University of Michigan
MI · Common Data Set 2025-2026
At a glance
Recent years
| Year | Admit rate | Enrolled UG | 6-yr grad | SAT (50th) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2025-2026 | 16.4% | 8,178 | 93.0% | 1,470 |
| 2024-2025 | 15.6% | 7,278 | 93.0% | — |
| 2023-2024 | — | 7,466 | 93.2% | 1,470 |
| 2022-2023 | — | 7,050 | 93.2% | 1,470 |
| 2021-2022 | — | 7,290 | 93.7% | — |
Common cross-admits
- University of Virginia-Main Campus
- Cornell University
- Georgetown University
- Carnegie Mellon University
- University of California-Los Angeles
- Northwestern University
- New York University
Statistical look-alikes
Schools with very similar admit rates, SAT scores, and enrollment to University of Michigan — worth a look even if they weren't already on your list.
- University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
- Georgia Institute of Technology-Main Campus
- Boston University
- University of Florida
- University of Southern California
Frequently asked
What is the acceptance rate at University of Michigan?
University of Michigan admits 16.4% of applicants based on the most recently reported Common Data Set.
What SAT score do I need for University of Michigan?
The middle 50% SAT range at University of Michigan is 1370–1530, with a median score of 1470. Students at the 25th percentile scored 1370; students at the 75th percentile scored 1530.
What ACT score do I need for University of Michigan?
The middle 50% ACT range at University of Michigan is 32–34, with a median of 33.
How much does University of Michigan cost?
Annual full-time tuition at University of Michigan is $19,015. Room and board is approximately $1,000. Most students pay less than the published price after financial aid.
What is the graduation rate at University of Michigan?
University of Michigan's 6-year graduation rate is 93.0%. The first-year retention rate is 97.0%.
How many students attend University of Michigan?
University of Michigan enrolls 35,358 undergraduate students. The student-to-faculty ratio is 15:1.
About the Common Data Set
The Common Data Set (CDS) is a collaborative reporting standard developed by colleges, the College Board, Peterson's, and U.S. News. Each year, participating institutions answer the same questionnaire covering admissions selectivity, enrollment composition, financial aid, faculty resources, and student outcomes. Because every school answers in the same format, the CDS lets prospective students compare schools apples-to-apples — without normalizing across different rankings methodologies. CDS Atlas aggregates the most recently published Common Data Set for hundreds of U.S. colleges and universities, with multi-year history where available, side-by-side comparison tools, and federal data (College Scorecard, EADA athletics, Clery campus safety) layered on top.
Source
Sourced from University of Michigan's officially published Common Data Set for 2025-2026.