Stanford Academic Requirements: GPA, SAT, & ACT Scores

Stanford Academic Requirements: GPA, SAT, & ACT Scores

Stanford, California · Private

Avg GPA (W)

4.18

Top 10% Rank

97%

Rec Units

21

Test Policy

Test Required

ACT 25th-75th

34-36

SAT 25th-75th

1520-1570

Source: Stanford CDS 2025/26

Kimberley L.

Former Stanford Admissions Officer

What GPA Do You Need to Get Into Stanford?

Stanford doesn't publish a minimum GPA, so no threshold exists that guarantees consideration or eliminates a candidate. Transcripts are read in context: the courses behind the grades, the rigor of the curriculum, and what was realistically available at a given school matter as much as the number itself. That said, the enrolled class data makes the competitive landscape clear.
Among enrolled students in the Class of 2029, 73% reported a perfect 4.0 unweighted GPA, and another 16.2% fell between 3.75 and 3.99. Combined, nearly 90% of enrolled students had an unweighted GPA of 3.75 or above. The average across the class was 3.9. These figures describe the academic depth of the applicant pool. Understanding the range helps frame realistic preparation, but Stanford reads every transcript in the context of the school it comes from.
GPA Range
% of Enrolled Students
4.0
73.0%
3.75-3.99
16.2%
3.50-3.74
7.9%
3.25-3.49
2.9%
3.00-3.24
0.1%
Below 3.0
0%
Source: CDS 2025-26
GPA Distribution
73%4.016%3.75-3.9911%Below 3.75

Source: Stanford CDS 2025/26

Stanford doesn't publish a minimum GPA. What the data shows is that 97% of enrolled students were in the top 10% of their class, & nearly three-quarters reported a perfect 4.0. The GPA bar is high, but it's only one component of many.

How Does Stanford Actually Evaluate Your GPA?

Rigor is rated Very Important in Stanford's CDS, sitting at the same level as essays, recommendations, character, and test scores. That tells you something important: a pristine GPA earned in unchallenging coursework reads differently to one built across the hardest classes a school offers. Stanford's admissions officers know the difference, and so do the teachers writing recommendations about it.
Context is everything. Admission officers travel extensively to develop familiarity with the schools, curricula, and grading conventions in their territories. A student from a rural school with limited AP offerings is evaluated against what was available to them, not against the course catalog of a well-resourced private school. That regional expertise is what allows Stanford to read every transcript on its own terms rather than against a universal standard.
Academic interests and course choices also need to align. A student claiming a passion for computer science whose transcript shows no advanced mathematics is telling two different stories simultaneously, and experienced readers notice the contradiction immediately. The academic record needs to reinforce the narrative being built elsewhere in the application.

Rigor Over Perfection

A demanding curriculum matters more than a perfect GPA earned in easier classes.

Context Matters

Stanford reads transcripts through each school’s curriculum, grading, and opportunities.

Alignment Counts

Academic choices should support the interests a student claims to care about.

Admission officers become experts in their region. We would travel extensively, so we understood the nuances of the region, of the different schools, of the opportunities available.

Kimberley L.

Former Stanford Admissions Officer

Is Stanford Test-Optional or Test-Required?

Stanford requires standardized testing.
After pausing its requirement during the pandemic, Stanford reinstated the SAT or ACT as mandatory beginning with the fall 2025 application cycle, making the Class of 2030 the first cohort for whom scores are required. The decision followed a faculty review confirming that test scores are significant predictors of academic performance at Stanford, and the university has been explicit that while testing is required, there is no minimum score.
The score submission figures in the data on this page reflect the Class of 2029, the last cycle admitted under the test-optional policy. Among those enrolled students, 56% submitted SAT scores and 21% submitted ACT scores voluntarily. That the majority chose to submit during a test-optional cycle speaks to how seriously the Stanford applicant pool approaches testing even when it isn't required.
Test scores are one of nine factors Stanford rates as Very Important, and they've never been the deciding one. Officers read scores in context, weighed against the sustained academic record that AP and IB results provide, and considered alongside the full file. A score that falls below Stanford's published ranges doesn't close a door. But it does raise a question that the rest of the application needs to answer convincingly.

