New Haven, CT · Private non-profit · Doctoral / R1 research university
Source: US Department of Education College Scorecard. Documentation version September 2025; repository snapshot imported April 25, 2026. Scorecard fields can come from different reporting years, and this snapshot does not encode one universal data year. SAT totals are rounded to the nearest valid 10 points. Tuition excludes room, board, fees, and books. Read the methodology.
The Scorecard snapshot places the middle 50% of reported scores between 1470 and 1570. This is descriptive data, not an admission threshold or probability estimate.
Ranked by proximity to Yale University's reported SAT midpoint. Similar scores do not imply similar programs, cost, or admission odds.
| College | Location | SAT middle 50% | Acceptance rate |
|---|---|---|---|
| New York University | New York, NY | 1480–1560 | 9% |
| University of Notre Dame | Notre Dame, IN | 1460–1560 | 11% |
| Emory University | Atlanta, GA | 1470–1550 | 11% |
| Barnard College | New York, NY | 1470–1560 | 9% |
| Wellesley College | Wellesley, MA | 1460–1560 | 14% |
| Carleton College | Northfield, MN | 1450–1560 | 20% |
Yale University's Scorecard snapshot shows a middle-50% SAT range of 1470–1570, rounded to valid 10-point totals. 1600 is a planning target above the reported range, not an admission cutoff.
Yale University's most recently reported acceptance rate is approximately 4%.
Published tuition is approximately $67,250 per year (excludes room, board, fees).
Many US universities adjusted test policies after 2020. Check Yale University's admissions page for current test-optional, test-required, or test-flexible policy.