Brown Academic Requirements: GPA, SAT Scores, & What Matters

Brown Academic Requirements: GPA, SAT Scores, & What Matters

Providence, Rhode Island · Private

Avg GPA

~4.18

Top 10% of Class

89%

Rec Units

22

Test Policy

Test Required

SAT Mid 50%

1470-1550

ACT Mid 50%

33-35

Source: Brown CDS 2024/25

Mariama A

Former Brown Admissions Officer

What GPA do you need to get into Brown?

Brown doesn't publish an average GPA, but based on Crimson's own admitted students, a competitive applicant typically sits around 3.9 unweighted (roughly 4.18 weighted).
Treat that as a working benchmark rather than a cutoff, since Brown reports no GPA figure and reads every transcript in context rather than against a threshold.
The cleaner published measure is class rank. 89% of enrolled Brown students were in the top 10% of their high school class, and 98% were in the top quarter. That is the academic story Brown actually reports, so it carries more weight than any reconstructed GPA average.
Class rank is also a better measure than GPA for the way Brown evaluates files, and Brown's own weightings back this up. The CDS rates class rank as Very Important, alongside rigor of secondary school record, academic GPA, and standardized test scores. Brown reads applicants against their school context, and class rank already encodes that comparison.
A 3.9 from a high school where most students sit below 3.4 carries different information from a 3.9 where the median is 3.95. Class rank captures the gap between you and your peer group, which is closer to how readers actually think about academic strength.

Enrolled Students Class Rank Distribution


% Enrolled Students
Top 10%
93%
Top 25%
98%
Top 50%
100%
Bottom 50%
0%

Source: Brown CDS 2025/26 C10. 29% of enrolled students submitted class rank.

Brown publishes no GPA. Crimson's admitted students cluster around a 3.9 unweighted (about 4.18 weighted), and 89% of enrolled students ranked in the top 10% of their class. Both describe the bar without setting a cutoff.

How does Brown actually evaluate your transcript?

Brown evaluates your transcript in three layers, asking what your high school offered, how you used those offerings, and whether your course selection lines up with the concentration you say you want to study. The transcript is the first thing a regional reader opens, every time, on every file.
The school profile sets the baseline. Admissions officers know what AP, IB, honors, and dual-enrollment options each high school offers, and they read course selection against that menu.
A student who took eight APs at a school that offers eight is in a different position from a student who took eight at a school that offers twenty. School resources affect what readers expect, but they do not raise or lower the academic bar on their own. The standard is what the student did with what they had available to them.
Alignment with the declared concentration completes the read. A student declaring math needs a transcript that exhausted the school's math offerings and finished strong in them.
A creative writing applicant still needs to take Calc BC if it was available, because Brown wants academic balance across the board. Brown rewards interdisciplinary range, and readers look for evidence that an applicant will use a curriculum with no requirements rather than hide in one corner of it.

Rigor in context

Brown reads your transcript against your school profile, then asks whether you pushed past it.

Alignment with concentration

Math applicants exhaust math offerings. Humanities applicants still take Calc BC.

Distance traveled

A modest profile from a low-resource school can outweigh a stronger one from a high-resource peer.

I would use the school profile, look at the offerings, compare that to what the student took, and how that connects to their declared major. If they wanted to study math, I needed to see they exhausted their math offerings.

Mariama A

Former Brown Admissions Officer

Is Brown test-optional or test-required?

