Wharton Acceptance Rate — Breakdown & Analysis (2025)

Learn what the Wharton acceptance rate means, who gets in, and how to improve your chances, based on real numbers and expert tips.

Posted July 14, 2025

Free Event

Perfecting your CBS MBA Essays - from an Admissions Interviwer & Alum

Starting Tuesday, July 15

11:00 PM UTC · 60 minutes

Melanie E.

Featuring Melanie E.

The Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania is one of the most well-known business schools in the world. For any prospective applicants, the first step is understanding just how competitive it is. The Wharton acceptance rate sits at around 21%, and while that number may seem more forgiving than Harvard Business School or Stanford, the competition is still intense.

This guide explains the Wharton MBA acceptance rate using current data, explains what the admissions committee looks for, and includes advice from former admissions officers and Leland coaches who’ve helped applicants get in.

Latest Data from the Wharton MBA Class of 2026

The Wharton MBA program remains one of the most selective graduate school options in the world. For the Class of 2026, Wharton received 7,322 applications and enrolled 866 students, resulting in an estimated Wharton acceptance rate of approximately 21%. While this percentage may seem within reach, it reflects a pool of exceptionally qualified MBA applicants competing for a limited number of seats.

Wharton MBA Class of 2026 Snapshot

MetricValue
Total Applicants7,322
Enrolled Students866
Estimated Wharton Acceptance Rate~21%
Average GMAT Score732
Average GRE Scores162 Verbal, 163 Quant
Average GPA3.7
Average Work Experience5 years
International Students31%
Countries Represented65
Women47%
LGBTQ+ Students10%
First-Generation Students11%
Military Veterans6%

Visit the Facts & Figures Wharton MBA Class Profile

This incoming class is diverse across gender, citizenship, academic background, and work experience. Wharton’s class includes students from over 65 countries, with a strong showing of first-generation students, LGBTQ+ students, and military veterans, demonstrating Wharton’s focus on building a class with global and life-experience diversity.

Racial and Ethnic Composition (U.S. Students Only)

Wharton reports race/ethnicity data using two formats: federally mandated guidelines and multi-dimensional self-identification. This distinction helps represent Wharton students who identify with more than one background.

Race/Ethnicity (Federal Guidelines)% of U.S. Students
Black/African American6%
Hispanic/Latinx8%
Asian American20%
White33%
Native American0%
Multi-Race1%
Did Not Report3%
Race/Ethnicity (Multi-Dimensional Reporting)% of U.S. Students
Black/African American6%
Hispanic/Latinx8%
Asian American21%
White39%
Multi-Race0%
Did Not Report3%

Note: These figures represent 71% of students who are U.S. citizens or permanent residents.

Academic and Testing Profile

There are no minimum score requirements, but competitive applicants typically submit strong test scores and transcripts from rigorous undergraduate education programs. Wharton does not prefer the GMAT over the GRE, and both are accepted equally.

  • Average GMAT score: 732
  • Average GRE scores: 162 Verbal, 163 Quant
  • Average GPA: 3.7 (reported only from schools using a 4.0 grading scale)
  • Most common undergraduate majors: Business, STEM, and Humanities

Wharton’s admissions team evaluates candidates holistically, placing value on academic performance, leadership, and real-world impact, regardless of specific majors or university rankings.

Program Options for the Class of 2026

Wharton offers several interdisciplinary and dual degree programs, including:

  • MBA/MA Lauder Joint Degree in International Studies
  • Carey JD/MBA Program
  • MBA in Health Care Management
  • Deferred admission through the Moelis Advance Access Program

These programs attract candidates with specific goals in international studies, law, health care, and other fields, and they contribute to the overall diversity of the Wharton MBA class.

How Wharton’s Acceptance Rate Compares to Other M7 Schools

The Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania is one of seven elite U.S. MBA programs known collectively as the M7, or "Magnificent Seven." These schools consistently rank among the best business schools and compete for the same pool of highly qualified MBA applicants. Here’s how Wharton’s estimated acceptance rate compares to the other M7 schools:

SchoolEstimated Acceptance Rate
Stanford GSB~6%
Harvard Business School~12%
Wharton (UPenn)~21%
Booth (University of Chicago)~22%
MIT Sloan~14%
Columbia Business School~16%
Kellogg (Northwestern)~26%

Read: M7 MBA Programs – What They Are & How to Get In

Among the M7, Stanford remains the most selective, with an estimated acceptance rate below 7%. Harvard Business School follows, and MIT Sloan and Columbia fall just below Wharton. Wharton’s rate, at roughly 21%, is slightly more accessible, but this doesn’t mean it’s easier to get in. Wharton consistently draws high-performing MBA candidates with competitive GMAT scores, strong undergraduate degrees, and experience at leading firms in consulting, investment banking, technology, healthcare, and entrepreneurship. It also remains a top choice for international students, professionals in business analytics, and those targeting finance roles.

In short, Wharton is not only part of the most competitive group of MBA programs, it’s also directly competing for talent with schools like Stanford GSB, Harvard, and MIT Sloan. Applicants who succeed here typically apply with a clear career plan, demonstrated leadership, and a strong fit with the school’s collaborative culture.

Factors That Influence Your Chances of Admission to Wharton

GMAT/GRE Scores and Academic Background

Wharton does not have a minimum required GMAT or GRE, but the bar is high. The average GMAT score for the most recent class was 732. For GRE takers, the average GRE scores were 162 Verbal and 163 Quant. A strong academic track record with a high GPA and rigorous undergraduate education matters. If your GPA is below average, it's possible to make up for it with excellent test scores, certifications (like CFA), or proof of strong quantitative ability through coursework or experience in business analytics or finance.

