UC Admissions Trends
UC Reach measures outcomes at the six most selective UC campuses: Berkeley, UCLA, San Diego, Santa Barbara, Irvine, and Davis. Santa Cruz, Riverside, and Merced are excluded — they admit at substantially higher rates and only one year of comparable data is currently available.
The 30-year GPA arms race — admit rate by GPA, 1994–2025
Freshman admit rate at each weighted-capped GPA level, every year since 1994. The top line is 4.0+ applicants — at the most selective campuses, even straight-A odds have collapsed.
Source: UCOP freshman admit rate by weighted-capped GPA, 1994–2025. "Weighted-capped" is UC's own GPA (honors/AP bonus, capped). The compression is concentrated at the top campuses — at Riverside and Merced a 4.0 is still a near-lock.
Admit rate by residency — is it easier as a non-resident?
Freshman admit rate for California residents vs. out-of-state vs. international applicants, 1994–2025. At several campuses non-residents are admitted at higher rates — though this is a raw rate, not controlled for GPA (see note below).
Who has the edge — 2025 admit rate
Systemwide = admitted to at least one UC campus. Campus rows are campus-specific admit rates — they are not additive and should not be averaged across campuses.
| Campus | CA resident | Out-of-state | International | OOS − CA | Edge |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Systemwide | 76.8% | 61.7% | 68.3% | -15.1 | CA resident easier |
| UC Davis | 37.2% | 63.2% | 56.1% | +26.0 | Non-resident easier |
| UC Irvine | 21.9% | 47.4% | 41.8% | +25.5 | Non-resident easier |
| UC Santa Barbara | 32.1% | 54.8% | 47.7% | +22.7 | Non-resident easier |
| UC San Diego | 24.6% | 39.2% | 29.5% | +14.6 | Non-resident easier |
| UC Santa Cruz | 71.0% | 84.0% | 71.9% | +13.0 | Non-resident easier |
| UC Riverside | 86.9% | 88.8% | 82.1% | +1.9 | About even |
| UCLA | 9.6% | 11.2% | 6.3% | +1.6 | About even |
| UC Berkeley | 13.6% | 10.3% | 5.8% | -3.3 | CA resident easier |
| UC Merced | 96.3% | 83.9% | 80.0% | -12.4 | CA resident easier |
Comparable GPA, different odds — does residency still matter?
Admit rate within matched applicant-GPA bands (UC weighted-capped GPA), California resident vs. out-of-state vs. international. This is the raw-rate gap above, now controlled for GPA — if a gap survives here, it isn't explained by one group sending stronger applicants.
Compare the three bars within each band — heights across bands aren't a clean GPA gradient. Bands group schools by their average applicant GPA, so this controls for school profile, not individual student GPA — and can't see the essays, course rigor, intended major, or holistic context UC actually reads. Top band is 4.10+, where the capped GPA tops out.
Matched-GPA admit rate (applicants at 4.00–4.20) — CA vs. non-resident
| Campus | CA | Out-of-state | Int'l | OOS − CA | Int'l − CA | At equal GPA |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| UC Irvine | 27.0% | 58.1% | 58.0% | +31.1 | +31.0 | Non-resident favored |
| UC Davis | 38.9% | 68.0% | 66.3% | +29.1 | +27.4 | Non-resident favored |
| UC Santa Barbara | 36.7% | 65.5% | 67.2% | +28.8 | +30.5 | Non-resident favored |
| UC San Diego | 23.0% | 38.5% | 36.5% | +15.5 | +13.5 | Non-resident favored |
| UCLA | 10.1% | 13.7% | 11.6% | +3.6 | +1.5 | Leans non-resident |
| UC Berkeley | 14.4% | 12.9% | 10.1% | -1.5 | -4.3 | About even |
What the systemwide number hides
UC can truthfully say it admits California residents at a higher rate than non-residents — systemwide. The same data, read per campus, tells the opposite story at the campuses students actually compete for.
Same system, two stories: access (admitted to any UC — California-favored, because Merced and Riverside take nearly everyone) versus competitiveness (selective campuses, at equal GPA — non-resident-favored). The public headline leans on the first; applying families live the second.
Same GPA, different odds — does your school matter?
A school's average applicant GPA barely predicts its UC admit rate — the typical California high school lands near 22% whether its applicants average below 3.80 or above 4.00 (25%). What moves the needle is being top of your class: UC reads every applicant in local context — Eligibility in the Local Context (the top 9% of each California high school) plus holistic, context-based review. So a handful of schools place a large share of applicants into selective UCs despite below-average grades.
