I got waitlisted from Dartmouth. What should I do now?
I just found out I was waitlisted from Dartmouth. I know Dartmouth has one of the most volatile waitlists in the Ivy League, with five zero-admit years over the last ten cycles. I want to understand the real odds, what a strong letter of continued interest should say for a school with Dartmouth's unique identity, and exactly what steps I should take right now. What should I do?
1 day ago
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Daniel Berkowitz
• 1 day ago
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Dartmouth received 28,230 applications for the Class of 2029 and admitted 1,702, an acceptance rate of 6.03%. The Regular Decision acceptance rate for the Class of 2028 was 3.66%. Dartmouth's yield rate has been approximately 70% in recent years. Dartmouth's waitlist data over 21 published years reveals an average acceptance rate of approximately 4.09%, but the year-to-year volatility is extreme. For the Class of 2028, 29 students were admitted from 2,189 who confirmed their waitlist spots, a 1.32% waitlist acceptance rate, the lowest in the Ivy League that year. For the Class of 2027, zero students were admitted. For the Classes of 2022, 2023, and 2025, zero students were admitted as well. Five zero-admit years over the last ten cycles is a high frequency. But the range extends to 129 students admitted for the Class of 2019 (13.4%) and 101 for the Class of 2020 (8.7%). On average, approximately 2,300 students are offered the waitlist each year, about 1,600 accept, and roughly 28 are admitted. The pattern is binary: either the list moves, or it does not. When yield hits its 70% target, the waitlist produces zero offers.
Submit the Wait List Reply Form through the Dartmouth Application Portal immediately. Select "Yes" to confirm your interest. If you do not respond via this form, you will not be considered if an opening occurs. The waitlist is unranked.
Commit to another school before May 1. Dartmouth's own guidance is direct: given the small number of students typically offered admission from the waitlist, it is important to secure a place at one of the schools where you were admitted. Do not leave yourself without a seat in a first-year class.
Write a letter of continued interest and upload it through the applicant portal promptly. Dartmouth explicitly encourages waitlisted students to upload a brief letter, and specifies that it accepts only written submissions, not photographs or scanned certificates. Write up to 650 words. Make it a love letter to Dartmouth. Not a brag sheet. Not a resume update. Not a list of other schools that admitted you. A letter that makes the reader understand exactly who you will be in the Dartmouth community and why this specific college, with its specific structure and culture, is where you belong.
Dartmouth's identity is built on several distinctive pillars, and your letter should engage with them directly. The first and most structurally distinctive is the D-Plan and the quarter system. Dartmouth operates on a year-round academic calendar of four 10-week terms, and the D-Plan allows students to customize their enrollment pattern across the four years. Students can take off terms during the academic year to pursue internships, research, travel, or personal projects, and enroll during summer terms instead. This flexibility is unique in the Ivy League and creates a rhythm of academic and experiential learning that no semester-based institution can replicate. The D-Plan also structures the more than 40 off-campus programs, including Language Study Abroad and Tucker Foundation global service programs. If the D-Plan is part of what draws you to Dartmouth, because you want the freedom to design a college experience that alternates between intensive on-campus academics and off-campus exploration, articulate the specific pattern you envision.
The second is the emphasis on undergraduate education. Dartmouth is a college, not a university, in its self-identification and in the structure of its resources. The faculty's primary commitment is to undergraduate teaching and mentorship, and the student-to-faculty ratio is 7:1. The Tuck School of Business, the Thayer School of Engineering, and the Geisel School of Medicine are graduate and professional schools that enrich the undergraduate experience through cross-enrollment and research access but do not draw faculty attention away from undergraduates in the way that large graduate programs at peer universities do. If you are drawn to Dartmouth because you want an Ivy League institution where the undergraduate is the primary student, where you will know your professors and they will know you, say so.
The third is the outdoor culture and the Upper Valley setting. Dartmouth's campus sits in Hanover, New Hampshire, on the banks of the Connecticut River. The Dartmouth Outing Club, the oldest and largest collegiate outing club in the country, organizes hiking, skiing, canoeing, climbing, and wilderness trips throughout the year. The Second College Grant, a 27,000-acre tract of forest in northern New Hampshire owned by the college, provides a wilderness classroom for ecology, environmental studies, and outdoor leadership. The Dartmouth Skiway, the college's own ski area, is a short drive from campus. If the outdoor culture and the relationship between the academic experience and the natural environment are part of what draws you to Dartmouth, this is a genuinely distinctive LOCI anchor that separates Dartmouth from every other school in the Ivy League. No other Ivy has anything remotely comparable.
The fourth is the residential and social culture. Dartmouth enrolls approximately 4,500 undergraduates and maintains a residential community where the vast majority of students live on campus for all four years. The house system, Greek organizations, and affinity communities create overlapping social structures. The small size of the student body means the campus feels genuinely close-knit: you will recognize faces on the Green, eat with people from every part of the campus community, and experience the intimacy of a small college within the resources of a research institution. If the scale and the community are part of your draw, articulate what they mean to you specifically.
The fifth is Ivy League Division I athletics and the competitive culture. Dartmouth competes in 34 varsity sports, and the combination of academic intensity, athletic competition, and the outdoor environment creates a campus energy that is uniquely Dartmouth. If athletics, intramurals, or the broader culture of physical activity and competition are part of your identity, connect them to your Dartmouth story.
