
How to Get Into Princeton University
Princeton, New Jersey · Private
Acceptance Rate
4.4%
Applicants
42,303
Admitted
1,868
Enrolled
1,408
Yield Rate
75%
UG Enrollment
5,916
Source: Princeton CDS 2025/26

Dana C.
Former Princeton Admissions Officer
Princeton's selectivity isn’t a credentials contest. It's a question of who, among a pool filled with high-achieving applicants, gives a reader a reason to fight for them in committee.
In Princeton's pool, nearly everyone was top of their class with amazing test scores. What differentiated people was whether they demonstrated a combination of intellectual vitality and a service-oriented mindset that Princeton really prizes.

Dana C.
Former Princeton Admissions Officer
Intellectually Vital
Pursues ideas because they're worth pursuing, not because they're on a syllabus.
Service-Oriented
Treats their work as something owed beyond themselves.
Ambitious and Collaborative
Pushes hard on their own work while making the room sharper.
The students who thrive at Princeton are the ones who can balance between being ambitious and being collaborative. They're students who light up in seminar discussions, but also push their peers to think a little bit harder and in a different way.

Dana C.
Former Princeton Admissions Officer
If the written version of your essay fell on the floor and I could just change your name out for anyone else's, that wasn't a good essay. That could be an essay written by anybody in the world.

Dana C.
Former Princeton Admissions Officer
Princeton is building a community, and every file is read for proof that the applicant would already be contributing on day one.
A 1500 SAT score from one student might mean something very different than another 1500 from another student, depending on the resources of their school, whether they had tutors, or if they were balancing work or other family responsibilities.

Dana C.
Former Princeton Admissions Officer
Princeton's supplements are designed to surface perspective. The strongest essays sound like a 17-year-old who has thought carefully about their place in their community and the world.
Admissions is more of an art than a science. The process is objective to a degree, but it's also deeply subjective. You can do all the things that you quote-unquote need to do and still not get in.

Dana C.
Former Princeton Admissions Officer
Rejection at Princeton is rarely about the applicant's qualifications. It turns on whether the application gave readers something distinct enough to carry through committee.
$79,320
Average need-based aid package (CDS 2025-26)
100%
Share of demonstrated need met, in grants, not loans.
$0 Cost
Most families earning up to $150,000 pay nothing: no tuition, no room and board, no fees.
No Tuition
Most families earning up to $250,000 pay no tuition.
25%
Class of 2029 Pell-eligible students. Highest in Princeton's history.
69%
Class of 2029 receiving aid.
Affordability was really a promise. That freed the admissions officers to really look at talent everywhere, even in communities where families might otherwise have thought, I can't afford an Ivy.

Dana C.
Former Princeton Admissions Officer
Princeton's aid program is designed so that getting in is the hard part. What it costs is mostly settled by what your family earns, not what the sticker price says.
97%
Six-year graduation rate (CDS 2025-26).
99%
First-year retention (CDS 2025-26).
8:1
Student-faculty ratio (CDS 2025-26).
$110,066
Median earnings, 10 years after entry (College Scorecard).
