The Most Selective MBA Programs in the U.S.
Reprinted from PoetsandQuants.com
A quick quiz: Which business school's full-time MBA program is more selective? The University of Texas at Dallas or Duke University's Fuqua School of Business? If you guessed the latter, you would be dead wrong. Surprisingly, UT's business school accepts just 20.7% of its applicants versus Fuqua's 23.7%.
Let's try another one. Which business school is able to enroll a higher percentage of the applicants it accepts? Yale's School of Management or Texas Tech's Rawls School? If you went with the Lone Star state choice this time, you would be right. As shockingly as it seems, 57.7% of the applicants accepted into the Rawls School's full-time MBA program enroll. At Yale, the number is 45.1%.
Who ever would have thought that the University of Wisconsin's business school in Madison would enroll a higher percentage of its admits than only three other U.S. MBA programs: Harvard, Stanford, and Georgia Tech? Yet, it's true. Wisconsin enrolls 75.6% of the applicants it accepts, not far behind Stanford's 79.7%.
These are just a few of the contrarian surprises buried in an interesting table (below) on the most selective full-time MBA programs at U.S. business schools. It's certainly a different way to look at the best schoolsâ€"not by a ranking but by how selective each school is and then what percentage of the accepted applicants actually decide whether or not to take the school up on its offer of acceptance.
Top ten list's unexpected findings
Even the top ten on this list is quite a surprise, with Texas Tech at number nine. Surprisingly, there are four Texas business schools in the top 20: Texas Tech, the University of Texas at Dallas, Texas A&M University, and finally what is generally regarded as the best MBA program in the state, the University of Texas at Austin at number 20.
One counter-intuitive conclusion: The best MBA programs are not always at schools with the lowest acceptance rates. There are a good number of highly ranked B-schools that fail to make the top 50 most selective list, notably Indiana University's Kelley School of Business and Georgetown University's McDonough School of Business (with an acceptance rate of 42.5%). Yet, there are numerous schools that can afford to be a bit more selective even though they don't have the reputation or quality of Indiana or Georgetown.
Geography matters
Another undeniable factor to consider when looking at the data: geography has an impact on the number of applications a school receives and, therefore, its acceptance rate. Schools in and around New York City and Boston as well as the state of California tend to be more selective because they are immediate draws for graduate students.
THE 50 MOST SELECTIVE FULL-TIME MBA PROGRAMS IN THE U.S.
| School | Applicants | Accepted | % Accepted | Enrolled | Yield |
| 1. Stanford | 7,204 | 488 | 6.8% | 389 | 79.7% |
| 2. Harvard | 9.524 | 1,071 | 11.2% | 903 | 84.3% |
| 3. Berkeley (Haas) | 3,627 | 422 | 11.6% | 243 | 57.6% |
