
How to Get Into Columbia University
New York · Private
Acceptance Rate
3.9%
Applicants
59,126
Admitted
2,280
Enrolled
1,483
Yield Rate
65.0%
UG Enrollment
6,597
Source: Columbia CDS 2024-25

Jermaine D.
Former Columbia Admissions Officer
I'm not here deciding whether a student is smart. They're all smart. I'm not here deciding whether this is a strong application — most likely it is. But how strong is their case for admission?

Jermaine D.
Former Columbia Admissions Officer
At Columbia, you don't ask for admission, you argue for it. Officers in committee aren't deciding whether you're smart enough; they're deciding whether your application convinces them that Columbia, specifically, is where you need to be.
Intellectually Omnivorous
You don't silo into a major; instead, you use it as a specialization alongside other foundations.
Specifically Columbian
If you can swap “Columbia” for “Harvard” in your essays without issue, you haven't done the work.
NYC-Engaged
You'll use the internships, the institutions, and the rhythms of New York as part of your education.
Columbia is very cerebral, extremely interdisciplinary. They live by their Core Curriculum and the understanding that you need a piece of philosophy, a piece of econ, a piece of this and that, so you have a vast understanding and learn a framework for learning.

Jermaine D.
Former Columbia Admissions Officer
Columbia rewards specificity. The applicant who can articulate exactly which resource, which professor, which Core Curriculum text, and which post-graduation goal connects to their application is the applicant officers can advocate for.
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 and communicate it outwards.

Jermaine D.
Former Columbia Admissions Officer
The office was really committed to not disadvantaging students who haven't taken it. When they say test-optional, they really do mean it. But if you do submit, it has to be a score you're quite proud of — we were maybe a little bit harsher on the review.

Jermaine D.
Former Columbia Admissions Officer
If an applicant can replace the word 'Columbia' with 'Harvard' or 'Princeton', then it's not specific enough. Keep it very, very specific. Keep it nerdy. Keep it passionate.

Jermaine D.
Former Columbia Admissions Officer
What separates Columbia admits is the thread. The major, the activities, the essays, and the trajectory all point in the same direction, and that direction is specifically Columbian.
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
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
