The Legacy Admissions Tracker

In the post-race-conscious admissions landscape, one of the hottest topics is legacy admissions. Here, we track how colleges are considering legacy in the admissions process.

legacy admissions

In the post-race-conscious admissions landscape, one of the hottest topics is legacy admissions. Many argue that legacy admissions unfairly benefit affluent students, which, in turn, can thwart efforts to build diverse campuses. Others argue that to pull legacy admissions practices just when legacy pools start to become more diverse is counterproductive—and that colleges need legacy preference to maintain connections to (and donations from) alumni. Colleges across the country are reckoning with this very question right now.

Some have already taken action in eliminating legacy preference—loudly, like Wesleyan University, or without fanfare, like the University of Michigan and Georgia Tech, which simply updated their Common Data Sets this year to reflect that alumni/ae connection is “not considered.” Others are devising new ways to be inclusive of legacy relationships without including a formal “box”—for example, the University of Virginia introduced a new essay question allowing students to write about their relationship with the institution, and they include language around relationships that might include being descended from laborers who worked there.

Below is a list of colleges that are popular with Private Prep students and do NOT consider legacy in the admissions process.*


Amherst College

Baylor University

Binghamton University (SUNY)

Bryn Mawr College

California Institute of Technology

University of California system — all campuses

Cal State system — all campuses

Florida state system – all campuses

Georgia state system – all campuses

Hunter College (CUNY)

Carnegie Mellon University

Clark University

Cooper Union

Emerson College

Johns Hopkins University

University of Illinois, Urbana Champaign

MIT

University of Maryland – College Park

University of Michigan, Ann Arbor

University of North Carolina – Chapel Hill

University of Pittsburgh

University of Texas – Austin

University of Washington

University of Wisconsin – Madison

Virginia Tech

Wesleyan University

*Information sourced from colleges’ 2022-23 Common Data Sets and/or institutional press releases.


It is important to note that, just because a school has stated that it does not officially consider legacy status, that does not necessarily mean that students can’t or shouldn’t write about a family connection to a school in a “why us?” essay. While legacy status may not give an official boost the way it once did at some schools, it can still be a compelling part of demonstrating interest and highlighting fit. Colleges still want to admit students who will come; legacy may be a part of that story for some students.

Need more personalized guidance on crafting your college application? Contact our college admissions team.

Caroline Hertz