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

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

New York · Private

Avg GPA (W)

4.15

Top 10% of Class

94%

Rec Units

21

Test Policy

Test Optional

SAT Mid 50%

1510-1580

ACT Mid 50%

34-35

Source: Columbia CDS 2024/25

Jermaine D.

Former Columbia Admissions Officer

What GPA Do You Need to Get Into Columbia?

To be competitive at Columbia, you need an unweighted GPA of 3.9 or higher based on Crimson's experience supporting hundreds of admitted Columbia students across recent cycles, alongside rigorous coursework across all four years of high school. Columbia doesn't publish a GPA cutoff or distribution in its Common Data Set, but the class rank data does back the picture up: 94% of admits whose schools report rank were in the top 10% of their graduating class, and 100% were in the top quarter. Zero admitted students fell below the top half.
The class rank figure only covers 25.7% of admits because many US high schools no longer rank, but the underlying picture holds. Inside the admissions office, when a GPA isn't 4.0 or 100-scale, officers run an internal calculation to map it against Columbia's benchmarks. The harder a GPA is to verify, the more attention shifts to standardized cross-references: AP scores, IB subject tests, SAT or ACT submissions. The thinking is straightforward: if one academic signal is hard to read, the rest of the profile has to do more of the work.
Class Rank
% of Enrolled Students (of those reporting)
Top 10% of class
94%
Top 25% of class
100%
Top 50% of class
100%
Bottom 50%
0%
% Enrolled Students
94%Top 10%6%Top 11-25%

Source: CDS 2024-25

Columbia doesn’t publish a GPA distribution. Among the 25.7% of admits whose schools report class rank, 94% were in the top 10%, and Crimson's experience shows competitive applicants typically present unweighted GPAs of 3.9 or higher.

An admissions officer at Columbia would calculate any non-standard GPAs. If the GPA is harder to verify, students must show other standardized markers: SAT, ACT, or AP scores.

Jermaine D.

Former Columbia Admissions Officer

How Does Columbia Actually Evaluate Your GPA and Coursework?

Columbia evaluates your GPA and coursework in context, with rigor of secondary school record rated Very Important in the CDS alongside GPA, class rank, essays, recommendations, extracurriculars, and character. Inside the admissions office, officers read by territory and become regional experts. They know your school, your curriculum, and what was actually available to you, which means a 3.9 GPA at a school offering 25 AP courses reads differently from a 3.9 at a school offering five.
The contextual read is the reason rigor sits in the top tier of Columbia's evaluation factors. Officers want to see that you took the hardest courses your school offered and did well in them, not that you padded a transcript with electives to protect your GPA. Coursework that aligns with your stated major matters too: if you're applying for econ but the transcript leans heavily into literature with no quantitative depth, that misalignment registers, and not in your favor.

Rigor Is Very Important

Columbia rates rigor at the top tier alongside GPA and class rank.

Context Matters

Officers read by region and school. They know your curriculum, your scale, your realistic options.

Coherence with Major

Officers look for transcript evidence that supports your stated direction.

We can trust the academic preparation when we know the school. The danger of accepting a student that might not have that level of rigor is that they come, can't handle it, and that's a disservice to them, too.

Jermaine D.

Former Columbia Admissions Officer

Is Columbia Test-Optional?

Yes, Columbia is test-optional, and as of the 2025-26 cycle, it's the only Ivy League school that still is. Harvard, Princeton, Yale, Penn, Brown, Cornell, and Dartmouth have all reinstated required testing, which makes Columbia's position a significant structural difference for applicants weighing where to apply and what to submit.
Inside the admissions office, the policy is truly test-optional. Non-submission isn't penalized, but the focus simply shifts to the rest of your academic preparation: AP scores, IB subject test scores, course rigor, GPA. The harder Columbia has to work to read your academic profile without a standardized test score, the more those other signals matter.
The flip side is real. The published mid-50% (1510-1560 SAT, 34-36 ACT) functions as the floor for serious consideration. Submitting a score below that range means officers read it as the academic signal you chose to lead with, which puts more pressure on the rest of the file.

% Submitted SAT
% Submitted ACT
% Submitted Neither
Enrolled Students
44%
17%
~50%

When they say test-optional, they really do mean it. The focus just spreads to the rest of your academic preparation: AP scores, IB subject tests.

Jermaine D.

Former Columbia Admissions Officer

What SAT Score Do You Need for Columbia?

If you're submitting SAT scores to Columbia, you need a composite score in the 1510-1560 range to land in the mid-50% of the applicant pool, with strong applicants typically scoring 1500 or higher across both sections. The published distribution makes clear that Columbia's submitters are at the top end of the curve. Of the 44% of enrolled students who submitted SAT scores, 99% scored 700-800 on SAT Math and 97% scored 700-800 on SAT EBRW, with no real room below 1400 in the admitted pool.
For ACT submitters, the bar is similarly tight. 100% of admitted students who submitted ACT scored 30-36 on the composite, with the mid-50% landing at 34-36. Across both tests, the practical reality is that submitting a score requires it to be at the top of the published range. A score that doesn't reach the top end is more likely to hurt the application than help it, given Columbia's test-optional policy and the scrutiny submitted scores receive.

