Dartmouth Admissions: How Applications Are Evaluated

Dartmouth Admissions: How Applications Are Evaluated

Hanover, New Hampshire · Private

Acceptance Rate

6.0%

Regular Rate

~3.8%

Early Program

ED

Binding Early

Yes

Early Deadline

Nov 1

Regular Deadline

Jan 3

Source: Dartmouth CDS 2025/26

What is Dartmouth's acceptance rate?

Dartmouth admitted 1,699 students from 28,230 applicants for the Class of 2029, a 6.0% acceptance rate. For perspective, Dartmouth turned away more valedictorians than it admitted.
Dartmouth's applicant pool is smaller than other Ivies. Penn drew more than 72,000 applicants for the same cycle, and Stanford roughly 60,000. The gap reflects a pool already filtered by fit, since students who apply to Dartmouth have usually decided they want a small, community-driven Ivy on the quarter system, in a town of about 11,000 people in rural New Hampshire. Students who would prefer an urban research university should apply elsewhere.
That self-selection changes what the acceptance rate measures. At a school that screens primarily on academics, a 6.0% rate sorts mostly on who can do the work. At Dartmouth, the academic floor gets cleared early, and the rate sorts on something harder to quantify: who will thrive in the community Dartmouth actually is, and who has given a reader enough to make that case.

Once a Dartmouth file clears the academic floor, the 6.0% rate stops measuring who can do the work. It measures who will fit the community and who gave a reader enough to argue it. That is a different filter from raw selectivity.

How does Dartmouth's class compose by geography?

Dartmouth's class composition reflects who's willing to live in Hanover as much as who Dartmouth admits. It’s a small, rural town that sits two and a half hours from Boston, the nearest major city. Applicants who arrive at the application have already chosen that, and the CDS rates geographic residence only "Considered" in admissions decisions. The geography you see in the enrolled class is mostly the residue of self-selection in the pool.
A note on what this data can and can’t show. Dartmouth's Common Data Set reports applications and enrollment by residency, but not admit counts by region. Geographic acceptance rates can’t be calculated from public Dartmouth data the way they can for some peers. What the figures describe is who ends up in Hanover, not who is more or less likely to be admitted from a given state.
Beyond the residency split, the most recent enrolled class came from 51 US states and territories and 53 countries. The regional breakdown across the class was 21% South, 18% New England, 18% Mid-Atlantic, 18% West, 15% international, and 10% Midwest. 20% of enrolled students come from rural hometowns and 31% from urban ones.
Applying from outside New Hampshire carries no disadvantage. New Hampshire applicants made up 516 of the 28,230 applications, under 2% of the pool, and the small in-state enrollment reflects that small applicant base rather than any preference in either direction.

Geographic composition of applicants and enrolled students

Applicant group
Applied
Enrolled
Share of class
In-state (NH)
516
27
2.2%
Out-of-state (US)
19,551
1,024
85.0%
International
8,163
154
12.8%
Total
28,230
1,205
100%

Dartmouth CDS 2025-26

Class composition
85%Out-of-state13%International2%New Hampshire

The 2% New Hampshire share reflects who applies, not who gets admitted. Geography simply isn't a lever in Dartmouth admissions.

How has Dartmouth's acceptance rate changed over time?

Dartmouth's acceptance rate didn't ease down gradually over the past decade. It reset in a single cycle. Through the Classes of 2020 to 2024 the rate ran between 7.9% and 10.6%, and then it dropped into the 6% band with the Class of 2025 and has stayed there in every year since. The reason is visible in the application numbers, where Dartmouth's own admissions office recorded a 33% jump in a single cycle, from 21,392 applications for the Class of 2024 to more than 28,000 for the Class of 2025, a level the pool has held ever since.
What makes the drop so sharp is that the pressure came from both directions at once. As applications climbed past 28,000, Dartmouth chose to admit fewer students rather than more, and offers fell from somewhere around 2,100 to 2,200 in the earlier classes to roughly 1,700 today. With more applicants competing for fewer seats, the rate was always going to fall faster than rising application volume alone would have pushed it.
Since 2025 the rate has settled onto a new and lower plateau. Across the five most recent cycles it has moved only between 5.4% and 6.4%, reaching its floor of 5.4% for the Class of 2028 after applications spiked to 31,656. The reinstated testing requirement, which arrived with the Class of 2029, did nothing to lift the rate back toward where it sat before 2025, and the Class of 2030 drew 28,863 applications at 5.8%, comfortably inside the new band.

Applied vs Accepted

AdmittedApplicants

Source: Source: NY Times 2025

Eleven-year acceptance rate trend

Class
Applicants
Admitted
Acceptance rate
2020
20,675
2,190
10.6%
2021
20,035
2,093
10.4%
2022
22,033
1,925
8.7%
2023
23,650
1,875
7.9%
2024
21,392
1,972
9.2%
2025
28,356
1,750
6.2%
2026
28,336
1,808
6.4%
2027
28,841
1,797
6.2%
2028
31,656
1,710
5.4%
2029
28,230
1,699
6.0%
2030
28,863
1,687
5.8%

Dartmouth Common Data Set, Classes of 2020–2029

What are Dartmouth's application requirements and deadlines?

