UT Austin's Acceptance Rate: What 26.6% Actually Means for Your Texas Student
UT Austin's Acceptance Rate: What 26.6% Actually Means for Your Texas Student
If you've been watching UT Austin's acceptance rate drift lower year after year, you're not imagining it. For the Class of 2028 (Fall 2024 entry), UT received 72,885 freshman applications and admitted 19,417 students, landing at an overall acceptance rate of 26.6%. That's a real number from the official Common Data Set, and it deserves more than a headline. Here's what it actually means for a Texas family trying to plan.
26.6% Is an Average, Not Your Odds
The first thing to understand is that UT Austin's overall acceptance rate is a blended number. It includes in-state students, out-of-state students, auto-admits, holistic review admits, and everyone in between. When you blend those populations together, you get 26.6%. But your student isn't applying as a statistical average; they're applying as a specific kind of applicant.
In-state acceptance rate vs. out-of-state acceptance rate for the Class of 2028. Same school, two very different realities.
Texas residents fare significantly better than the headline suggests. The in-state acceptance rate for the Class of 2028 was approximately 41%, driven largely by the state's automatic admission policy. Out-of-state students, on the other hand, faced a far steeper climb, with an acceptance rate closer to 10%. Of roughly 23,000 out-of-state applicants, only about 2,332 were admitted. That gap is not a rounding error; it's state law in action.
Auto-Admit: The Floor, Not the Ceiling
Texas state law requires UT Austin to automatically admit any Texas resident who graduates in the top 5% of their high school class. It also requires that at least 90% of UT's freshman class come from Texas, with 75% of in-state seats reserved for those auto-admits. In practice, that means the majority of UT's incoming class is filled before holistic review even starts.
First, if your student is in the top 5%, they are guaranteed admission to UT Austin. What they are not guaranteed is their first-choice major. Auto-admit guarantees a seat on the Forty Acres; it does not guarantee a seat in Cockrell Engineering or McCombs Business. Major-specific competition is a separate, and often more difficult, conversation.
Second, if your student is just outside the top 5%, they move into holistic review, where they compete for a much smaller pool of remaining spots alongside out-of-state applicants who are often highly competitive nationally. The effective acceptance rate for that group is not 26.6%. It's considerably lower.
Applications Are Rising Faster Than Seats
Here's the trend that should concern every Texas family regardless of where their student stands: UT Austin received 90,562 freshman applications for Fall 2025, a 24.3% jump from the 72,885 applications received for Fall 2024. Out-of-state applications alone surged 48% in that single cycle. UT Austin has become a national destination school, not just a Texas flagship. Forbes named UT Austin a "New Ivy" for the third consecutive year in 2026, and the national attention that comes with that designation is showing up directly in application volume.
The university has not expanded its freshman class at anything close to the same rate. More applicants chasing roughly the same number of seats means the rate will keep falling. The Class of 2028's 26.6% will not be the floor.
What UT Actually Looks At
For students going through holistic review, UT Austin's admissions page lists the factors considered in their decisions. The CDS confirms the following are all "considered" in the review process: rigor of secondary school record, class rank, academic GPA, standardized test scores, the application essay, recommendations, extracurricular activities, talent and ability, character and personal qualities, first-generation status, geographic residence, state residency, volunteer work, and work experience.
That list looks broad because it is. UT does not publish average GPAs or test score cutoffs for holistically reviewed students, which makes planning harder. What we do know from UT's own statements is that scores matter: when the university moved back to test-required for the 2025-2026 cycle, they noted that students who submitted test scores during the optional period outperformed those who didn't, and that scores serve as a useful differentiator when the applicant pool is full of near-perfect GPAs.
The essays are not optional filler. With grades compressed near the top of the scale and class rank policies varying by high school, the personal statement and short answers are often the primary way a real human story gets into the file.
One Number That Actually Tells the Story
Yield rate for the Class of 2028. Nearly half of admitted students chose UT over every other option they had.
Of the 19,417 students UT admitted for Fall 2024, 9,210 enrolled. That is a striking number for a public university, where yield rates are typically lower because students use state schools as fallbacks. That's not just brand loyalty; it's a reflection of Austin's job market, UT's research infrastructure, and what a degree from the Forty Acres signals to employers in Texas and beyond.
For out-of-state families weighing cost against prestige, it's also a reminder that a lot of nationally competitive students are looking at UT and choosing it. The peer group your student would be entering is not what it was ten years ago.
What About the 2025-2026 Cycle?
UT Austin received 90,562 freshman applications for the Fall 2025 admission cycle, a record. Official admissions outcomes and the updated Common Data Set for 2025-2026 have not yet been published. When that data drops, this blog will be updated to reflect the new numbers. Check back at greencollegeadmissions.com/insights or subscribe to updates from Green College Admissions to be notified when it's live.
The Bottom Line for Texas Families
UT Austin is not as accessible as its public-university branding suggests, and it's not as impossible as its declining acceptance rate might imply. Where your student lands in that range depends heavily on class rank, the specific college they're targeting, and, for holistic review applicants, how well their application tells a coherent and compelling story.
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If your student is a junior or senior and UT Austin is on the list, now is the right time to be strategic, not reactive.
Schedule a ConsultationJoe Green is an independent college admissions consultant and owner of Green College Admissions, based in Keller, TX. He works with students across the DFW area and nationwide to help them build thoughtful, strategic applications to competitive universities. Learn more at greencollegeadmissions.com.