UNC admissions advice

TarHeelDad

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My youngest daughter is applying to UNC currently for admission as an incoming freshman in 2026. Any helpful advice on what the most weight is placed on in the application process? I honestly don’t think she will have an issue getting accepted but if anyone has any advice for her I would live to pass it on. Thanks in advance.
 
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TarHeelDad

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If she's going into her SR year there's no advice to be given other than keep her grades up.
Yes she has the grades, the extra curricular, the service element all covered. I was more looking for what they look for the short answer questions. I feel like her essay is excellent. I just worry with her coming from a very rural area that it may hurt her. She didn’t have the same AP class opportunities as kids in the larger more urban counties. She has loaded up on community college classes and even took Latin as her foreign language online as she wants to be a surgeon and that was recommended for her to take.
 

IslanderHeel

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Yes she has the grades, the extra curricular, the service element all covered. I was more looking for what they look for the short answer questions. I feel like her essay is excellent. I just worry with her coming from a very rural area that it may hurt her. She didn’t have the same AP class opportunities as kids in the larger more urban counties. She has loaded up on community college classes and even took Latin as her foreign language online as she wants to be a surgeon and that was recommended for her to take.
As long as she has a balanced resume and consistent involvement with service/clubs/sports/job, then her SAT, essays and teacher recs are really all you can control along with her senior schedule. She should continue to take any AP/honor level courses if available. If not available in her school, UNC and other schools will know and absolutely take that into consideration. One additional option may be online AP, etc. Tour, reach out to a particular department and see if she can sit in on a class. Inquire about Honors Carolina. Any additional letter of recommendation she can have from someone who has a direct tie to Carolina will help (definitely recommend this to anyone applying from out of state). This all coming from a parent who has an out of state freshman starting in 2 weeks. In state and rural should absolutely help, but having two kids go through the process the last three years all I can really guarantee is that sometimes it’s just a crapshoot.
 
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UNC1789

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Aug 1, 2025
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Re-take ACT if not at least a 30, preferably a 33 (superscore), although might be able to get away with lower from a rural area. I believe over 66% of the current student body has at least a 30 on the ACT (if they submitted it.)

Show personality and character, not just smarts in the essay.
 

Louigi

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In state or out of state? If out of state they pretty much have to be the valedictorian
 

Peppersthebeast

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Jul 31, 2025
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Honestly the best advice but also extreme is to move to a more rural area; the kids from Wake, Mecklurg, Iredell, Orange counties and the like are a dime a dozen.
If you are one county over in Person, Catawba counties it can make a big difference.
 
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Aguia Vitoria

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Jul 31, 2025
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She sounds like she would be a wonderful addition to the Carolina family. I hope the admissions dept sees that too. I suggest with all kindness and respect that she pick a good back-up school just in case it doesn’t work out this time around, and consider transferring to UNC as a junior. She could even do it through the C-STEP program if it came to her matriculating at a community college first. Wishing her all the best.
 

SpacemanSpiff09

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Jul 31, 2025
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A BOT friend of mine said they rarely see in state kids not admitted who are in the top 10% of their graduating class. Seems that weighs most in considerations. A little harder if you are at an Enloe, Broughton, Science and Math or Myers Park type HS.
 

CharlotteHeel

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Jul 31, 2025
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Honestly the best advice but also extreme is to move to a more rural area; the kids from Wake, Mecklurg, Iredell, Orange counties and the like are a dime a dozen.
If you are one county over in Person, Catawba counties it can make a big difference.
Is Iredell really a county up there with Wake and Meck as far as amount of qualified students? I would think there would be several counties with more than Iredell (Guilford, Forsyth, New Hanover, to name a few)
 

AndyHeel

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Best of luck to her. It is like a lottery and not much you can do. I suggest having a couple of good backups just in case and she can transfer after 2 years if she really wants Carolina. My daughter went to Dook 2 years and hated it so she transferred to Carolina and graduated there.
 