SAT Score Distribution Table

Score Range
SAT EBRW
SAT Math
700-800
97%
99%
600-699
3%
1%
Below 600
0%
0%

SAT Composite Distribution Table

Score Range
SAT Composite
1400-1600
99%
1200-1399
1%
Below 1200
0%

ACT Score Distribution Table

Score Range
ACT Composite
ACT Math
ACT English
ACT Reading
ACT Science
30-36
100%
93%
98%
99%
97%
24-29
0%
7%
2%
1%
3%

99% of Columbia admits who submitted SAT scored 700-800 on SAT Math, and 100% of ACT submitters scored 30-36 on the composite. The data describes what submitters achieved and sets a clear bar for anyone considering submission.

How Does Columbia Compare to Other Top Schools Academically?

Columbia compares favorably to its peers across academic metrics, but with one structural difference that reshapes the application read: it's the only Ivy League school still operating under a test-optional policy. The data below shows where Columbia sits relative to other highly selective US universities, with submission rates revealing how applicants actually behave at each school.
School
SAT Mid-50%
ACT Mid-50%
Test Policy
% Submitting SAT
% Submitting ACT
Columbia
1510-1560
34-36
Test-Optional
44%
17%
Harvard
1510-1580
34-36
Required
54%
19%
Yale
1470-1560
33-35
Test-Flexible
71%
27%
Princeton
1490-1560
34-35
Required (from 2027-28)
60%
20%
Stanford
1520-1570
34-36
Required
56%
21%
MIT
1520-1570
34-36
Required
83%
29%

Sources: Each school's most recent published Common Data Set (CDS 2024-25 or 2025-26 cycle).

Two things stand out from the data. First, Columbia's submitter mid-50% (1510-1560) is competitive with every school in this comparison, which means the bar for choosing to submit is high. Second, Columbia's SAT submission rate (44%) is lowest of any school in the group, considerably lower than Harvard (54%), Stanford (56%), Princeton (60%), Yale (71%), and far below MIT (83%). The test-optional policy isn't symbolic. It's shifting who chooses to submit and how the rest of the application gets read. Yale's test-flexible policy is also worth noting: students still submit a standardized test score, just from a wider range of options including AP and IB. Columbia is the only school in this comparison that lets applicants opt out of standardized testing entirely.

Columbia's test-optional policy is the structural difference. Submitter scores are competitive with peer schools at the top, but the 44% submission rate is the lowest in the comparison. Choosing whether to submit is a real decision at Columbia.

What Courses Does Columbia Expect You to Take?

Columbia expects you to take a rigorous secondary school program covering English, mathematics, science with lab, foreign language, and history across all four years of high school. The university publishes both required and recommended units in its CDS, with the recommended track demanding more depth than the minimum across most subjects.
Subject
Units Required
Units Recommended
English
4
4
Mathematics
4
4
Science
3 (with 3 lab)
4 (with 4 lab)
Foreign Language
3
4
History
3
4
Academic Electives
3
4
Columbia's required course distribution is more demanding than what Stanford and MIT publish as recommendations, particularly the four-year math and English requirement and the three-year foreign language minimum. SEAS applicants are expected to go even further: BC Calculus is the practical baseline, alongside two or more lab sciences and clear evidence of comfort working in a quantitative environment. AB Calculus with strong other indicators may pass, but missing calculus altogether is generally disqualifying for engineering admission.

For SEAS, we need to see something like BC Calc. We need to see that you love being in the lab, that you are not easily deterred when you make a mistake.

Jermaine D.

Former Columbia Admissions Officer

How Does Columbia Evaluate International Curricula?

Columbia evaluates international curricula in the context of each system rather than against a single global benchmark. Every application is reviewed by region, and officers know the major systems well: IB, Cambridge A-Levels, the French Baccalauréat, the German Abitur, CBSE/ICSE, and most national curricula in between. The school profile, included with every transcript, fills in the rest: how the curriculum works, how grading translates, what's actually available to students at that school. No transcript is read in isolation.
Columbia accepts all secondary school curricula. Submit any exam results required for graduation from your school. If they're not required, you don't have to submit them. Officers can contact schools directly or do their own research when they need more context to read the file.
International applicants are roughly 24% of Columbia's applicant pool but only 17% of admits, with an international acceptance rate of 2.46% in the most recent CDS-confirmed cycle. The lower rate reflects more applicants per spot, not a separate review track. Officers evaluate international files through the same process as domestic ones, calibrated by regional context.

English Language Proficiency

All international applicants must demonstrate English proficiency, regardless of what other test scores they submit. Columbia accepts several ways to meet this: English as a home language, English as the primary language of instruction throughout secondary school, an SAT EBRW score of 700 or higher, or an ACT English or Reading score of 29 or higher. If none of those apply, you submit a score from one of the four accepted English proficiency exams.
— TOEFL: 105 on the internet-based test (iBT) for exams taken on or before January 20, 2026; 5.5 for exams taken on or after January 21, 2026. Scores must come from a single test sitting.
— IELTS: 7.5 minimum overall band score.
— DET (Duolingo English Test): 135 on the current test.
— Cambridge English Qualifications: 191 on the current C1 Advanced or C2 Proficiency exams.
Scores must be reported directly to Columbia by the testing service. Applicants can also submit a conversational video through InitialView or Vericant to show language fluency, due November 15 for Early Decision, January 15 for Regular Decision, or March 1 for Transfer.