SAT vs ACT Scores Submitted

Submitted SAT73%Submitted ACT27%

Source: Stanford CDS 2025/26

It is a day or two out of the student's life. Yes, it's an important data point. But it's a day or two versus the transcripts, extracurriculars, everything else is kind of four years in the making.

Kimberley L.

Former Stanford Admissions Officer

What SAT Score Do You Need for Stanford?

There are no score cutoffs at Stanford. Test scores are read alongside the rest of the file, compared against what other students from the same school submitted, and weighed against the sustained academic record that AP and IB results provide. The numbers below show where the competitive pool sits. They don't show a floor, because there isn't one.
Among enrolled students in the Class of 2029, the SAT mid-50% composite range was 1520-1570. On the math section, 97.9% of submitters scored between 700 and 800. On EBRW, 97.2% scored in that range. For ACT submitters, 99.2% scored between 30 and 36 on the composite. The 25th percentile figures are the most instructive for applicants benchmarking themselves: 25% of enrolled students scored below the mid-50% floor and were still admitted on the strength of the full file.

SAT Score Ranges of Accepted Students

Score Range
SAT EBRW
SAT Math
700-800
97.2%
97.9%
600-699
2.8%
2.1%

ACT Score Ranges of Accepted Students

Score Range
ACT Composite
ACT Math
30-36
99.2%
95.1%
24-29
0.8%
4.9%

There are no score cutoffs. Stanford's mid-50% SAT range is 1520-1570, but 25% of enrolled students scored below that floor and were admitted on the strength of everything else.

A test score would never keep a student out if there was enough strong components in the rest of the application.

Kimberley L.

Former Stanford Admissions Officer

How Does Stanford Compare to Other Top Schools Academically?

At this level of selectivity, the academic profiles of peer institutions are strikingly similar. The differences between them are marginal, which reinforces a consistent truth: academic credentials alone rarely determine outcomes at any of these schools.

Avg GPA (W)
SAT 25-75%
ACT 25-75%
Test Policy
Stanford
~4.18
1520-1570
34-36
Required
Harvard
4.21
1510-1580
34-36
Required
Yale
~4.17
1470-1560
33-35
Flexible
Princeton
~4.20
1490-1560
34-35
Required
MIT
~4.19
1520-1570
34-36
Required
Source: Individual institution Common Data Sets. Stanford, Yale, Princeton: CDS 2025-26. Harvard, MIT: CDS 2024-25.

What Courses Does Stanford Expect You to Take?

Stanford doesn't prescribe a fixed course list. What it recommends is a rigorous, broad preparation across core academic disciplines, with enough depth to confirm that a student is ready for the demands of university-level work. The quarter system Stanford operates on rewards intellectual range: students have the flexibility to explore broadly across their four years, and the strongest applicants arrive already showing that curiosity in their high school course choices.

Recommended Courses for Stanford

Subject
Recommended Years
English
4
Mathematics
4
Science
3+
Foreign Language
3+
Social Studies
3+
Other (electives)
3
Total recommended academic units
20+
These are recommendations, not requirements. Stanford knows not every school offers the same opportunities, and no student is penalized for a curriculum their school doesn't provide. What admissions officers are looking for is evidence that a student pushed as far as their environment allowed.
For students following an AP curriculum, strong results across subjects aligned with stated academic interests provide Stanford with direct evidence of college-level readiness. Where a test score falls slightly short, a convincing AP record offers meaningful context that admissions officers take seriously.

How Does Stanford Evaluate International Curricula?

Stanford evaluates all curricula in context, and its territory-based reading structure means admissions officers become familiar with the systems used across their regions.
Officers responsible for international territories spend years building expertise in the specific curricula, grading conventions, and educational cultures of their areas, from IB programs across Europe to national boards across South and Southeast Asia.
That depth of knowledge is what allows Stanford to read a file from Mumbai or Singapore with the same precision it brings to one from London or São Paulo.

