I got waitlisted from Stanford. What should I do now?
I just found out I was waitlisted from Stanford University. I know Stanford keeps its admissions data unusually opaque and that the Waitlist Response Form can only be submitted once, making it the most important communication I can send. I want to understand the real odds, what that form should say, and exactly what steps I should take right now. What should I do?
5 hours ago
•
2 views
Daniel Berkowitz
• 5 hours ago
Advisor
Stanford is one of the most selective universities in the world and an institution that keeps its admissions data closer to the vest than almost any peer. Stanford's most recent published acceptance rate is 3.61% for the Class of 2028, when 2,067 students were admitted from 57,326 applicants. Stanford has declined to release detailed admissions data for the Class of 2029, continuing a pattern of opacity that extends to early action and regular decision breakdowns and other statistics that most peer institutions publish. What the university does disclose is that approximately 1% of all applicants were offered a place on the waitlist. With over 55,000 applicants in recent cycles, that means the waitlist pool is roughly 550 to 600 students, one of the smallest in this series relative to the total applicant pool.
Stanford has admitted students from its waitlist in 13 of the last 17 years for which data is available, including nine consecutive years prior to the Class of 2029. For the Class of 2028, 25 students were admitted from 414 who confirmed their waitlist spots, a 6.04% waitlist acceptance rate. The historical data shows significant volatility: in years when Stanford uses the list, it typically admits between 25 and 170 students. In the remaining years, zero. Stanford commits to providing all waitlist candidates with a final decision by July 1.
Submit the Stanford Waitlist Response Form, which is linked in your decision letter. Only students who accept their place will be considered. The waitlist is unranked. Respond promptly.
The most important procedural detail in Stanford's waitlist process is this: the Waitlist Response Form may be submitted only once. The form includes space for brief updates to your application. After you submit it, you can provide additional updates through the Update Application Form in your portal, but the initial Waitlist Response Form is your primary and most impactful communication. Stanford's admissions office states that it does not need supplementary materials or additional letters of recommendation in order to consider your application from the waitlist, and that updates should go through the portal forms only. No additional letters of recommendation. No supplementary portfolios. No unsolicited materials.
Commit to another school before May 1. Stanford's waitlist decisions, if any, will come after May 1 and will be finalized by July 1. Do not leave yourself without a seat in a first-year class.
Write your update through the portal forms as if it were a love letter to Stanford. Not a brag sheet. Not a resume update. Not a list of other schools that admitted you. A communication that makes the reader understand exactly who you will be in the Stanford community and why this specific university, with its specific structure, culture, and setting, is where you belong.
Stanford's identity is built on several distinctive pillars, and your update should engage with them directly. The first is the academic structure and interdisciplinary flexibility. Stanford is organized into seven schools, three of which serve undergraduates: the School of Humanities and Sciences, the School of Engineering, and the Doerr School of Sustainability (launched in 2022, Stanford's first new school in 70 years). Undergraduates have enormous flexibility to take courses across all seven schools, including the Graduate School of Business, the Law School, and the School of Medicine. Stanford operates on a quarter system, which means students take more courses across four years than at semester-based institutions and can explore more broadly. The coterminal degree program allows undergraduates to begin a master's degree while completing their bachelor's. If your intellectual interests span multiple schools or if you are drawn to the interdisciplinary flexibility that Stanford's structure enables, name the specific departments, programs, or cross-school combinations that excite you.
The second is the entrepreneurial culture and Silicon Valley. Stanford's campus sits on 8,180 acres in Palo Alto at the epicenter of the global technology economy. The relationship between Stanford and Silicon Valley is foundational: Stanford faculty and graduates created Hewlett-Packard, Google, Cisco, Netflix, Instagram, Snapchat, and hundreds of other companies. The Stanford Research Park, established in 1951, was the first university research park in the world. StartX, the Stanford Venture Studio, and the d.school (Hasso Plattner Institute of Design) provide structured pathways for students interested in entrepreneurship, design thinking, and innovation. If you are drawn to Stanford because you want to build something, because you want to be at the intersection of research and application, connect that to your specific plans.
The third is the research infrastructure. Stanford is among the top research universities in the world by every measure. Undergraduate research is deeply embedded in the culture, with structured programs including the Stanford Undergraduate Research Journal, the Undergraduate Research Program, and summer research fellowships. If specific labs, research centers, or faculty draw you to Stanford, name them.
The fourth is the residential culture and campus experience. Stanford's residential system places the vast majority of undergraduates in on-campus housing for all four years. The first-year residential experience, structured around themed residences and academic communities, creates an immediate sense of belonging. Stanford competes in 36 NCAA Division I varsity sports, the most of any university in the country, and has won more Director's Cup trophies than any other institution. If the residential culture, the athletics, or the physical beauty of the campus are part of your draw, articulate what they mean to you.
The fifth is the California setting. Stanford's location in the San Francisco Bay Area provides access to one of the most dynamic economic, cultural, and technological ecosystems in the world. The Pacific coast, the redwood forests, and the Mediterranean climate create a physical environment that is unlike any other campus in this tier. Bing Overseas Studies operates programs on every continent, and Stanford's financial aid travels with students. If the Bay Area environment or the global programs are part of what draws you, connect them to your plans.
Do not brag. Do not list your accomplishments. Submit the Waitlist Response Form promptly and use the Update Application Form for any subsequent updates. Do not send additional letters of recommendation or supplementary materials through any other channel.