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Peppersthebeast

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Jul 31, 2025
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Yes--Huntersville, Davidson, Cornelius and Mooresville tend to be a more privileged population so I hear it is very difficult for kids to get into UNC and NC state from here. I'm sure Forsyth, Guilford etc can have similar situations.
 

MikeyHoncho

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Aug 7, 2025
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I quit H&B cold turkey my senior year of HS. Started back at CTOPS, worked like a charm
👍
 

JohnYayas

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One of my daughters got into UNC. The other did not. They both had good grades but the one that got in was 2nd in her class while the other was not as high. It is what it is.
 
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FreeLunch

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Get some pictures of your daughter for the Rowing team
.

fake photo 3.jpg
 
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ronjon

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It’s too hard to get in to UNC these days. They need to get undergraduate enrollment up to 35-40k (over time). Open Carolina North up for business, dorms, classroom buildings, killer arenas.
 

GregBarnes

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A BOT friend of mine said they rarely see in state kids not admitted who are in the top 10% of their graduating class. Seems that weighs most in considerations. A little harder if you are at an Enloe, Broughton, Science and Math or Myers Park type HS.
According to Department of Education statistics, that would indicate that approximately 13,000 in-state graduates earned admission for 2025-26. UNC admitted 4600 in-state students. Plenty of top kids go elsewhere, so the math may work out, but the odds are against you in Wake County unless your kid is near the very top of the class rank. We've watched it play out with friends/neighbors in recent years.
 
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IslanderHeel

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It’s too hard to get in to UNC these days. They need to get undergraduate enrollment up to 35-40k (over time). Open Carolina North up for business, dorms, classroom buildings, killer arenas.
The plan is to grow by 5,000 undergrads, taking 500 more each year for 10 years, starting with this year’s enrolling class. Sustained growth which involves increasing infrastructure. Can’t be done overnight. Chancellor and BOT also acknowledge they turn away great students every year, both in and out of state.
 

1992Heel

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Aug 1, 2025
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My son graduated HS in 2015. He was top 10%, 34 ACT, sports, band, job, etc. Both parents graduated from UNC. Lived in NC. He still got rejected, not even wait listed, just plain rejected.
 

mpaer

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Been a while-but my son graduated in 2000 with a big class (one school then in Chapel hill, School had 2000 plus )
Over 30% of his class got accepted Now I get it is a weird population, lord knows how many of those kids had parents with PHDs.
My point is UNC does not mind accepting a lot of kids from a given school
 

TarHeelDad

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Thanks for all the replies. She has everything ready to submit. Just waiting on her letters of recommendation to be written.
 
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JohnYayas

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Thanks for all the replies. She has everything ready to submit. Just waiting on her letters of recommendation to be written.
Good luck, and remember that transferring from another school is always a possibility if she doesn't get in.
 

IslanderHeel

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Thanks for all the replies. She has everything ready to submit. Just waiting on her letters of recommendation to be written.
Best of luck as well! Dropping my daughter off off Friday. I hope you and your daughter experience the same excitement, but remember to celebrate every acceptance and that they end up where they belong (oldest is not at UNC but loves where she is). Their college experiences are what they make them, no matter where.
 

TarHeelDad

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Best of luck as well! Dropping my daughter off off Friday. I hope you and your daughter experience the same excitement, but remember to celebrate every acceptance and that they end up where they belong (oldest is not at UNC but loves where she is). Their college experiences are what they make them, no matter where.
My oldest daughter went to a small private college because that’s what she wanted and she was on full academic scholarship so it worked out great for us as well. She just didn’t like the big school feel.
My youngest is the exact opposite. She is only looking at larger universities other than Wake Forest. She has UNC #1 obviously but she really likes Clemson as well. What surprised me is how much she liked Auburn. I have to admit it’s gorgeous but I didn’t see it being as high as it is on her list.
 

