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Yale University - Find Out If You Can Get In

With an acceptance rate of 10%, Yale is one of the most difficult schools to get into. Go4College.com can help you figure out whether you can get into Yale and which other Ivy League colleges you might want to apply based on your probabilities of getting in.

You can get accurate, unbiased percentage chances of admission at more than 150 top colleges including the Ivy League. Knowing whether you have an 83% chance of getting into a college or a 35% chance, for examples, enables you to make the best and most informed application decisions possible.

  • Thousands of high school students' chances of admission predicted with greater than 94% accuracy

  • Accuracy guaranteed or your money back

  • Services featured on NBC News, Reader's Digest, and Chicago Tribune

  • Reduce anxiety by knowing if you are on track to get into your top choices
Click here to view a sample chances of admission report.

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Yale Fact Sheet
  • Location: New Haven, Connecticut

  • Enrollment: 5,300 Undergraduates

  • Website: www.yale.edu

  • Most popular majors: Social Sciences/History - 40%, Biology – 9%, English – 9%
  • Total Cost per Year: $47,500

  • Tuition per Year: $34,500

  • Admissions Requirements: SAT and SAT Subject Tests or ACT, essay


  • The History of Yale
    Yale University was founded in 1701 as the Collegiate School in the home of Abraham Pierson, its first rector, in Killingworth, Connecticut. In 1716 the school moved to New Haven and, with the generous gift by Elihu Yale of nine bales of goods, 417 books, and a portrait and arms of King George I, was renamed Yale College in 1718.

    Yale embarked on a steady expansion, establishing the Medical Institution (1810), Divinity School (1822), Law School (1843), Graduate School of Arts and Sciences (1847), the School of Fine Arts (1869), and School of Music (1894). In 1887 Yale College became Yale University. It continued to add to its academic offerings with the School of Forestry & Environmental Studies (1900), School of Nursing (1923), School of Drama (1955), School of Architecture (1972), and School of Management (1974).
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