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

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

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania · Private

Avg GPA

4.15

Top 10% of Class

91%

Rec Units

20

Test Policy

Test Required

SAT Mid 50%

1510-1570

ACT Mid 50%

34-36

Source: upenn.edu

What GPA Do You Need to Get Into Penn?

Penn doesn't publish a minimum GPA, and there's no number that guarantees anything, but the grades among admitted students sit close to the ceiling. In the most recent Common Data Set, 59% of enrolled students arrived with a 4.0, another 31% landed between 3.75 and 3.99, and only one in 10 sat below 3.75. The average works out to 3.9 unweighted or ~4.15 weighted. Among students whose schools reported a class rank, 91% stood in the top tenth.
What those numbers describe is a floor, not a target. Nearly everyone Penn admits has grades in this band, which means a strong GPA gets you taken seriously rather than setting you apart. It's the price of being read closely, not the thing that earns the offer. Treat the distribution as a sense of where you'd need to be to be competitive, not a cutoff you clear and forget.
The more useful thing to understand is that Penn weighs the GPA and the courses behind it at the same level. Penn's CDS rates both academic GPA and rigor of secondary school record as Very Important, the top tier. A high number on its own says less than the number read against the transcript that produced it, which is where the next section picks up.
GPA Distribution
59%4.031%3.75-3.9910%Below 3.75

Source: Penn Common Data Set 2024-25

Penn doesn't publish a minimum GPA, but the room is narrow: 90% of admitted students had a 3.75 or higher, and among those who reported a class rank, 91% sat in the top tenth.

How Does Penn Actually Evaluate Your GPA?

Penn weighs your GPA against the courses that produced it, which is why difficulty counts as much as the number itself. Its CDS rates rigor of secondary school record as Very Important, the same top tier as the GPA, and the practical meaning is that a 3.9 earned across the hardest classes your school offered carries more than a 4.0 collected from easier ones. The grade says what you scored; the transcript, what you took on to score it.
The catch most applicants miss is that Penn judges this in context. Officers work regionally and come to know the schools in their territory: what each one offers, which classes count as a genuine stretch there, and what was simply unavailable. You're measured against your own school's ceiling, not a national one. A student who exhausted the advanced options on offer comes across as someone who went looking for challenge; one who stayed comfortable when more was within reach does not. And where a school offers little, initiative still shows. Sitting an AP exam you had to prepare for on your own marks you as someone who sought the work out rather than waiting for it to appear on a timetable.

If an admissions officer is looking at two students from the same school with access to the same higher-level AP, honors courses, & one really maxed out their school's offerings while the other had more of a standard level course selection, the one who really showed that level of rigor stands out.

Eileen D.

FAO Consultant

There's a limit worth respecting, though. Stacking your schedule with advanced courses you can't actually handle works against you, both because the grades suffer and because the hours come out of everything else you're trying to build. The aim is to carry the most demanding load you can manage well, not the most demanding load that exists.

Rigor Over Inflation

A demanding 3.9 can say more than a 4.0 built on easier choices.

Context Is Everything

Penn reads your record against your school, curriculum, and available options.

Initiative Counts

Self-studying when options are limited shows the curiosity and drive Penn values.

Students who self-study for an AP outside of school, take the exam, do really well, those tend to get the nod, because they're really seeking to challenge themselves through showing that key element of intellectual curiosity.

Eileen D.

FAO Consultant

Penn weighs how demanding your courses were as heavily as the grades you earned, and judges that against what your school actually offered. The strongest transcripts show a student who took on the most they could handle well.

Is Penn Test-Optional or Test-Required?

Penn requires applicants to submit test scores. Penn brought back the SAT and ACT in February 2025 for the 2025-26 cycle, closing out five years of test-optional admission that began when the pandemic shut testing centers in 2020. Every first-year applicant for Fall 2026 entry and beyond sends a score, with one carve-out: students who face real hardship reaching a test can request a waiver inside the application.
The shift has been recent and nearly leaguewide, which shapes how Penn talks about scores. Penn, Harvard, Dartmouth, Cornell, Brown, and now Yale all require the SAT or ACT, Yale having dropped its test-flexible option in May 2026. Princeton has one test-optional cycle left before it requires scores from Fall 2028 entry, which leaves Columbia as the only Ivy still test-optional with no reinstatement announced. Penn sits squarely in the require-a-score group, though it has been explicit that the test is one input among many rather than a gatekeeper. In its own framing, a score rounds out the school record rather than standing in for the years of work behind it.
The cycle captured in Penn's most recent CDS was the last optional one, and the submission pattern tells you something useful. Half of enrolled students sent an SAT, 17% sent an ACT, and roughly a third submitted nothing at all. That final third is the group the new requirement closes off. The question now isn't whether to submit but how to make the score one more proof that you're ready for Penn, rather than the piece you're hoping the rest of the application will cover for.