Brown is test-required again. The university reinstated the SAT or ACT requirement for the Class of 2029 (entering Fall 2025) after a four-year test-optional period that ran through the Class of 2028. Applicants must now submit either SAT or ACT scores with their application.
Latest data shows the jump. With testing reinstated for the Class of 2029, 77% of enrolled students submitted SAT scores and 28% submitted ACT scores, up from 61% and 24% the year before.
The SAT mid-50% range for first-year students who entered Fall 2025 sits between 1470 and 1550, with a median of 1520.
The ACT mid-50% sits between 33 and 35, with a median of 35. The slightly lower SAT range reflects a broader pool of submitters under the requirement, which now includes students who might have applied test-optional in prior cycles.
Brown uses testing as a confirmation rather than a filter. A strong score reaffirms what the transcript already shows. A weaker score in a high-resource setting raises questions about the transcript. A weaker score in a low-resource setting often points to potential, particularly when paired with strong grades and the kind of coursework rigor a school made available. The score itself rarely decides a file. The score in context does most of the work.

SAT vs ACT Test Preference


SAT submitted
ACT submitted
Fall 2024 (Test Optional)
61%
24%
Fall 2025 (Test Required)
77%
28%

Source: Brown CDS 2024-2025, 2025-2026

Brown used testing as a confirmation that the student can handle learning on the campus. A 1450 might seem lower within the Brown pool, but within a setting where students get 1100, that shows great potential.

Mariama A

Former Brown Admissions Officer

What SAT or ACT score do you need for Brown?

A competitive SAT for Brown sits in the 1470 to 1550 range, with a midpoint around 1520. For the ACT, the competitive range is 33 to 35, with a midpoint of 35. These are Brown's published 25th-to-75th percentile bands for enrolled students, not a cutoff. Brown publishes no minimum score and reads every score against an applicant's school context rather than against a fixed bar.
Most admitted students cluster near the top of those bands. 89% of SAT submitters scored between 1400 and 1600, and 94% of ACT submitters scored 30 to 36. Submission rates differ by test: 77% of enrolled students submitted the SAT and 28% submitted the ACT.
Informally, the bar shifts by concentration. STEM-heavy concentrations like engineering, computer science, and physics create a higher de facto floor, closer to the top of the published range.
Humanities applicants are evaluated competitively from lower in the band. These aren't Brown's published policy. They're patterns admissions officers see inside the reading room, which give you a more accurate read on how scores move a file than the published range alone.

SAT & ACT Percentile Score for Brown Admits


25th
50th
75th
SAT Composite
1470
1520
1550
ACT Composite
33
35
35

SAT Composite Range

1400-160089%1200-139910%1000-11991%

Source: Source: Brown CDS 2025/26

For STEM students, engineering, computer science, physics, there's a threshold. At 1550 and above, you're fine. If you're a humanities kid, around 1500-plus or 1530 is alright. It really depends on the concentration you select.

Mariama A

Former Brown Admissions Officer

Brown publishes no score cutoff. The SAT mid-50% range is 1470–1550 and the ACT mid-50% is 33–35, read against your school context. 89% of SAT submitters scored 1400 or higher, but a strong score never carries a file on its own.

How does Brown compare to other top schools academically?

Brown's academic profile sits in the same band as its closest peers, though slightly fewer admits come from the top 10% of their class than at Harvard, Yale, Princeton, MIT, or Stanford.
The gap is small, and the comparison is more useful for context than for ranking. Class rank and score ranges across these schools fall inside a narrow window, and the file-level differences between admits at any of them are decided on factors other than the published academic numbers.

Top 10%
SAT Mid 50%
ACT Mid 50%
Test Policy
Brown
89%
1470-1550
33-35
Required
Harvard
94%
1510-1580
34-36
Required
Yale
97%
1470-1560
33-35
Required
Princeton
94%*
1490-1560
34-35
Required
MIT
96%
1520-1580
35-36
Required
Stanford
97%
1520-1570
34-36
Required

Brown's academic profile sits inside a narrow band shared by its closest peers. The differences between admits at these schools are decided on essays, fit, and narrative, not on a few points of SAT or class rank.

What courses does Brown expect you to take?

Brown publishes recommended and required course units in its CDS. A unit equals one year of study or its equivalent. The published guidance functions as a recommendation rather than a strict admissions formula, and Brown adds that STEM-bound applicants should plan to take more advanced coursework than the published minimums.

