 4.0 scale. More striking is the concentration: 93% of enrolled students had a 3.5 or higher, and nearly three-quarters landed at 3.75 or higher.

With test scores optional for many applicants, course rigor and GPA do more of the heavy lifting at NYU.

See also: Why GPA goals matter more than you think in junior year

What NYU actually cares about in admissions

NYU’s Common Data Set explicitly shows how admissions weighs each part of your application.

FactorImportance
Rigor of secondary schoolVery important
Academic GPAVery important
Standardized test scores (if submitted)Very important
Application essayVery important
RecommendationsVery important
Character/personal qualitiesVery important
Extracurricular activitiesImportant
Talent/abilityImportant
First-generation statusConsidered
Alumni/ae relationConsidered
Geographic residenceConsidered
Volunteer workConsidered
Work experienceConsidered
Class rankNot considered
InterviewNot considered
Level of applicant’s interestNot considered

GPA and rigor are both in the top tier. NYU explicitly lists ā€œAcademic GPAā€ and ā€œRigor of secondary schoolā€ as Very Important. Translation: take the hardest courses your school offers and do well in them. A strong GPA with an easy schedule won’t carry the same weight.

Test scores are ā€œVery important,ā€ even though they’re optional. This nuance trips families up. While NYU doesn’t require scores, when you submit them, they’re in the top tier. If your scores are high, they really help. If they aren’t, the test-optional door is still open.

Class rank is ā€œNot considered.ā€ Many high schools no longer rank students, and NYU has taken it off the table entirely. Don’t worry about where you fall in your class. Instead, focus on your transcripts and courses.

Character and personal qualities fall in the top tier as well. This is the work your essays and recommendations are doing for your application.

Note: For programs that require a portfolio or audition (such as Tisch and Steinhardt), NYU states that artistic talent becomes ā€œVery important.ā€ If you’re applying to these programs, your portfolio or audition outweighs many other top-tier factors.

Cost of attending NYU and financial aid

For many families, a school’s price tag is as important as acceptance figures. NYU carries the reputation as one of the most expensive schools in the country. But that reputation is based on sticker price, and a recent policy change has rewritten its financial aid story.

Estimated annual cost of attendance (before aid), 2025 – 2026

CostAmount
Tuition and required fees$65,622
Food and housing (on-campus)$25,516
Transportation$2,366
Personal Expenses$2,014
Books and supplies$1,470

Total estimated cost of attendance (on-campus): $96,988

Catch your breath. This figure is rarely what families actually pay.

NYU financial aid

For years, NYU was known for not meeting students’ full financial needs — a real weakness compared to its peers. That changed with the Class of 2025.

NYU now pledges to meet 100% of demonstrated financial need for first-year students admitted to its New York campus. This commitment extends to all four years and includes international students.

Among first-year students awarded need-based aid, the average scholarship and grant award was $60,191. Additionally, nearly 1,500 first-year aid recipients had their full need met.

One honest caveat worth keeping in mind: the 100% pledge applies to first-year students admitted to the New York campus. Returning students who enrolled before the policy went into effect, and students at NYU’s other campuses, may see different packages.

And NYU’s methodology for ā€œdemonstrated needā€ may differ from what your family can actually pay. 

Run the numbers yourself. Use NYU’s Net Price Calculator for a personalized estimate.

How to strengthen your NYU application

  • Take harder courses and perform well. GPA and course rigor are both ā€œVery important,ā€ sitting at the tippy-top of NYU’s list. Your transcript is the single strongest signal you can send.
  • Deliberate about sending test scores. NYU is test-optional, but scores are weighted heavily when submitted. If your scores are in the 1480–1550 SAT range, or above 34 on the ACT, send them. If not, applying without submitting is the right choice.
  • Match your application to the right program. A Stern business applicant, a Tisch arts applicant, and a College of Arts and Sciences applicant are evaluated very differently. While a Stern student might be expected to score at least 750 on the Math SAT, a Tisch student can likely rely on their portfolio.

FAQ

What’s NYU’s acceptance rate?

NYU’s acceptance rate for the Class of 2029 was 9.1%: 114,125 students applied, and 10,340 were admitted. The yield rate was 54.8%, meaning more than half of admitted students chose to enroll.

Does NYU require the SAT or ACT?

No, NYU is test-optional. Only about 37% of enrolled first-year students submitted scores (27% the SAT, 10% the ACT). However, NYU lists test scores as “Very Important” when they are submitted, so strong scores help your application even though they aren’t required. NYU also accepts certain alternatives in lieu of the SAT or ACT.

What SAT score do I need for NYU?

Among enrolled first-year students who submitted SAT scores, the middle 50% ranged from approximately 1480 to 1550, with a median of 1520. The 25th percentile sits at 730 for Reading & Writing and 750 for Math. Because most students apply without scores, there’s no minimum, but submitting a score in this range strengthens your case.

What GPA do I need for NYU?

The average high school GPA of enrolled students was 3.81 on a 4.0 scale, and 93% of enrolled students had a 3.5 or higher. With NYU test-optional for most applicants, GPA and course rigor are the most important academic factors in your application.

Does NYU meet full financial need? 

For first-year undergraduates admitted to the New York campus, NYU now pledges to meet 100% of demonstrated financial need — a policy that began with the Class of 2025. The average need-based scholarship and grant award for first-year students was $60,191.

What does NYU look for in admissions?

NYU lists six factors as “Very important”: rigor of secondary school record, academic GPA, standardized test scores (when submitted), the application essay, recommendations, and character/personal qualities. Class rank, the interview, and demonstrated interest are not considered. For portfolio or audition programs like Tisch, artistic talent becomes ā€œVery important.ā€

Final thoughts

The takeaway? Course rigor, a strong transcript, and essays with a real point of view carry an NYU application further than test scores you may not even need to send.

And if you’re serious about NYU, get your application in front of someone who has actually read them for a living.

The 9.1% acceptance rate is about the whole pool — not you. The only way to know your real odds is to have a qualified former admissions officer pressure-test your application before NYU does. The figures in this guide are drawn from New York University’s official Common Data Set 2025 –2026. Reported counts (applications, enrollments, test scores, GPA, financial aid, etc.) are taken directly from this document. Cost-of-attendance figures are drawn from NYU’s published 2025-2026 tuition and fees, as NYU’s CDS did not report finalized cost data. Always confirm current-year requirements, deadlines, and testing policies on NYU’s website before applying.

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