Final test-optional cycle (Fall 2024 entry)

SAT submitted50%No score submitted33%ACT Submitted17%

Source: Penn CDS 2024-25

It's another way to show academic strength and preparedness. Having a strong, consistently strong transcript along with a really competitive standardized test score going hand in hand, that really shows a strong foundation and preparedness for the rigors of a place like Penn.

Eileen D.

FAO Consultant

A score below your hopes won't sink you on its own, though. Penn weighs it beside everything else, and a number a little under the published middle isn't the end of a strong application, with one exception the next sections return to: for Wharton, where the coursework runs heavily quantitative, the math score carries weight it doesn't elsewhere in the university.

It's one piece of the application, it's not the only piece. It's not something I feel dejected by if you don't have a score crossing that 1550 range.

Eileen D.

FAO Consultant

Testing is back and required, but Penn reads it as support for the transcript, not a substitute. The exception is Wharton, where a soft math score is the one number that can genuinely cost you.

What SAT/ACT Score Do You Need for Penn?

There's no score you "need," in the sense of a cutoff, but the middle of Penn's admitted range tells you where competitive sits: an SAT between 1510 and 1570, built from 740 to 770 on the reading and writing half and 770 to 800 on the math.
On the ACT, the comparable middle runs 34 to 36. Those are the mid-50% bands, meaning a quarter of enrolled students scored above them and a quarter below, so a number outside the range on either side is common rather than disqualifying.
What stands out in Penn's distribution is how top-heavy the math is. Among SAT submitters, 96% cleared 700 on the reading and writing section, and 98% cleared it on math, with the math ceiling pressed right up against 800. That pattern isn't an accident of who applies. It reflects how much quantitative preparation Penn's strongest programs assume, and it's the backdrop for the one place a score can actually work against you.
That place is Wharton. For most of the university, a math score a little under the median sits inside the normal spread and draws no particular notice. For Wharton, whose majors run heavily quantitative, the same score reads as a question about whether you can handle the coursework. It's the clearest case on the whole application where which Penn school you're aiming at changes how a single number lands.

SAT Score Distribution


SAT EBRW
SAT Math
700-800
96%
98%
600-699
4%
2%
500-599
0%
0%

Source: Penn Common Data Set 2024-25 (Class of 2028). SAT and ACT distributions reflect enrolled students who submitted scores during Penn's final test-optional cycle.

ACT Score Distribution


ACT Composite
ACT Math
30-36
99%
96%
24-29
1%
4%

Source: Penn Common Data Set 2024-25 (Class of 2028). SAT and ACT distributions reflect enrolled students who submitted scores during Penn's final test-optional cycle.

For Wharton, you need that strong base and foundation. If my math score isn't as high as maybe it should be, then yeah, that might be a red flag in terms of your ability to be successful in a highly quantitative set of majors.

Eileen D.

FAO Consultant

Penn's mid-50% SAT runs 1510 to 1570, with no cutoff at either end. The number that matters most isn't the composite but the math, and most of all for Wharton, where a soft math score is the one result that can genuinely raise doubts.

How Does Penn Compare to Other Top Schools Academically?

Penn's academic profile sits right in the middle of its peer group, which is the honest headline: at this level the numbers cluster so tightly they stop telling the schools apart. A score or grade that's competitive for Penn is competitive across the whole set.

Avg GPA (W)
SAT Mid 50%
ACT Mid 50%
Test Policy
Penn
4.15
1510-1570
34-36
Required
Harvard
4.21
1510-1580
34-36
Required
Princeton
4.20
1490-1560
34-35
Required from Fall 2028
Stanford
4.18
1520-1570
34-36
Required
MIT
4.19
1520-1570
34-36
Required
Yale
~4.17
1470-1560
33-35
Required
Dartmouth
4.11
1440-1550
32-25
Required

Sources: Each school's most recently published Common Data Set (2024-25 or 2025-26, depending on the institution). GPA figures here are weighted averages, which credit advanced coursework and so sit a little above the unweighted 3.9 cited earlier for Penn. The two numbers describe the same students measured two ways.

A quick note on that GPA column. These are weighted averages, which add credit for harder courses, so they land just above 4.0 and modestly above the unweighted 3.9 used earlier on this page. Both describe Penn's class; they're two scales, not two different groups of students.
The score ranges barely move across the table. A handful of points separate one school's band from the next, and every range overlaps heavily with Penn's, so trying to chase a number that clears one school's bar rather than another's misreads how little space there is between them. The one row that sits a little lower, Dartmouth, still lands within reach of the rest, and the gap says more about how each school's submitting pool shook out than about any real difference in difficulty.
Where the schools diverge is testing policy, and that's the column worth reading closely. Most of this group now requires the SAT or ACT, Penn included. Princeton is the exception for one more cycle before its requirement takes effect for Fall 2028 entry. Only the policy differs; the score expectations, as the ranges show, are effectively shared.