After you have submitted the Waitlist Response Form, your guidance counselor should contact the admissions office to communicate that Stanford is your top choice and that you will enroll if admitted. A brief, credible call reinforces the signal that your interest is genuine. Keep your grades up. Stanford's acceptance rate has been below 4% in recent years. Updated grades can be shared through the Update Application Form in your portal.
Stanford has admitted students from its waitlist in 13 of the last 17 years for which data is available, including nine consecutive years prior to the Class of 2029. For the Class of 2028, 25 students were admitted from 414 who confirmed their waitlist spots, a 6.04% waitlist acceptance rate. The historical data shows significant volatility: in years when Stanford uses the list, it typically admits between 25 and 170 students. In the remaining years, zero. Stanford commits to providing all waitlist candidates with a final decision by July 1.
Submit the Stanford Waitlist Response Form, which is linked in your decision letter. Only students who accept their place will be considered. The waitlist is unranked. Respond promptly.
The most important procedural detail in Stanford's waitlist process is this: the Waitlist Response Form may be submitted only once. The form includes space for brief updates to your application. After you submit it, you can provide additional updates through the Update Application Form in your portal, but the initial Waitlist Response Form is your primary and most impactful communication. Stanford's admissions office states that it does not need supplementary materials or additional letters of recommendation in order to consider your application from the waitlist, and that updates should go through the portal forms only. No additional letters of recommendation. No supplementary portfolios. No unsolicited materials.
Commit to another school before May 1. Stanford's waitlist decisions, if any, will come after May 1 and will be finalized by July 1. Do not leave yourself without a seat in a first-year class.
Write your update through the portal forms as if it were a love letter to Stanford. Not a brag sheet. Not a resume update. Not a list of other schools that admitted you. A communication that makes the reader understand exactly who you will be in the Stanford community and why this specific university, with its specific structure, culture, and setting, is where you belong.
Stanford's identity is built on several distinctive pillars, and your update should engage with them directly. The first is the academic structure and interdisciplinary flexibility. Stanford is organized into seven schools, three of which serve undergraduates: the School of Humanities and Sciences, the School of Engineering, and the Doerr School of Sustainability (launched in 2022, Stanford's first new school in 70 years). Undergraduates have enormous flexibility to take courses across all seven schools, including the Graduate School of Business, the Law School, and the School of Medicine. Stanford operates on a quarter system, which means students take more courses across four years than at semester-based institutions and can explore more broadly. The coterminal degree program allows undergraduates to begin a master's degree while completing their bachelor's. If your intellectual interests span multiple schools or if you are drawn to the interdisciplinary flexibility that Stanford's structure enables, name the specific departments, programs, or cross-school combinations that excite you.
The second is the entrepreneurial culture and Silicon Valley. Stanford's campus sits on 8,180 acres in Palo Alto at the epicenter of the global technology economy. The relationship between Stanford and Silicon Valley is foundational: Stanford faculty and graduates created Hewlett-Packard, Google, Cisco, Netflix, Instagram, Snapchat, and hundreds of other companies. The Stanford Research Park, established in 1951, was the first university research park in the world. StartX, the Stanford Venture Studio, and the d.school (Hasso Plattner Institute of Design) provide structured pathways for students interested in entrepreneurship, design thinking, and innovation. If you are drawn to Stanford because you want to build something, because you want to be at the intersection of research and application, connect that to your specific plans.
The third is the research infrastructure. Stanford is among the top research universities in the world by every measure. Undergraduate research is deeply embedded in the culture, with structured programs including the Stanford Undergraduate Research Journal, the Undergraduate Research Program, and summer research fellowships. If specific labs, research centers, or faculty draw you to Stanford, name them.
The fourth is the residential culture and campus experience. Stanford's residential system places the vast majority of undergraduates in on-campus housing for all four years. The first-year residential experience, structured around themed residences and academic communities, creates an immediate sense of belonging. Stanford competes in 36 NCAA Division I varsity sports, the most of any university in the country, and has won more Director's Cup trophies than any other institution. If the residential culture, the athletics, or the physical beauty of the campus are part of your draw, articulate what they mean to you.
The fifth is the California setting. Stanford's location in the San Francisco Bay Area provides access to one of the most dynamic economic, cultural, and technological ecosystems in the world. The Pacific coast, the redwood forests, and the Mediterranean climate create a physical environment that is unlike any other campus in this tier. Bing Overseas Studies operates programs on every continent, and Stanford's financial aid travels with students. If the Bay Area environment or the global programs are part of what draws you, connect them to your plans.
Do not brag. Do not list your accomplishments. Submit the Waitlist Response Form promptly and use the Update Application Form for any subsequent updates. Do not send additional letters of recommendation or supplementary materials through any other channel.
After you have submitted the Waitlist Response Form, your guidance counselor should contact the admissions office to communicate that Stanford is your top choice and that you will enroll if admitted. A brief, credible call reinforces the signal that your interest is genuine. Keep your grades up. Stanford's acceptance rate has been below 4% in recent years. Updated grades can be shared through the Update Application Form in your portal.
Comments & Questions (0)
No comments yet. Be the first to ask a question or share your thoughts!
Start the conversation
Have a follow-up question or want to share your experience? Leave a comment below.
Related Questions
Students also ask…
Daniel Berkowitz
New York City
Yale University - PhD in Theoretical Physics | NYU - BS in Physics
Experience
9 years
Rating
5.0 (274 reviews)