UT Austin Holistic Admissions: What Happens After the Auto-Admit List
75% of UT Austin's freshman class is filled by class rank. The other 25% is decided by something else entirely. Here's what holistic review actually looks at.
Green College Admissions | Insights
UT Austin Holistic Admissions: What Happens After the Auto-Admit List
By Joseph Green | June 18, 2026
At Green College Admissions , one of the most common things I hear from Texas families is some version of this: "My child isn't in the top 5%, so UT Austin is off the table." That belief is understandable. It's also incomplete.
State law requires UT Austin to fill 75% of its in-state freshman seats through automatic admission based on class rank. For fall 2026 applicants, that threshold is the top 5%. But that leaves 25% of every incoming class admitted through a different process entirely: holistic review. That 25% does not go to students with the highest stats who just missed the cutoff. It goes to students who make a compelling case across the full picture of their application.
This post breaks down exactly what that process looks at, and what it means practically for a student who is not auto-admit.
The 25% nobody talks about
Under Texas Education Code, UT Austin is legally required to automatically admit any Texas resident who graduates in the top percentage of their high school class, up to 75% of the in-state enrollment cap. Once that 75% is filled, the remaining seats, plus all out-of-state and transfer applicants, go through holistic review.
That is not a small number. For a flagship university that enrolled around 8,600 freshmen in a recent class, 25% represents well over 2,000 seats filled based on something other than rank alone. Those students are not statistical outliers who snuck through. They are admitted because their applications made a case that reviewers found compelling.
The question is: what does that case look like?
What UT Austin's admissions officers actually consider
UT Austin publishes its holistic review criteria directly on its admissions website. The factors are:
Class rank and strength of academic background
Rank still matters in holistic review, but it is weighed in context. A student ranked 12th in a class of 500 at a rigorous high school is read differently than the same rank at a different school. Course rigor sits alongside rank in this evaluation.
Test scores
UT Austin is test-required. Scores are part of the file, but they are one input among many. There is no published cutoff. A strong score helps; a lower score does not automatically disqualify a holistic applicant if the rest of the application is cohesive.
Achievements, honors, and awards
Formal recognition matters, but it does not have to come from a national competition. Reviewers are looking for evidence of initiative and accomplishment in the context of what was available to that student.
Work, service, and extracurricular activities
The quantity of activities is less important than the pattern they reveal. A student who has held a part-time job and mentored younger students in one area tells a cleaner story than a student with fifteen unconnected clubs.
Personal essays
For holistic applicants, essays are often the most important part of the file. This is where a student can provide context a transcript cannot, explain choices, and make a reviewer feel like they understand who this person is and why they belong at UT Austin.
Recommendations
UT Austin does not require recommendations, but accepts them. A strong letter from a teacher who can speak specifically to a student's intellectual curiosity or growth adds a dimension a GPA cannot.
Fit to your chosen major
This is the factor that comes up most consistently among holistic admits. UT Austin reviews applications at the college and major level. A student applying to Computer Science who has spent three years building software projects tells a coherent story. A student applying to the same program whose activities have no connection to it does not.
Source: admissions.utexas.edu
Your rank is one input. Your story is another.
The families I work with who feel locked out of UT Austin because of rank are often looking at the wrong variable. Holistic review does not ask whether a student can survive at UT Austin. It asks whether this student belongs in this college, in this major, right now.
That is a question a rank cannot answer. It is a question essays, activities, and deliberate framing can answer very well.
"Holistic review does not ask whether a student can survive at UT Austin. It asks whether this student belongs in this college, in this major, right now."
The practical implication: if your child is not in the top 5%, the work is not to manufacture credentials they don't have. The work is to build an application that tells a coherent story about who they are and what they intend to study. That starts earlier than most families think, and it requires more than a strong personal statement drafted the summer before senior year.
If UT Austin is on your child's list and they are not auto-admit, the question is not whether to apply. The question is whether the application they submit tells that story clearly enough to compete.
Related reading
Beyond the Numbers: Holistic Admissions at UT Austin and Texas A&M
Should You Submit a Test Score to Michigan? Here's What the Data Shows.
Is UT Austin on your child's list?
I work with Texas families to build the application layer that holistic review is actually looking for. Essays, activities framing, school list strategy, and major fit. If your child is a junior or rising senior, now is the right time to start.
Get in TouchJoseph Green
Independent college admissions consultant based in Keller, TX. Founder of Green College Admissions . 25 years in education. Serving Texas families in person and students nationwide virtually.
What Admissions Officers Actually See
Your child's GPA and test score open the door. Here's what admissions officers are actually evaluating on the other side of it.
What Admissions Officers Actually See
Your child's transcript starts the conversation. Their application has to finish it.