| 4. MIT (Sloan) | 4,782 | 621 | 13.0% | 401 | 64.6% |
| 5. NYU (Stern) | 4,501 | 592 | 13.2% | 314 | 53.0% |
| 6. Columbia | 6,666 | 1,023 | 15.3% | 739 | 72.2% |
| 7. UPenn (Wharton) | 6,832 | 1,145 | 16.8% | 817 | 71.4% |
| 8. Yale | 2,963 | 512 | 17.3% | 231 | 45.1% |
| 9. Texas Tech (Rawls) | 275 | 52 | 18.9% | 30 | 57.7% |
| 10. Northwestern (Kellogg) | 5,591 | 1,112 | 19.9% | 647 | 58.2% |
| 11. Dartmouth (Tuck) | 2,528 | 514 | 20.3% | 280 | 54.5% |
| 12. Texas-Dallas | 415 | 86 | 20.7% | 63 | 73.3% |
| 13. USC (Marshall) | 1,983 | 436 | 22.0% | 216 | 49.5% |
| 14. Georgia Inst. of Tech | 436 | 122 | 22.0% | 93 | 76.2% |
| 15. Chicago (Booth) | 4,299 | 957 | 22.3% | 579 | 60.5% |
| 16. Texas A&M (Mays) | 537 | 122 | 22.7% | 63 | 51.6% |
| 17. Cornell (Johnson) | 2,001 | 469 | 23.4% | 275 | 58.6% |
| 18. Duke (Fuqua) | 3,506 | 831 | 23.7% | 440 | 52.9% |
| 19. UC-Davis | 447 | 107 | 23.9% | 55 | 51.4% |
| 20. Texas (McCombs) | 2,259 | 542 | 24.0% | 261 | 48.2% |
| 21. Michigan (Ross) | 2,722 | 691 | 25.4% | 488 | 70.6% |
| 22. Virginia (Darden) | 2,515 | 662 | 26.3% | 339 | 51.2% |
| 23. Florida (Hough) | 263 | 70 | 26.6% | 36 | 51.4% |
| 24. Ohio State (Fisher) | 789 | 213 | 27.0% | 122 | 57.3% |
| 25. Carnegie Mellon (Tepper) | 1,540 | 423 | 27.5% | 201 | 47.5% |
| 26. Illinois-Urbana Champaign | 719 | 199 | 27.7% | 103 | 51.7% |
| 27. UC-Irvine (Merage) | 802 | 224 | 27.9% | 83 | 37.1% |
| 28. Boston Univ. | 1,387 | 388 | 28.0% | 160 | 41.2% |
| 29. Washington (Olin) | 1,529 | 437 | 28.6% | 148 | 33.9% |
| 30. UMass-Amherst (Isenberg) | 254 | 73 | 28.7% | 36 | 49.3% |
| 31. UCLA (Anderson) | 2,459 | 714 | 29.0% | 371 | 52.0% |
| 32. Arizona State (Carey) | 510 | 151 | 29.6% | 79 | 52.3% |
| 33. Minnesota (Carlson) | 452 | 137 | 30.3% | 71 | 51.8% |
| 34. Wisconsin-Madison | 511 | 156 | 30.5% | 118 | 75.6% |
| 35. Washington (Foster) | 771 | 241 | 31.3% | 114 | 47.3% |
| 36. Northeastern | 391 | 157 | 32.7% | 103 | 65.6% |
| 37. Boston College (Carroll) | 719 | 236 | 32.8% | 106 | 44.9% |
| 38. Notre Dame (Mendoza) | 886 | 292 | 33.0% | 134 | 45.9% |
| 39. Purdue (Krannert) | 771 | 256 | 33.2% | 108 | 42.2% |
| 40. Emory (Goizueta) | 1,037 | 345 | 33.3% | 134 | 38.8% |
| 41. Rochester (Simon) | 850 | 285 | 33.5% | 122 | 42.8% |
| 42. CUNY (Zicklin) | 379 | 128 | 33.8% | 65 | 50.8% |
| 43. Temple (Fox) | 275 | 96 | 34.9% | 50 | 52.1% |
| 44. SMU (Cox) | 565 | 198 | 35.0% | 128 | 64.6% |
| 45. Buffalo-SUNY | 421 | 149 | 35.4% | 94 | 63.1% |
| 46. Missouri (Trulaske) | 471 | 167 | 35.5% | 99 | 59.3% |
| 47. Rice (Jones) | 544 | 195 | 35.8% | 109 | 55.9% |
| 48. Vanderbilt (Owen) | 894 | 322 | 36.0% | 186 | 57.8% |
| 49. UNC (Kenan-Flagler) | 1,764 | 636 | 36.1% | 287 | 45.1% |
| 50. Penn State (Smeal) | 587 | 217 | 37.0% | 107 | 49.3% |
Related Reading:
- Smart Advice for This Year's B-School Applicants
- The Super GMAT Business Schools
- What An Average GMAT Score Would Get You
- Turning the Tables: Ranking the MBA Rankings