Dartmouth's first-year application runs through the Common Application, or the QuestBridge application for eligible low-income students. There's no separate institutional form. The required components are identical for Early Decision and Regular Decision.
Requirement
Detail
Common Application
Dartmouth's primary application platform. QuestBridge finalists may apply through the QuestBridge application instead; the two are treated equally, with no preference for either.
Dartmouth Writing Supplement
Dartmouth-specific essays in addition to the Common App personal statement. Prompts are updated each cycle and include a short response plus a longer essay.
Application fee
$85 for first-year applicants, paid online through the Common App. A fee waiver is available for financial hardship, requested within the Common App, and asking for one does not disadvantage your application.
Secondary School Report
Submitted by your counselor, including the official transcript, your school profile, and a counselor evaluation.
Two teacher evaluations
From core-subject teachers who've actually taught you, junior or senior year. The letter that helps most is from someone who can describe a moment, not just a grade.
SAT or ACT
Required again for first-year applicants. Dartmouth evaluates scores in the context of your school and setting rather than against a fixed cutoff.
Three components sit outside the required list, each genuinely optional or recommended rather than mandatory.
Component
Detail
Peer recommendation
Recommended, not required. Written by a friend, classmate, or teammate rather than a teacher or counselor, it gives readers a view of how you show up among people your own age.
Alumni interview
Optional, and conducted by a Dartmouth graduate rather than an admissions officer. You can't request one; alumni reach out directly after you apply, where availability and geography allow. The conversation goes both ways, you can ask questions, and the alumnus writes a short report that's added to your file and read alongside the rest of your application. Not being offered an interview does not disadvantage you. ED interviews happen around November, RD between early December and mid-February.
Art portfolio
Optional, for applicants with serious work in studio art, music, dance, theater, or film.
Note: International applicants have additional testing and English-proficiency requirements.

The peer recommendation is unique to Dartmouth, and easy to miss until you open the supplement. Line up your recommender early and give them as much time as a teacher.

When are Dartmouth's application deadlines?

Milestone
Date
Early Decision application due
November 1
ED financial aid materials due
November 1
ED notification
Mid-December
Regular Decision application due
January 1
RD financial aid materials due
February 1
RD notification
Late March or early April
Reply / intent to enroll deadline
May 1

Dartmouth Office of Undergraduate Admissions

How does Dartmouth evaluate applications?

What the CDS says Dartmouth weighs

Dartmouth's Common Data Set rates eight factors as Very Important. Six are academic: rigor, class rank, GPA, test scores, the application essay, and recommendations. Two are non-academic: extracurricular activities and character. Among peers, Dartmouth weights test scores and class rank at the top tier alongside Princeton and Stanford. Yale, Penn, and Harvard rate one or both factors lower in their most recently published CDSs.

Factor weightings table

Factor
Dartmouth's rating
Rigor of secondary school record
Very Important
Class rank
Very Important
Academic GPA
Very Important
Standardized test scores
Very Important
Application essay
Very Important
Recommendation(s)
Very Important
Character/personal qualities
Very Important
Extracurricular activities
Very Important
Talent/ability
Important
First-generation status
Considered
Volunteer work
Considered
Interview
Considered
Geographical residence
Considered
Alumni/ae relation
Considered
Work experience
Considered
State residency
Not Considered
Religious affiliation/commitment
Not Considered
Level of applicant's interest
Not Considered

Dartmouth rates standardized test scores Very Important, matching Princeton and Stanford. Yale, Penn, and Harvard rate them Considered. A soft test score has more riding on it at Dartmouth than at several peers.

How Dartmouth applications are actually read

Every application is read in full at least twice. The admissions officer responsible for the applicant's territory completes the first read, then a second reader works through the same file independently, before the territory officer presents it to committee. The committee asks questions, and a vote decides the outcome: admit, defer, waitlist, or deny. Senior leadership reviews the final decisions before they're released.
The structure exists to keep any single reader's judgment from carrying a file on its own. A territory officer immersed in one region can develop blind spots that a reader from outside that region doesn't share, and the second read plus the full committee expose every application to more than one set of eyes. Reader training at the start of each cycle aligns the staff on shared standards.

What Dartmouth admissions readers look for in your application

Once academic capacity is established, the read becomes a search for how the file holds together and how it would present in committee. A reader is effectively building the case they'll make, or fail to make, to the room.
A reader is essentially asking, can I describe this applicant in a sentence that someone else around the table will remember an hour later? An application with a clear throughline provides that. A file without one leaves them improvising. That is what cohesion means in practice. A file where the intended major, the activities, the essays, and the recommendations all point the same direction is one a reader can describe cleanly, and one they can advocate for. One where the pieces pull in different directions is harder to carry into committee, however strong any single piece looks on its own.
The read on character surfaces most clearly in what other people say about the applicant. A teacher who singles a student out as exceptional, or who describes how they lifted the people around them, gives a reader something concrete to present. Recommendation language that distinguishes a student from the rest of the pool carries real weight in the room; generic praise gives a reader nothing to work with.

