
Columbia Admissions: How Applications Are Evaluated
New York · Private
Acceptance Rate
3.9%
Regular Rate
~3%
Early Program
ED
Binding Early
Yes
Early Deadline
Nov 1
Regular Deadline
Jan 1
Source: Columbia CDS 2024/25

Jermaine D.
Former Columbia Admissions Officer
Selective admissions is looking for a rare level of introspection, a rare level of intellectual vitality, a rare clarity of vision.

Jermaine D.
Former Columbia Admissions Officer
Columbia's 4.23% acceptance rate hides a real gap by geography. International applicants face the steepest path at 2.46% in the most recent CDS-confirmed cycle, a number worth knowing if you're applying from outside the US.
Applied vs Accepted
Source: ABC
Columbia rates seven factors as Very Important, the broadest of any school in this comparison set. Test scores sit only at Considered, reflecting their test-optional policy. Interviews are Not Considered, since Columbia eliminated them in 2023.
When we're reviewing an application, we're looking up regional context ahead of time. What region is this from? Is it well-resourced? How many students have we accepted from this region over the past five years?

Jermaine D.
Former Columbia Admissions Officer
Columbia loves that nerdy passion, that special-interest, nerdy passion. Lean into it. The director used to ask, when we'd finished discussing all the logistics: 'Do they love Columbia?'

Jermaine D.
Former Columbia Admissions Officer
Columbia College (CC)
Liberal arts. Broad, interdisciplinary, Core Curriculum-driven.
Columbia Engineering (SEAS)
STEM-focused with reduced Core load. BC Calc, lab experience, and academic resilience expected.
We were admitting the SEAS folks who could present. There are some software engineers and STEM folks who are really, really smart, but they're inward, heads down. We were admitting the ones who could lead the team.

Jermaine D.
Former Columbia Admissions Officer
Rejection from Columbia is rarely about academic capability. It's about the application failing to give officers enough Columbia-specific substance to defend it.
Everybody benefits if they're applying Early Decision, but the people that benefit the most are folks from those impacted majors — econ, bio, computer science. The school doesn't have to wonder if you would actually say yes to us.

Jermaine D.
Former Columbia Admissions Officer
