Harvard College grants early admission to class of 2019

As early applications soar, 977 candidates are admitted to the class of 2019.

The College announced today that 977 applicants from a pool of 5,919 had been granted early-action admission to the class of 2019, entering next August. The number of admissions is consistent with last year's level, but the number of applicants soared. In the years since early-action has been reinstituted, 774 of 4,228 applicants were so favored in 2011; 892 of 4,845 applicants in 2012; and 992 of 4,692 in 2013—about 60 percent of a typical class. Such admissions are not binding on applicants, who can decide next spring whether to enroll, but the "yield" (percentage of those offered admission who accept) is typically very high—meaning that the rate of admissions for the many thousands of regular applicants (who of course may also differ in quality from the early applicants) is now extraordinarily low.

Admissions staff attributed the sharp increase in early applications to Harvard College Connection—a Web, video, and social-media outreach and recruiting program that was announced in October 2013. It will be interesting to see whether other early-action institutions also attracted a larger pool, as the competition for a slot at an elite, selective institution continues to intensify, prompting high-school students to submit ever-more applications and to pursue coveted early-admission slots. One possible effect: the early-action pool may become a bit diluted. Harvard probably does not want to admit still more early applicants, a sort of upper bound on December admissions; but this year, it deferred 4,292 for regular-action consideration (March 31 notification) and rejected 541. Other applications were withdrawn or incomplete.

Read the news announcement here.

You might also like

Pete Buttigieg Calls For a Politics of ‘Belonging’

A Kennedy School panel discusses polarization and the uncertain future of American democracy.

What a Key EPA Repeal Means for America’s Climate Future

A Harvard alumni panel examines the impact of the “Endangerment Finding.”

Jerome Powell Talks Risk, Resilience, and AI at Harvard

The Fed Chairman laid out the U.S. central bank’s approach to global conflict and an unpredictable future.

Most popular

Martin Nowak Placed on Leave a Second Time

Further links to Jeffrey Epstein surface in newly released files.

Inside Harvard’s Most Egalitarian School

The Extension School is open to everyone. Expect to work—hard.

Brief life of Harvard CIA agent who helped install the shah of Iran

Brief life of a Harvard conspirator: 1916-2000

Explore More From Current Issue

A woman gazes at large decorative letters with her reflection and two stylized faces beside them.

The True Cost of Grade Inflation at Harvard

How an abundance of A’s created “the most stressed-out world of all.”

Four Labrador puppies—two black and two yellow—sitting in green grass.

What Do Puppies Know?

Canine capabilities emerge early and continue into adulthood.

Modern campus collage: Rubenstein Treehouse Conference Center, One Milestone labs, Verra apartment, and co-working space.

The Enterprise Research Campus in Allston Nears Completion

A hotel, restaurants, and other retail establishments are open or on the way.