Tufts University
tufts.md
Tufts University
Admissions (Class of 2029 / Fall 2025)
- Total applicants: 34,800
- Overall acceptance rate: 10.5%
- Early round: Early Decision — 30.0% vs 7.0% RD
- Class size: 1,400
- Yield: 37%
Academics
- SAT middle 50%: 1480–1550
- ACT middle 50%: 33–35
- Avg unweighted GPA: 3.9
- Top 10% of HS class: 89%
- Testing policy: Test-optional
Demographics
- Women: 54.5%, Asian: 12.4%, Black: 3.4%, Hispanic: 5.4%, White: 54.2%, International: 10.8%
Financial Aid / Net Cost
| Income Bracket | Net Price |
|---|---|
| $0–$30,000 | $8,432 |
| $30,001–$48,000 | $12,051 |
| $48,001–$75,000 | $19,461 |
| $75,001–$110,000 | $26,933 |
| Over $110,000 | $47,143 |
Athletics
NCAA Division III — no athletic scholarships.
Notable
Known for weighting demonstrated interest (campus visits, interviews) heavily. Strong for international relations and pre-med. Located in Medford, MA near Boston.
Community Insights (Reddit/Forums)
Admissions Strategy
- ED advantage is enormous: 30% ED vs 7% RD (~4.3x multiplier). Forum consensus: ED is "basically required" if Tufts is a top choice.
- "Tufts Syndrome" is the literal namesake of yield protection. The term was coined because Tufts was repeatedly accused of rejecting overqualified applicants who treated it as a safety school. This is the most discussed topic about Tufts on any admissions forum.
- Demonstrated interest is listed as "considered" on the CDS. Forums strongly recommend campus visits, interviews, and thoughtful supplemental essays referencing specific Tufts programs.
- CC thread "Is Tufts Syndrome Real at Tufts?" documents extensive debate: some users cite Naviance data showing high-stat students rejected while lower-stat students were admitted; others argue essays, fit, and holistic review explain the pattern.
- Tufts historically attracted "STEM kids who like music" (per CC user) — applicants who demonstrate intellectual breadth and genuine Tufts-specific interest reportedly do best.
- No school has ever publicly admitted to yield protection. The strongest counter-argument: applicants who get rejected probably wrote weaker "Why Tufts" essays because they didn't take the school seriously.
Campus Culture & Fit
- Strong for international relations (Fletcher School connection), pre-med, and interdisciplinary programs. SMFA (art school) merger adds creative dimension.
- Medford/Somerville location is suburban but close to Boston. Students describe campus as "intellectual but chill" — not cutthroat.
- D3 athletics mean no sports-focused culture. Greek life exists but is not dominant.
- Political culture leans progressive. Community service and global engagement are strong institutional values.
- Common criticism: Tufts lacks the name recognition of peer schools (Ivy, HYPSM), which contributes to yield challenges.
Financial Aid Reputation
- Meets 100% of demonstrated need, but forums describe Tufts aid as less generous than HYPSM peers.
- Net cost data shows: $8.4K for lowest bracket (reasonable) but $47K+ for $110K+ families — among the highest in its tier.
- No significant merit scholarship program. Need-based aid is the primary pathway.
Simulation-Relevant Takeaways
- Yield protection should be a key parameter for Tufts in the model. With 37% yield and the literal namesake of the practice, the simulation should penalize overqualified applicants who don't signal genuine interest (e.g., no ED commitment).
- Very high ED multiplier (4.3x) should be modeled. RD rate (7%) is brutally low.
- Demonstrated interest factor should be modeled explicitly for Tufts — one of the few schools where CDS confirms it matters.
Sources
- Tufts University Common Data Set 2024–2025
- research_colleges.json simulation data
- College Confidential: Is Tufts Syndrome Real at Tufts? (talk.collegeconfidential.com)
- College Confidential: Beware the Tufts Syndrome (collegeconfidential.com articles)
- CollegeVine: What is Yield Protection/Tufts Syndrome? (blog.collegevine.com)
- Tufts Admissions: What's the Deal with Demonstrated Interest? (admissions.tufts.edu)
- Transizion: Yield Protection aka Tufts Syndrome — Everything You Need to Know
- BestColleges: Is Yield Protection Real? (bestcolleges.com)