At Penn's tier the score ranges are nearly identical from school to school, so a profile that's competitive for Penn is competitive across its peers. The real variation is in testing policy, not in the numbers themselves.

What Courses Does Penn Expect You to Take?

Penn doesn't require a fixed set of courses, but it recommends a clear one, and the recommendation is essentially the most demanding college-prep track your school offers. Across four years, that means four units each of English, math, science, and a foreign language, plus two each of social studies and history, 20 academic units in total. Three of the four science units should be lab sciences.
The word doing the work there is recommends. Penn lists no hard course requirements, which matters for students whose schools simply don't offer four years of, say, a foreign language. You're assessed against what was available to you, the same contextual reading that governs how Penn weighs rigor. But "recommended" shouldn't be read as optional in any strategic sense. At Penn's level of selectivity, the recommended track is the floor for a competitive application, not a stretch goal. Falling short of it without a clear reason tied to your school's offerings is the kind of gap a reader notices.
Subject
Recommended Units
English
4
Mathematics
4
Science (3 lab)
4
Foreign Language
4
Social Studies
2
History
2
Total
20

Source: Penn Common Data Set 2024-25, Section C5. Penn lists these as recommended; it specifies no required course distribution. Computer science and visual or performing arts appear as recognized categories without a recommended unit count.

Where the course list turns from recommendation into something firmer is when your intended school calls for it. The clearest case is math. For most of the university, the four recommended units are guidance. For Wharton, Penn states outright that it wants strong math preparation including exposure to calculus in high school, so a transcript that stops short of calculus raises the same question a soft math score does: can this student handle the coursework? Engineering carries a comparable expectation around calculus and physics, the subjects its degrees are built on. The honest version of "what courses does Penn expect" is the recommended track for everyone, plus whatever your target school's field genuinely runs on.

Penn recommends 20 academic units built from the hardest core track your school offers, and treats that as the competitive floor rather than a hard rule. For Wharton and Engineering, advanced math becomes a practical requirement in its own right.

How Does Penn Evaluate International Curricula?

Penn evaluates international applicants on the same application and against the same standards as domestic ones, read in the context of your own country's education system. The process is identical: every applicant, whatever their citizenship, submits the Common App, Coalition Application, or QuestBridge. What shifts for international students isn't the bar but the context Penn reads you in, plus a handful of extra materials.
The thing to understand is how Penn handles the range of curricula it sees. Applications are sorted by the location of your secondary school rather than your nationality, so your file reaches an officer who knows your region's system: what an A-Level or IB or French Baccalaureate program looks like, what counts as a strong result within it, and what was realistically available where you studied. You're assessed inside your own system rather than converted into an American one, which is why Penn tells international applicants plainly not to recalculate their grades into a US GPA. Submit your records as they stand.

IB Diploma

Penn reads the IB in the context of your school and sets no minimum score, but it does look for the full Diploma over scattered certificates and for Higher Level subjects that match where you're heading academically. Applicants from this system who are competitive at Penn's level generally present Higher Level scores in the 6 to 7 range. Because results often aren't final before Penn decides, predicted scores are used in the review, and the strongest predictions track closely with your internal assessment record.

A-Levels

A-Levels are well understood in Penn's process and read against what your school offers. There's no fixed grade requirement, but competitive applicants at this tier typically present A* or A grades across three to four subjects, with predicted grades used at the application stage. Subject choices should point toward your intended field while keeping enough breadth to show range.

Other national curricula

From CBSE and ISC to the French Baccalaureate, the German Abitur, and national leaving exams worldwide, Penn evaluates each on its own terms. The constant question is whether you've taken the most demanding options your system offers and performed near the top of them. A strong result from a highly competitive school reads differently than the same figure from a less rigorous one, which is why a counselor's context on grading scales and school profile can matter. Where a national exam gates entry to a pre-university track, such as the IGCSE or SPM, send certified copies of those results with your application.

Predicted scores and exam timing

Penn frequently makes decisions before results for exams like the A-Levels, IB, or French Baccalaureate are released, so it asks your school to send predicted grades and uses them in the review. Final results are required before you enroll, not before you're admitted. If your program won't release externals in time, predictions plus your existing grades are what Penn works from.

Transcripts and translation

Submit complete records for all four years of high school, from every school you attended. Don't recalculate your grades or GPA, and don't pay for third-party evaluation, Penn's officers are trained to read records directly. Any document not originally in English needs a certified English translation.