Think of every college application as an iceberg. What most families spend all their time on sits above the waterline. The part that decides the outcome is below it.
It's a fair question. And the answer isn't that grades and scores don't matter. They do. They're the price of admission to the conversation. But at most competitive colleges, the conversation doesn't end there.
Here's what's actually happening on the other side of the application.
The iceberg model
Think of every application as an iceberg. The tip, GPA, course rigor, test scores, is what gets your child's file picked up. Every applicant in a competitive pool has something there. It's the floor, not the ceiling.
Below the waterline is where the actual decision happens. That's where admissions officers spend most of their time, reading essays, reviewing activities, weighing recommendations, and asking whether this student's application speaks to this school in a way that feels specific, not generic.
The families who understand this early are the ones who spend junior year building that layer, not cramming for another practice test. For a deeper look at how one test-optional school weighs scores, see our breakdown of whether to submit a test score to Michigan .
"A compelling story from a 1280 will outperform a flat application from a 1400. Every time."
The three questions every reader asks
When an admissions officer reads your child's application, they're trying to answer three things:
The subjective layer: what actually moves the needle
Below the waterline, these are the components that determine outcomes in close decisions:
This applies everywhere, not just test-optional schools
One thing families often assume is that if a school reinstated test requirements, scores must be driving the decision. That's not how it works. Schools like Harvard, Georgetown, Cornell, and UT Austin all require scores, and all read every essay, weigh every recommendation, and evaluate whether each applicant's story fits the school they're applying to.
A test score gets your child's file opened. It doesn't get them in. That's true whether the school is test-optional or test-required, whether the acceptance rate is single digits or fifty percent.
The application layer is where this gets decided. And that layer takes time to build.
"The work starts now. Not in August."
If your child is a junior and hasn't started thinking about their story, their essays, or their activities narrative, this is the moment to start.
Beyond the Numbers: How UT Austin and Texas A&M Actually Evaluate Your Application
For students outside the auto-admit threshold at UT Austin and Texas A&M, the holistic parts of the application aren't optional. Here's what they are and why they matter.
If your child is applying to UT Austin or Texas A&M, GPA and class rank are probably at the center of your planning. They should be. But for a large portion of Texas applicants, those numbers are only part of the story. Once a student falls outside the automatic admission threshold, the application becomes something different entirely. It becomes a holistic review, and that is where strategy makes the difference.
The Auto-Admit Threshold: A Floor, Not a Plan
Both schools operate under Texas's automatic admission law, but the cutoffs are not the same.
UT Austin automatically admits Texas residents who graduate in the top 5% of their high school class. That cutoff has tightened in recent cycles as application volume has surged. UT received over 90,000 freshman applications for fall 2025. The number of seats has not kept pace. Here's a deeper look at what UT's acceptance rate actually means for Texas families.
Texas A&M automatically admits Texas residents in the top 10% of their graduating class. The university's headline acceptance rate is approximately 51%, but that figure is shaped significantly by auto-admits and does not reflect what the process looks like for students going through holistic review. For out-of-state applicants, there is no automatic path at all. If your family is applying from outside Texas, this post covers what OOS families actually need to know about A&M admissions.
For students just outside either cutoff, strong numbers still matter. But they are no longer enough on their own. That is where the holistic parts of the application take over.
What Holistic Review Actually Means
Your numbers get you noticed. Your story gets you in.
When admissions officers at UT or A&M move into holistic review, they are reading the full application. GPA and test scores are already in the file. What they are looking for now is the person behind those numbers. Four components carry the most weight in that evaluation.
The Cost of a Numbers-Only Application
A student with a strong GPA and competitive test scores who submits a numbers-heavy application with no compelling narrative is one of the most common patterns behind students who end up with CAP at UT or an outright denial at A&M. It is not that their numbers were wrong. It is that the holistic parts of the application did not do any work.
CAP postpones admission to UT's main campus for one year. It is not a rejection, but it is not what a student who earned a 4.0 and a competitive SAT planned on when they applied. And it is often avoidable with the right approach. The holistic parts of the application are not optional. For students outside the auto-admit threshold, they are the deciding factor.
How Green College Admissions Can Help
This is exactly the work we do at Green College Admissions. We work with students and families on the parts of the application that numbers alone can't represent: the personal statement, supplemental responses, activities section, and honors. The goal is an application that tells a coherent, authentic story, one that makes your child memorable to an admissions officer who has read thousands of files just like theirs.
We serve DFW families in person and students nationwide virtually. If UT Austin or Texas A&M is on your child's list and they are a junior or senior, now is the right time to be strategic about it.
Let's build the story.
Independent college admissions consulting for families who want more than a checklist. Serving DFW in person and students nationwide virtually.
View our services →