Brown's course expectations (CDS 2024-25, Section C5)


Units Required
Units Recommended
English
4
4
Mathematics
4
4
Science
3 (2 lab)
4 (3 lab)
Foreign Language
3
4
Social Studies
0
1
History
2
3
Academic Electives
1
1
Computer Science
0
0
Visual/Performing Arts
0
1
TOTAL
17
22
Brown CDS Note
Future science, math, engineering students will benefit from more advanced courses related to those fields.

Do academics alone get you into Brown?

Academics alone don’t get you into Brown. They function as the gatekeeper to admissions, not the decider. Applications with weak transcripts or inappropriate coursework for the declared concentration are filtered out before they reach a regional reader. The pre-filter is strict, and applicants who clear it have already shown academic capacity.
What changes after the filter is the question being asked. Once a file reaches a reader, the evaluation shifts from "can this student do the work" to "is this student a Brown student." The Open Curriculum question, the coherence of the application's narrative, the read on character from recommendations, and the authenticity of the essay voice carry the rest of the file. Strong academics do not substitute for these.
A perfect transcript with a generic "Why Brown" essay reads as a credentialed applicant who hasn’t engaged with what makes Brown distinct.
This is also why Brown's C7 weightings place four non-academic factors (application essay, recommendations, talent or ability, and character or personal qualities) in the same Very Important tier as the four academic ones (rigor, class rank, GPA, and standardized test scores).
Strong academics are necessary, but they share the top tier with everything that shows who you are. Brown built its rating system to mirror how readers actually decide files, and the published weightings encode the room's priorities.

A perfect transcript with a generic “Why Brown” essay reads as a credentialed applicant who hasn’t engaged with what makes Brown distinct.

This is also why Brown's C7 weightings place four non-academic factors (application essay, recommendations, talent or ability, and character or personal qualities) in the same Very Important tier as the four academic ones (rigor, class rank, GPA, and standardized test scores).
Strong academics are necessary, but they share the top tier with everything that shows who you are. Brown built its rating system to mirror how readers actually decide files, and the published weightings encode the room's priorities.

Gets you past the filter

Strong GPA, competitive scores, rigorous curriculum. The bar for reaching a reader.

Gets you admitted

Open Curriculum fit, narrative coherence, distance traveled, voice, and read on character.

They are looking for a balance between STEM and humanities, regardless of your concentration. If you are a creative writing concentrator, yes, we want you to take AP English. We also want you to take AP Calc BC.

Mariama A

Former Brown Admissions Officer

What are the most common academic mistakes Brown applicants make?

Five academic mistakes show up repeatedly in files that should have been admitted and weren’t.

Choosing GPA protection over rigor

Students who take easier courses to preserve a 4.0 give readers the wrong message. Admissions officers see the school profile, notice which advanced courses were skipped, and read the choice as risk-aversion. Brown rates rigor as Very Important and an unrigorous transcript is harder to defend than a slightly lower GPA earned in tougher classes.

Misaligned coursework against the declared concentration

A student declaring a math concentration without exhausting the available math offerings creates a file that doesn’t cohere. Committee members raise the gap and the file struggles to recover.

Failing to push past the school's curriculum

Stopping at Calc BC at a school that expects students to reach beyond it (through community college, dual enrollment, or independent study) appears as a lack of intellectual initiative. Brown reads applicants against the resources available to them, including resources outside the high school itself.

Strategic concentration switching

Declaring a less competitive concentration while every other piece of the application points at a more competitive one is a pattern committee members surface immediately. Readers see through the move and the file gets challenged in committee.

Treating testing as the differentiator

Brown elevated standardized test scores to Very Important in the CDS when it reinstated the testing requirement, but the function inside the reading room hasn’t changed. A perfect SAT doesn’t compensate for a thin transcript or a generic essay. Testing confirms a story the rest of the file is already telling.

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