English proficiency

If English is your first language or has been your language of instruction throughout high school, you're exempt. Otherwise you submit the TOEFL, IELTS, or Duolingo English Test, sent directly by the testing agency. Penn doesn't take self-reported English scores, the IELTS Indicator, or TOEFL MyBest results, and scores are valid for two years. Competitive applicants tend toward a TOEFL around 100 or above, an IELTS band of 7 or above, or a Duolingo score of 130 or above, with consistency across all four sections.
International admission is also the most competitive slice of Penn's pool, and that's worth saying plainly. In the most recent cycle Penn breaks out by geography, international applicants were admitted at 2.8%, against 6.0% for out-of-state domestic applicants and 8.4% for Pennsylvanians. Nothing in the process works against you, but the size of the international pool relative to the seats means the academic and personal case has to be as sharp as anywhere in the application.

Penn reads international applicants inside their own education system, with no required courses and no recalculated grades. The standards match domestic admission; only the context shifts, and at 2.8%, it's Penn's most competitive pool.

Do Academics Alone Get You Into Penn?

No. Strong academics get your application taken seriously, but they don't, on their own, get you in. Penn's own description of how it reads a transcript makes this clear: the committee asks whether you took the rigorous courses available to you and whether your grades in core subjects show you're ready for the specific program you chose. Clear those two questions and you've established that you can do the work. You haven't yet shown why Penn should choose you over the thousands of others who can also do the work.
That's the real shape of it. Academics are necessary and not sufficient, the entry condition for a serious read rather than the thing that earns the offer. Penn says it directly in what it looks for by school: alongside preparation in the right subjects, the College wants curiosity and a willingness to learn from people who think differently, Engineering wants stated reasons for pursuing it, Nursing wants a real commitment to patient care, Wharton wants leadership and a sense of business as a force for good. None of those are grades. They're the things a transcript can't carry, and they live in your essays, your activities, and your recommendations.

Gets You Read

Strong GPA, rigorous courses, and test scores keep the application in contention.

Gets You Admitted

Cohesion, authentic interest, intended impact, and a specific case for Penn.

The rest of your application is where those questions get answered. Your essays show how you think and what you care about. Your activities show what you've actually built or changed. Your recommendations confirm the person behind the record. The pages on Penn's supplements and on extracurriculars take each of those in turn.

They're going to see your academic strength. They're going to see why you think you're a fit for Penn. Show them who you are, the experiences that built you into who you are today.

Eileen D.

FAO Consultant

Strong academics get your application read, not admitted. Penn checks that your transcript fits the school you chose, then turns to the questions a transcript can't answer: who you are, what you'd do with a Penn education, and why it has to be Penn.

What Are the Most Common Academic Mistakes Penn Applicants Make?

Most academic mistakes at Penn come down to optimizing for the wrong thing, whether that’s protecting a grade, chasing a perfect score or building a transcript that doesn't match the rest of the application. None of them are about being a weaker student. They're about strategy, which means they're avoidable once you’re aware of them.

Choosing easier courses to protect a GPA

Penn rates course rigor as Very Important, level with the GPA itself, and reads the transcript against what your school offered. A 4.0 built from standard classes when honors and AP were available sends a weaker signal than a 3.85 across the hardest schedule you could take. The grade you protected costs you the rigor that would have meant more.

Misaligning your courses with your intended school

Penn reads your transcript for fit with the specific program you chose, so the coursework has to back the direction you claim. Applying to Wharton without advanced math, or to Engineering without physics, opens a credibility gap that's hard to close. Penn is explicit that it wants calculus for Wharton and calculus and physics for Engineering, the record needs to show it.

Starting standardized testing too late

Now that a score is required, leaving testing to senior fall removes any room to recover from a weak first sitting. Diagnostic-test both the SAT and ACT early, commit to whichever fits you better, and build a timeline with margin in it.

Over-testing at the expense of everything else

A score stops moving meaningfully after about three attempts, and the hours poured into a fifth or sixth sitting are hours not spent on the activities and projects that actually differentiate a file. Chasing a perfect number is usually a worse use of time than developing the rest of the application.

Underestimating Wharton's quantitative bar

A math score that's perfectly fine for the College reads as a real concern for Wharton, where the majors run heavily quantitative. Which school you're applying to changes how the same number lands, and a soft math result is the clearest example of it.

You're going to be taking the exam no more than 3 times on average, just because it's not going to budge that much. You also don't want to take away time from your extracurricular profile.

Eileen D.

FAO Consultant

The most common academic mistake at Penn isn't a low grade, it's choosing safety over rigor and treating the test score as the goal. Penn would rather see a demanding schedule with an imperfect grade than an easy one with a perfect average.

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