Schools that beat their GPA — below-3.80 average applicant GPA, high UC admit rate (2025)
| School | Avg applicant GPA | Apps | UC admit rate ⓘ | UC Reach ⓘ |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Fresno High School
|
3.73 | 112 | 33.9% | 11.1% |
|
Desert Hot Springs Hs
|
3.76 | 196 | 32.7% | 15.9% |
|
Math Science Technology Magnet
|
3.73 | 141 | 32.6% | — |
|
San Gorgonio High School
|
3.75 | 164 | 32.3% | 17.6% |
|
Granite Hills High
|
3.75 | 140 | 32.1% | 16.4% |
|
Madera High School
|
3.74 | 181 | 32.0% | 14.9% |
|
Indio High School
|
3.77 | 263 | 31.6% | 17.2% |
|
Mendota High School
|
3.71 | 114 | 31.6% | 13.5% |
|
Wallis Annenberg High School
|
3.78 | 171 | 31.0% | 45.7% |
|
Pomona High School
|
3.69 | 120 | 30.8% | 15.0% |
Why getting into UC is harder than ever
Statewide views, 1994–2025, across the six most selective UC campuses. Together they explain the squeeze UC Reach measures.
Admit-rate compression
Each campus admits a smaller share of applicants, 1994 to 2025.
GPA creep
Share of each campus's admits with a 4.0+ GPA, 1994 to 2025.
Public vs. private divergence
UC Reach (top-6 admits ÷ seniors) by school type.
Applications-per-senior inflation
Total UC applications ÷ seniors. Students apply to more campuses each year.
Yield trend
Share of admitted students who enroll, systemwide, 1994 to 2025.
Elite vs. Selective gap
Admit rate at UCB+UCLA vs. UCSD/UCSB/UCI/UCD.
Explore by campus tier
Aggregate Admit Rate by Year
Admit rate = SUM(admits) ÷ SUM(applicants) across the 4 selected campuses. Campus-level totals — one student admitted to multiple campuses is counted at each.
Admit Rate by Campus
Each line is one UC campus. Hover to see exact values. Lower lines mean the campus admitted a smaller share of its applicant pool that year.
Admits by Campus (count)
Total freshman admits each campus issued each year, 1994–2025 (all applicants). Useful for seeing absolute volume shifts as each campus grew.
Detail
| Year | Applicants | Admits | Admit Rate |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1994 | 68,112 | 49,056 | 72.0% |
| 1995 | 73,019 | 51,212 | 70.1% |
| 1996 | 77,997 | 52,293 | 67.0% |
| 1997 | 82,242 | 52,892 | 64.3% |
| 1998 | 92,044 | 53,803 | 58.5% |
| 1999 | 104,201 | 55,178 | 53.0% |
| 2000 | 116,772 | 58,385 | 50.0% |
| 2001 | 129,191 | 68,172 | 52.8% |
| 2002 | 135,282 | 70,063 | 51.8% |
| 2003 | 147,840 | 71,896 | 48.6% |
| 2004 | 144,618 | 71,074 | 49.1% |
| 2005 | 142,538 | 76,141 | 53.4% |
| 2006 | 154,427 | 86,445 | 56.0% |
| 2007 | 161,033 | 84,099 | 52.2% |
| 2008 | 177,280 | 84,020 | 47.4% |
| 2009 | 178,183 | 78,107 | 43.8% |
| 2010 | 183,865 | 80,190 | 43.6% |
| 2011 | 198,593 | 87,576 | 44.1% |
| 2012 | 222,417 | 93,848 | 42.2% |
| 2013 | 246,352 | 97,432 | 39.5% |
| 2014 | 267,304 | 98,055 | 36.7% |
| 2015 | 284,927 | 101,626 | 35.7% |
| 2016 | 307,655 | 118,212 | 38.4% |
| 2017 | 326,229 | 118,705 | 36.4% |
| 2018 | 363,200 | 118,504 | 32.6% |
| 2019 | 366,055 | 114,487 | 31.3% |
| 2020 | 365,858 | 134,963 | 36.9% |
| 2021 | 419,092 | 144,902 | 34.6% |
| 2022 | 456,166 | 120,375 | 26.4% |
| 2023 | 457,432 | 133,218 | 29.1% |
| 2024 | 466,269 | 148,661 | 31.9% |
| 2025 | 474,106 | 161,882 | 34.1% |