Reading test scores in context

A test score doesn't carry a fixed meaning at Dartmouth. The second reader, working without the territory officer's local knowledge, leans on the school profile to set the comparison. A 1500 at a school where the median is 1450 reads as a student stretching past their setting, while the same score at a school where the median is 1530 reads differently. The question a reader answers isn't whether a score clears a bar, but whether the student has excelled against the opportunities actually in front of them.

Why do strong applicants get rejected from Dartmouth?

Three layers explain most rejections of strong applicants. None of them is about being unqualified.

Scarcity

For the Class of 2029, Dartmouth received 28,230 applications and offered 1,699 places. The math removes a large number of qualified students before any individual weakness comes into play. A reader's job in committee isn’t to find a reason to admit; it’s to argue that this particular applicant should take one of 1,699 seats over the thousands of others who could also plausibly fill the same seat. Most rejections of strong applicants happen on that ratio alone. The pool is deep enough that Dartmouth could build a different class of 1,699 every year and lose nothing in quality.

Class-building priorities shift each cycle

Dartmouth's reading priorities aren’t static. Every cycle begins with reader training that aligns staff to that year's institutional needs, and those needs change. A new center, a quiet department, a strategic priority from leadership can all change what readers are weighing at the margin. Two applicants with nearly identical profiles can land on different sides of the decision because one fits a gap the office is trying to fill that year and the other doesn't. The mechanism isn’t visible from the outside, but it shapes outcomes in the room.

Application execution

The third layer is the one the applicant controls. Three execution failures show up repeatedly in qualified-but-rejected files:
• Recycled supplements. A student writes a strong "Why X" essay for another school and adapts it for Dartmouth without rebuilding it around what Dartmouth specifically offers. The writing is good but fails to answer the actual prompt.
• No narrative cohesion. Activities, essays, and the intended major don't speak to each other. The application reads as a list of accomplishments rather than a portrait of one student.
• Individual achievement with no community contribution. A student whose record is purely solitary, coding, research, competition, with no visible engagement in a group, a team, or a community, reads as a mismatch for a college that builds itself around shared life.

Most strong applicants who are rejected from Dartmouth made no mistake. The math takes some, the year's priorities take others, and execution failures take the rest. The applicant only controls the third.

Should you apply Early Decision to Dartmouth?

How the ED and RD rates compare

Of 3,552 Early Decision applicants for the Class of 2029, Dartmouth admitted 768, a 21.6% rate. The remaining 24,678 Regular Decision applicants competed for 931 places, an RD rate near 3.8%. Early admits made up about 45% of the admitted class.
The difference looks dramatic. It’s partly real and partly composition. ED applicants self-select for fit and academic readiness before submitting, so the early pool runs stronger on average than the regular one. The early round still offers a significant admit-rate advantage for applicants who are in range, but the gap is narrower for any individual student than the raw rates suggest.

Dartmouth's Early Decision rate (21.6%) runs more than five times the Regular Decision rate, but the early pool is also stronger. ED gives a real advantage to applicants already in range, not a workaround for those who aren't.

Before you weigh ED, understand what it commits you to.

Early Decision is binding. The Early Decision Agreement, signed by you, a parent, and your school counselor, commits you to enroll at Dartmouth if admitted. While your application is pending you can apply to other schools through non-binding programs, but no other binding early applications. The moment Dartmouth admits you in mid-December, you withdraw every other application and stop submitting new ones. The only release is for unforeseen financial hardship, and even then only after the Financial Aid Office and your family have worked through the package and cannot reach an agreement. Outside that channel, the commitment stands.
The binding nature is part of why the ED rate runs higher than RD. Dartmouth knows every ED admit will enroll, so it can build close to half its class through the early round without yield uncertainty. The trade is that you give up the ability to compare offers, hold multiple aid packages, or change your mind after December.

Apply Early Decision if:

• Dartmouth is your unambiguous first choice. You and your family have had the conversation, and everyone agrees.
• Your academic profile is in range with Dartmouth's published mid-50% by November. Testing and transcript are at their strongest, with no needed room for improvement.
• You've run Dartmouth's net price calculator and accept the package model.
• You have a peer recommender lined up. Peer recs are Dartmouth-specific and easy to forget about until the deadline.

Consider Regular Decision if:

• You need senior-year grades or stronger test scores to improve your profile.
• You're not certain Dartmouth is your top choice. Applying ED to a school you're ambivalent about damages your other applications.
• You want to compare aid packages across schools before committing.
• You haven't engaged deeply with what Dartmouth specifically is. The quarter system, the rural setting, the size of the place. Fit at Dartmouth is non-trivial, and applying early to a school you don't actually understand is a common mistake.

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