IslanderHeel

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My oldest daughter went to a small private college because that’s what she wanted and she was on full academic scholarship so it worked out great for us as well. She just didn’t like the big school feel.
My youngest is the exact opposite. She is only looking at larger universities other than Wake Forest. She has UNC #1 obviously but she really likes Clemson as well. What surprised me is how much she liked Auburn. I have to admit it’s gorgeous but I didn’t see it being as high as it is on her list.
My other daughter is a junior at Clemson. Loves it. Glad to have her there. Auburn is basically Clemson without a lake.
 

FreeLunch

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Who gets into the best colleges and why?



We use anonymized admissions data from several colleges linked to income tax records and SAT and ACT test scores to study the determinants and causal effects of attending Ivy-Plus colleges (Ivy League, Stanford, MIT, Duke, and Chicago).

Children from families in the top 1% are more than twice as likely to attend an Ivy-Plus college as those from middle-class families with comparable SAT/ACT scores. Two-thirds of this gap is due to higher admissions rates for students with comparable test scores from high-income families; the remaining third is due to differences in rates of application and matriculation.

In contrast, children from high-income families have no admissions advantage at flagship public colleges.

The high-income admissions advantage at Ivy-Plus colleges is driven by three factors: (1) preferences for children of alumni, (2) weight placed on non-academic credentials, and (3) athletic recruitment.

Using a new research design that isolates idiosyncratic variation in admissions decisions for waitlisted applicants, we show that attending an Ivy-Plus college instead of the average flagship public college increases students’ chances of reaching the top 1% of the earnings distribution by 50%, nearly doubles their chances of attending an elite graduate school, and almost triples their chances of working at a prestigious firm. The three factors that give children from high-income families an admissions advantage are uncorrelated or negatively correlated with post-college outcomes, whereas academic credentials such as SAT/ACT scores are highly predictive of post-college success.

link:

 

mpaer

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It has been 20 years . But I was part of a team that interviewed Admissions staff at various UNC System Univs . Experienced professional UNC-CH Admissions staff remembered One case where South Bldg had them admit a kid because of Daddy's $
One
 
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Aguia Vitoria

Sophomore
Jul 31, 2025
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My brother was an admissions executive at a "public Ivy" university for several decades. I was always favorably and highly impressed with the care and thought that their admissions team took in deciding among the many qualified applicants, most of whom were denied admission. He assigned the review of applications of the kids of relatives and friends to a colleague, recusing himself from any discussion and decisions regarding those applications. He would not even read them. I always admired his integrity in the process. He never wavered.

Anyway... best of luck to the OP and daughter. I know it's hard.
 

336Heel

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Aug 27, 2025
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Good luck, and remember that transferring from another school is always a possibility if she doesn't get in.
And also remember that there are plenty of other schools where your child can thrive and be happy. Always thought both of mine would go to UNC. Turns out they wanted different things. Oldest got admitted to UNC but chose a much smaller private school. Youngest withdrew her application from UNC after being admitted early decision at her 1st choice. Both made the best decision for them.
 

FreeLunch

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One thing that might help a prospective student gain admission to a competitive school like UNC would be to use words like --> anonymized ..... determinants ...... matriculation .... idiosyncratic .... predictive -- in their college application essays.

:geek:
 
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TarHeelDad

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Well my daughter has been accepted into three schools so far. She applied to a couple of private schools and has been accepted to those. Campbell University and Lenoir-Rhyne University. She also applied to Auburn University and got her acceptance email today. She really likes Auburn but UNC is still her top choice. The rest of her options including UNC won’t release admissions decisions until December and later. It’s a very exciting time for her though for sure.
 

TarHeelDad

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So Auburn released their stats for their first round of early action decisions. From what I have gathered they deferred a lot of kids. Also they claim to be test optional but from what we read when applying they almost always automatically defer or outright deny without test scores and starting next year they will go back to requiring test scores. I never understood doing away with test scores anyway myself. She is still worried about not getting into UNC but she is going to have lots of great options if she doesn’t. Oh, her major is going to be bio-chemistry by the way on a pre med track. She has applied to some schools that even if she gets in I don’t see how we can afford it though. Like Vandy, Wake, and Notre Dame.IMG_0291.png
 
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