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Nearly half will pay no tuition Harvard College on Thursday released data and demographics for the Class of 2029. This is the first class of undergraduates admitted since the Faculty of Arts and Sciences (FAS) reinstated standardized test scores as a required part of the application process. The College offered admission to 2,003 applicants, with 1,675 accepting, for a yield rate of 83.6 percent. This is the College’s fifth consecutive admissions cycle with a yield above 83 percent. Harvard received 47,893 applications, a 10 percent increase from the most recent admissions cycle (Class of 2023) for which it required applicants to submit standardized test scores. “The Class of 2029 reflects everything that makes Harvard College extraordinary,” said Edgerley Family Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences Hopi Hoekstra. “These remarkable students come to us from across the country and around the globe with boundless curiosity and eagerness to join a community that challenges them to learn deeply, listen generously, and expand their understanding of themselves and the world around them. Even amid shifting economic realities, our commitment to access and opportunity remains unwavering. That nearly half of this class will attend Harvard tuition-free fills me with immense pride and optimism for the future they will help shape.” The class is made up of students from 92 countries and all 50 states. International students make up 15 percent of the class. The yield rate for international students was 90.3 percent, with only eight choosing to defer their admission. “The Class of 2029 was drawn from big cities and small towns, suburbs and farms, and from nations around the world, and all students, no matter where they’re from, where they went to high school, or what their personal circumstances might be, were admitted to Harvard because they share the extraordinary potential to change the world,” said William Fitzsimmons, dean of admissions and financial aid. “Amid several seismic shifts in higher education admissions over the past few years, as well as the effects of COVID, the Class of 2029 enters Harvard as worthy successors to the generations of students who’ve come before them.” Of students in the class who self-identified their race, 11.5 percent identified as African American or Black, 41 percent identified as Asian American, 11 percent identified as Hispanic or Latino, and nearly 2 percent identified as Native American, Native Hawaiian, or Pacific Islander. Eight percent of the class did not disclose race or ethnicity. Applicants who self-selected more than one race are reflected in the percentages for each of their respective identified races. Racial demographics are accessible only after the admissions process is complete. First-generation students represent 20 percent of the class. Twenty-one percent are estimated to be eligible for federal Pell Grants. In this first admitted class since the FAS announced a significant undergraduate financial aid expansion in March 2025, 45 percent are attending the College tuition-free. More than half of those students qualified for a free Harvard education with financial aid covering all expenses, including tuition, fees, food, and housing. The class includes 16 veterans. Twelve transfer students joined the class, and 75 students were admitted from the wait-list. Among U.S. students, geographical representation is as follows: New England, 17.8 percent; Middle Atlantic, 20.6 percent; Southern U.S., 15.9 percent. The Midwest is represented by 10 percent of the class; the Central region, 1.6 percent; the Mountain region, 3.2 percent; and the Pacific region, 13.6 percent. |
| Only 37% white is deeply concerning. Someone needs to check their admissions practices. |
The pool of students scoring 1500+ is only 37% white. The administration will probably check their admissions practices, but since the administration favors merit (ie SAT) based admissions, this number is unlikely to increase. |
The admissions percentage and the percentage of those scoring above 1500 should track exactly. Across all applicants. |
Seems strong to me |
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Key point, "tuition" doesn't include room and board.
Costs have gone up and so must need-based financial aid. People should be using Harvard's Net Price Calculator to see what it would cost them; this is nothing new. These types of articles are just advertising for the school. |
| well, some schools won't publish them at all - ie Dartmouth. |
? I don't understand your point. Princeton's class is 28% white for comparison. |
Agree that it's advertising for the school and given its recent press I don't blame them. (BTW, the article does mention that 23% have tuition and R+B covered.) It does beg the question how do other top 20 schools stack up in providing full tuition and full tuition + room/board. |
| How is the tuition free % different from prior Harvard classes? |
| Wow. 75 off waitlist this summer?!?? |
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Won’t be able to continue to foist DEI admits with gift 3.8 GPAs on the world much longer.
It’s gotten so bad even Harvard has recognized the problem - https://www.thecrimson.com/article/2025/10/27/grading-workload-report/ |
| Aren't white students minorities in all the Ivy league and top 10 schools now? That's why you are seeing a cultural shift towards other schools. Many students don't want to be a minority regardless of race. The social dynamic isn't very good and instead of mixing, many students of the same ethnicity only socialize with those of their own background. Not sure what can be done but admissions is doing a terrible job. |
This is very true. And it’s a sad state the lack of integration. The Indian kids hang out with the Indian kids. Even if they are born in America and not India. The Korean and Japanese kids hang out together as well. The Jewish kids hang out together. The poor white kids hang out together. The very wealthy rich, private school white kids all hang out together. There is much less mixing at the schools and there was even a decade or so ago. This social experiment has failed. I have two kids at T10 schools. |
? How is that admissions’ fault that your kids are racists and wouldn’t socialize with minorities? |