Do not brag. Do not list your accomplishments in the body of the letter. Upload the letter through the portal promptly. The primacy effect matters.
One important restriction: Dartmouth specifically requests that waitlisted students not visit the admissions office in person. This is a busy period for the office, and in-person visits will not help your candidacy. Your uploaded letter is where you make your case.
After your letter is submitted, your guidance counselor should contact the admissions office to communicate that Dartmouth 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. Dartmouth's acceptance rate for the Class of 2029 was 6.03% and the RD rate for the Class of 2028 was 3.66%. The academic profile of admitted students is among the strongest in the Ivy League. Updated grades strengthen your candidacy.
Submit the Wait List Reply Form through the Dartmouth Application Portal immediately. Select "Yes" to confirm your interest. If you do not respond via this form, you will not be considered if an opening occurs. The waitlist is unranked.
Commit to another school before May 1. Dartmouth's own guidance is direct: given the small number of students typically offered admission from the waitlist, it is important to secure a place at one of the schools where you were admitted. Do not leave yourself without a seat in a first-year class.
Write a letter of continued interest and upload it through the applicant portal promptly. Dartmouth explicitly encourages waitlisted students to upload a brief letter, and specifies that it accepts only written submissions, not photographs or scanned certificates. Write up to 650 words. Make it a love letter to Dartmouth. Not a brag sheet. Not a resume update. Not a list of other schools that admitted you. A letter that makes the reader understand exactly who you will be in the Dartmouth community and why this specific college, with its specific structure and culture, is where you belong.
Dartmouth's identity is built on several distinctive pillars, and your letter should engage with them directly. The first and most structurally distinctive is the D-Plan and the quarter system. Dartmouth operates on a year-round academic calendar of four 10-week terms, and the D-Plan allows students to customize their enrollment pattern across the four years. Students can take off terms during the academic year to pursue internships, research, travel, or personal projects, and enroll during summer terms instead. This flexibility is unique in the Ivy League and creates a rhythm of academic and experiential learning that no semester-based institution can replicate. The D-Plan also structures the more than 40 off-campus programs, including Language Study Abroad and Tucker Foundation global service programs. If the D-Plan is part of what draws you to Dartmouth, because you want the freedom to design a college experience that alternates between intensive on-campus academics and off-campus exploration, articulate the specific pattern you envision.
The second is the emphasis on undergraduate education. Dartmouth is a college, not a university, in its self-identification and in the structure of its resources. The faculty's primary commitment is to undergraduate teaching and mentorship, and the student-to-faculty ratio is 7:1. The Tuck School of Business, the Thayer School of Engineering, and the Geisel School of Medicine are graduate and professional schools that enrich the undergraduate experience through cross-enrollment and research access but do not draw faculty attention away from undergraduates in the way that large graduate programs at peer universities do. If you are drawn to Dartmouth because you want an Ivy League institution where the undergraduate is the primary student, where you will know your professors and they will know you, say so.
The third is the outdoor culture and the Upper Valley setting. Dartmouth's campus sits in Hanover, New Hampshire, on the banks of the Connecticut River. The Dartmouth Outing Club, the oldest and largest collegiate outing club in the country, organizes hiking, skiing, canoeing, climbing, and wilderness trips throughout the year. The Second College Grant, a 27,000-acre tract of forest in northern New Hampshire owned by the college, provides a wilderness classroom for ecology, environmental studies, and outdoor leadership. The Dartmouth Skiway, the college's own ski area, is a short drive from campus. If the outdoor culture and the relationship between the academic experience and the natural environment are part of what draws you to Dartmouth, this is a genuinely distinctive LOCI anchor that separates Dartmouth from every other school in the Ivy League. No other Ivy has anything remotely comparable.
The fourth is the residential and social culture. Dartmouth enrolls approximately 4,500 undergraduates and maintains a residential community where the vast majority of students live on campus for all four years. The house system, Greek organizations, and affinity communities create overlapping social structures. The small size of the student body means the campus feels genuinely close-knit: you will recognize faces on the Green, eat with people from every part of the campus community, and experience the intimacy of a small college within the resources of a research institution. If the scale and the community are part of your draw, articulate what they mean to you specifically.
The fifth is Ivy League Division I athletics and the competitive culture. Dartmouth competes in 34 varsity sports, and the combination of academic intensity, athletic competition, and the outdoor environment creates a campus energy that is uniquely Dartmouth. If athletics, intramurals, or the broader culture of physical activity and competition are part of your identity, connect them to your Dartmouth story.
Do not brag. Do not list your accomplishments in the body of the letter. Upload the letter through the portal promptly. The primacy effect matters.
One important restriction: Dartmouth specifically requests that waitlisted students not visit the admissions office in person. This is a busy period for the office, and in-person visits will not help your candidacy. Your uploaded letter is where you make your case.
After your letter is submitted, your guidance counselor should contact the admissions office to communicate that Dartmouth 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. Dartmouth's acceptance rate for the Class of 2029 was 6.03% and the RD rate for the Class of 2028 was 3.66%. The academic profile of admitted students is among the strongest in the Ivy League. Updated grades strengthen your candidacy.
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Daniel Berkowitz
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Yale University - PhD in Theoretical Physics | NYU - BS in Physics
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