Curriculum-Specific Guidance

IB (International Baccalaureate)

Columbia reads IB diplomas directly without recalculation. HL subject choice is the strongest signal of academic direction, and the school profile gives context on how grading translates at your specific school. Predicted grades carry weight; final scores are required if available before the application deadline.

A-Levels (Cambridge)

Officers evaluate A-Levels in context. Subject combination signals academic direction, and quantitative combinations are weighted differently for SEAS than for Columbia College. Predicted grades and final results are read alongside the school profile.

CBSE / ICSE (Indian National Curricula)

Class XII percentages are interpreted in context, with the school profile providing the calibration. Subject combinations that align with your intended direction matter, and AP or SAT scores can serve as standardized cross-references.

Abitur (German)

Columbia reads the Abitur in original form, with officers familiar with the Leistungskurse structure and the 1.0-6.0 scale. The school profile and your advanced courses are weighed together. Final results required if available before the deadline.

Baccalauréat (French)

Officers evaluate the Bac with attention to spécialités and final mention. Spécialité choice signals academic direction, and final results are required if available before the deadline.

AP (Advanced Placement)

AP scores are accepted as standardized cross-references, and Columbia recommends self-reporting all AP results. They carry weight under test-optional, especially when other standardized markers are absent. Strong AP performance in subjects relevant to your intended major reinforces direction.

Other Curricula

Columbia interprets other national curricula by region and school context, drawing on staff experience with systems worldwide. The school profile is the framework officers use to make sense of non-standard scales. Applicants from less common systems should self-report all available standardized markers and use the additional information section to explain grading conventions or unusual academic norms.

If a GPA is kind of harder to verify, a student must know they have to show other standardized markers: SAT, ACT, or AP scores. We're spreading the focus to the rest of the academic preparation.

Jermaine D.

Former Columbia Admissions Officer

Do Academics Alone Get You Into Columbia?

Academics alone don't get you into Columbia but they do get you past the first cut. The CDS rates seven factors as Very Important, the broadest top tier of any school in this comparison, but most applicants Columbia evaluates clear those academic markers cleanly. What separates the file that advances in committee from the one that doesn't is specificity to Columbia, intellectual vitality, and a clear sense of where the student is going. Strong academics give you a fighting chance. The rest of the application has to seal it.

Pass the First Cut

Top 10% rank, rigorous coursework, strong AP/IB scores. Academic baseline for competitive applicant.

Gets You Admitted

Specificity to Columbia, with a clear sense of where the student is going.

What Are the Most Common Academic Mistakes Columbia Applicants Make?

The most common academic mistakes Columbia applicants make are submitting weak test scores under test-optional, coasting in math (especially for SEAS), misaligning coursework with the stated major, missing the Core Curriculum signal, and underestimating the weight of AP or IB performance. None of these are about academic ability. They're about applicants not thinking carefully enough about how Columbia actually evaluates the file.

Submitting a test score that isn't strong

Under test-optional, submitted scores get extra scrutiny because choosing to submit signals confidence. A 1450 from an otherwise strong applicant can hurt the file more than no submission at all. If your score sits below the published mid-50% (1510-1560 SAT, 34-36 ACT), the safer move is usually to apply test-optional and let the rest of the academic profile do the work.

Coasting in math, especially for SEAS

BC Calculus is the practical baseline for engineering applicants. AB Calculus with strong other indicators may pass, but missing calculus entirely is a serious problem for SEAS admission. Even Columbia College applicants targeting quantitative fields like economics, computer science, or quantitative biology should expect officers to look for sustained math through senior year.

Coursework that doesn't match your stated major

Officers flag applicants whose activities and coursework tell a different story than the major they're claiming. Strategic major-gaming, picking a field because the acceptance rate looks higher rather than because the academic record supports it, doesn't survive close reading.

Missing the Core Curriculum signal

For Columbia College applicants, no engagement with the Core Curriculum in essays or supplementals is a fit problem. The Core is Columbia's central intellectual framework. If you don't reference it, officers read the silence as a sign you haven't seriously thought about what attending Columbia would actually look like.

Underestimating the weight of AP or IB scores

Under test-optional, AP and IB scores carry heavier weight as standardized cross-references. A 5 on AP Calculus or AP Literature means more in a Columbia file than in a file at a school with required SAT or ACT, where the test score does the standardization work. Self-report all AP and IB results, especially in subjects relevant to your intended direction.

If you don't mention the Core Curriculum in your application, then it's going to hurt. You need to embrace it, see how it feeds into your specific field, and how it will set you apart in said field.

Jermaine D.

Former Columbia Admissions Officer

Book a free consultation with one of our expert advisors.