Schools

These 3 NJ Colleges Are The Hardest To Get Into

A new ranking by Niche looked at admission rates and other factors to determine exclusivity at colleges across the country.

The hardest New Jersey college to get into is Princeton University, according to a recent ranking that looks at admission rates and other factors to determine exclusivity.
The hardest New Jersey college to get into is Princeton University, according to a recent ranking that looks at admission rates and other factors to determine exclusivity. (Alex Mirchuk/Patch)

NEW JERSEY — The hardest New Jersey college to get into is Princeton University, according to a recent ranking that looks at admission rates and other factors to determine exclusivity.

New Jersey has three colleges on the 2025 Hardest Colleges To Get Into list from Niche, whose rankings focus on education and the best places to live. One of those were also among the top 20 in the nation.

Those schools and their acceptance rates are:

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1. Princeton University

  • Acceptance rate: 6 percent

2. Eastern International College - Jersey City

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  • Acceptance rate: 17 percent

3. Stevens Institute of Technology

  • Acceptance rate: 46 percent

Niche said ACT and SAT scores have been removed in this year’s rankings “to reflect a general de-emphasis on test scores in the college admissions process.”

Nationally, the hardest schools to get into are:

  1. Minerva University, San Francisco (1 percent)
  2. California Institute of Technology, Pasadena (3 percent),
  3. Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts (3 percent)
  4. Stanford University, Stanford, California (4 percent)
  5. Columbia University, New York City (4 percent)
  6. Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge (4 percent)
  7. Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut (5 percent)
  8. Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island (5 percent)
  9. University of Chicago (5 percent)
  10. Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey (6 percent)
  11. Duke University, Durham, North Carolina (6 percent)
  12. Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire (6 percent)
  13. University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia (7 percent)
  14. Vanderbilt University, Nashville (7 percent)
  15. Northeastern University, Boston (7 percent)
  16. Swarthmore College, Swarthmore, Pennsylvania (7 percent)
  17. Pomona College, Claremont, California (7 percent)
  18. Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois (7 percent)
  19. Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore (7 percent)
  20. Amherst College, Amherst, Massachusetts (7 percent)

Three of those schools — Johns Hopkins University, Northwestern University and Vanderbilt University — are what Forbes calls “the New Ivies,” 20 public and private schools that offer good job prospects to graduates as employers turn away from the nation’s oldest and most venerable schools.

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