IB Diploma

The IB Diploma is well understood and valued at Stanford. Strong applicants typically present Higher Level scores of 6 or 7, with the full Diploma preferred over individual certificates. Predicted scores are accepted at both REA and RD stages, and alignment between predicted grades and internal assessment records strengthens the academic case considerably.

A-Levels

A-Levels are a well-established qualification in Stanford's process. Among competitive applicants, A* or A grades across three to four subjects is the norm, with predicted grades central to the application. Subject choices should reflect intended academic direction without sacrificing breadth where the curriculum allows.

CBSE / ISC

Stanford's admissions officers are familiar with both Indian boards. Competitive applicants tend to present aggregates above 95%, though a strong result from a highly selective school carries different weight than the same figure from a less demanding environment.

Other International Systems

From the French Baccalaureate to the German Abitur to national leaving examinations across Africa, Latin America, and Southeast Asia, each system is evaluated on its own terms. The consistent question is whether the student pursued the most rigorous options available and performed at the highest level within them. A counselor recommendation that provides clear context about grading scales and school profile can make a significant difference.

International students who maybe weren't planning on applying to a U.S. institution don't have standardized testing on their radar at all. We understand that there's nuances of preparation and access.

Kimberley L.

Former Stanford Admissions Officer

Do Academics Alone Get You Into Stanford?

No. Stanford's CDS rates nine factors as Very Important, and academic credentials account for three of them: rigor, GPA, and test scores. The remaining six, essays, recommendations, extracurricular activities, talent, character, and class rank, all carry equal billing. A transcript that confirms academic readiness will get an application into the conversation. What gets it admitted is everything that the transcript can't convey.
The students who advance are those whose academic record, essays, activities, and recommendations point toward the same cohesive narrative. Strong grades establish that a student can handle the work. Everything beyond that establishes who they are, what they care about, and what they'll contribute to a campus community that expects everyone to show up fully.

Gets You Read

Strong grades, scores, and rigor earn a place in the committee conversation.

Gets You Considered

A cohesive file shows the same student across academics, essays, activities, and recs.

Gets You Admitted

Curiosity, purpose, authentic voice, and character make the student hard to forget.

Strong academics is kind of the qualifier for students to be in the committee process. The differentiator really can lay on the essays and kind of how they think.

Kimberley L.

Former Stanford Admissions Officer

What Are the Most Common Academic Mistakes Stanford Applicants Make?

Most mistakes trace back to the same misunderstanding: treating the academic component as a separate exercise in score maximization rather than as one thread in a larger, integrated argument.

Over-indexing on GPA at the expense of rigor

Stanford rates course rigor as Very Important, at the same level as essays and character. Choosing easier classes to protect a GPA sends precisely the wrong signal to officers who are trained to read exactly that trade-off.

Misaligned courses and stated interests

A student applying as a classics major whose entire extracurricular record is built around computer science raises immediate questions. The academic record and the personal narrative need to reinforce each other, not pull in opposite directions.

Overestimating the weight of a perfect score

Test scores are one of nine factors Stanford rates as Very Important. A 1600 SAT doesn't compensate for essays that fall flat or an activity list without depth or conviction.

Ignoring the quarter system advantage

Stanford's quarter system creates genuine flexibility to explore broadly across four years. Applicants who arrive with rigid tunnel vision about a single discipline are missing part of what makes Stanford distinctive. Showing intellectual range and openness in course choices demonstrates readiness for that environment.

The most common academic mistake at Stanford is building a record around the wrong goal: protecting averages, avoiding challenge, or choosing courses that weaken the story the rest of the application is trying to tell.

It was very easy to see through students who applied as an arts major but were all CS in their extracurriculars. I myself was a classics major, so I could see right through that.

Kimberley L.

Former Stanford Admissions Officer

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Stanford Academic Requirements | GPA, SAT, & ACT Scores