19 selective schools · New York

Best Colleges in New York

Ranked by acceptance rate. Real published data.

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What is the most selective college in New York?

Columbia University currently has the lowest acceptance rate among selective New York schools at 3.9%. The average acceptance rate across these 19 New York institutions is 22.4%.

Ranked by Acceptance Rate

#SchoolAccept
1Columbia UniversityNew York, New York3.9%
2Cornell UniversityIthaca, New York7.9%
3Barnard CollegeNew York, New York8.8%
4Barnard CollegeNew York, NY8.8%
5New York UniversityNew York, New York9.2%
6New York UniversityNew York, NY9.2%
7Hamilton CollegeClinton, New York13.6%
8Hamilton CollegeClinton, NY13.6%
9Colgate UniversityHamilton, New York13.9%
10Colgate UniversityHamilton, NY13.9%
11Vassar CollegePoughkeepsie, New York18.6%
12Vassar CollegePoughkeepsie, NY18.6%
13Skidmore CollegeSaratoga Springs, NY21.1%
14Binghamton UniversityVestal, New York38.6%
15Binghamton UniversityBinghamton, NY38.6%
16Union CollegeSchenectady, NY43.9%
17Syracuse UniversitySyracuse, NY45.9%
18Stony Brook UniversityStony Brook, New York49.0%
19Stony Brook UniversityStony Brook, NY49.0%

Source: U.S. Department of Education College Scorecard. Last verified May 2026.

Standouts in New York

The New York Selective Landscape

New York has 19 selective universities and colleges in this dataset: 4 public institutions and 15 private institutions. Acceptance rates range from 3.9% at Columbia to 49.0% at Stony Brook, with a state average of 22.4%. For in-state students, the public options offer significantly lower net prices than out-of-state alternatives, often by $15,000 or more per year.

In-State vs. Out-of-State: The Hidden Discount

Public university acceptance rates published nationally aggregate in-state and out-of-state applicants. The actual rates split substantially. Most New York public flagships admit in-state residents at acceptance rates 10–25 percentage points higher than their published headline numbers. The reverse is also true: for out-of-state applicants, the effective acceptance rate at these schools is often well below the published figure.

Tuition follows the same logic. New York residents typically pay $20,000–$30,000 less per year at in-state public universities than non-residents. Combined with state-specific aid programs, that gap often makes a state flagship the highest-ROI option for in-state students even when private schools meet 100% of demonstrated need.

New York-Specific Aid You Should Know

Beyond federal Pell Grants and institutional aid, New York runs its own student aid program: Excelsior Scholarship (free SUNY/CUNY tuition for in-state families under specific income thresholds). Eligibility rules vary year to year. Always check the most recent state guidance and FAFSA requirements before counting on any specific dollar amount.

How to Use This List

Acceptance rate is the most direct selectivity signal but tells you nothing about your personal odds. Schools with similar admit rates can have very different admitted-student profiles. New York has a mix of national-tier privates, in-state flagships (with substantially higher admit rates for residents than non-residents), and selective liberal arts colleges. Each plays a different role in a balanced college list.

For most in-state New York applicants, the right college list mixes one or two reach privates, a flagship public as a target with strong odds and low net price, and at least one safety. Use the calculator to estimate your personal odds at each before deciding which to ED.

FAQ

What is the easiest college to get into in New York?

Among selective New York institutions tracked here, Stony Brook University has the highest acceptance rate (49.0%). For broader admissions options, the in-state community college and CSU/SUNY/state university systems offer significantly higher admit rates than these competitive schools.

Are in-state public schools easier to get into than the published rate?

Yes, often dramatically so. Public flagships report aggregate acceptance rates that mix in-state and out-of-state pools. In-state residents typically face acceptance rates 10–30 percentage points higher than the headline number. Out-of-state applicants face rates lower than the headline. Check each school's Common Data Set for the residency-split breakdown.

Should I apply to schools outside New York?

Most students should apply to a mix. Private universities have no in-state preference (Harvard treats a New York applicant the same as a Wyoming applicant). Out-of-state public flagships typically charge much higher tuition. The right balance depends on your odds, financial picture, and willingness to leave home.