Work Experience and Career Progression

Wharton expects applicants to have full-time experience. The average is five years. While there's no strict minimum, applicants without work experience often come through the deferred MBA program like the Moelis Advance Access Program. Applicants often come from:

  • Consulting (24%)
  • Private Equity/Venture Capital (12%)
  • Technology (10%)
  • Government/Non-Profit (10%)
  • Investment Banking (9%)

Growth, leadership, and impact in your career matter more than job titles.

Personal Story and Leadership Qualities

The admissions committee looks beyond metrics. Strong applicants show a clear sense of purpose, measurable leadership, and initiative in extracurricular activities, work, or community service. The best stories are specific and personal. Leadership can come from launching an internal initiative, leading a nonprofit, managing a startup team, or creating access programs in underserved areas. It doesn’t need to be formal. It does need to be real.

Fit with Wharton’s Culture and Values

Wharton values collaboration. Its team-based learning structure is a core part of the full-time program and the executive MBA program. The school wants students who are team players, self-aware, and ready to contribute to group learning environments.

Examples of cultural fit:

  • Interest in international studies (Lauder program)
  • Contributions to diverse teams
  • Involvement in DEI or community efforts
  • Engagement in peer-led initiatives

Strength of Essays, Recommendations, and Interview Performance

Essays are your best shot at explaining your career goals, why Wharton offers the best platform to reach them, and how you plan to contribute to the Wharton class.

Recommendations should come from people who have managed you directly and can speak to your leadership, results, and character.

Interviews at Wharton include:

  • A Team-Based Discussion (TBD) where you collaborate in real time with other applicants
  • A one-on-one interview with a Wharton MBA alumnus or staff member

How Wharton’s Acceptance Rate Varies by Applicant Profile

The Wharton acceptance rate may be around 21% overall, but your actual chances depend on several factors, including nationality, academic background, industry, and life experience. The admissions committee evaluates every profile in context, and certain applicant types may face different levels of selectivity.

International vs. Domestic Applicants

International students make up 31% of the Wharton MBA class of 2026, representing 65 countries. The school remains a top choice for global MBA applicants due to its strong international alumni network, access to global firms, and optional STEM tracks. Wharton’s STEM-designated majors are especially valuable for F-1 visa holders. These allow students to apply for up to 36 months of U.S. work authorization after graduation, which is a major advantage for international students aiming to work in the U.S. after their MBA.

Language Requirements:

Applicants who didn’t complete their undergraduate degree in English are required to submit TOEFL, IELTS, or PTE scores. This is a standard requirement for U.S. graduate school admissions.

Underrepresented Backgrounds (Diversity, Industry, Geography)

Wharton continues to increase representation across race, gender, and socioeconomic background. For the Class of 2026:

  • 11% are first-generation students
  • 10% identify as LGBTQ+
  • 35% are U.S. minority students (Black, Hispanic/Latinx, Asian American, Multiethnic)

The school is also targeting geographic diversity, including applicants from rural areas and smaller cities across the U.S., as well as industries that are historically underrepresented in MBA programs, such as nonprofit, public sector, and community service roles. Applicants from these groups are not given guaranteed preference, but their experiences add value to the Wharton class and are recognized during the review process.

STEM, Finance, and Non-Traditional Applicants

Wharton’s student body includes a mix of traditional and non-traditional backgrounds. Here's how the undergraduate education breakdown looks for the Class of 2026:

Major Type% of Class
Humanities38%
Business34%
STEM28%

Applicants from finance, consulting, and business analytics backgrounds are common, but Wharton continues to welcome candidates from humanities, education, arts, and other sectors, especially when they demonstrate clear goals, strong test scores, and leadership in their prior roles. Career switchers and entrepreneurs are also a visible part of the class. The key is making your motivation and readiness for a full-time MBA program clear in your MBA application, especially in your essays and interviews.

How to Improve Your Odds of Getting Into Wharton

Getting into the Wharton MBA program is competitive, but there are clear ways to stand out. Based on what the admissions committee values, here are four areas where strong MBA applicants can improve their chances.

Craft a Compelling “Why Wharton” Narrative

Your essays need to show why Wharton is the right fit, not just for your goals, but for how you think and work. Generic statements don’t help. The strongest MBA applications explain how specific Wharton resources align with your short-term and long-term plans. Align your goals with what Wharton offers:

  • Entrepreneurship- Mention the Wharton Venture Lab, Startup Challenge, or the Entrepreneurship & Innovation major
  • Business Analytics- Reference the Wharton Customer Analytics Initiative or the Operations, Information, and Decisions department
  • Finance- Highlight Wharton’s long-standing strength in corporate finance, the executive MBA program, or the Harris Family Alternative Investments Program

Note: The more clearly you connect Wharton’s programs to your goals, the more convincing your application will be.

Be Strategic With Your Recommenders and Resume

Letters of recommendation are more helpful when they go beyond generic praise. Choose people who have directly managed your work and can speak to your leadership, results, and growth over time. Your recommenders should:

  • Know your work well from firsthand experience
  • Be able to give detailed examples of your strengths and performance
  • Understand what the Wharton admissions officers look for (impact, teamwork, potential)

For your resume:

  • Keep it to one page, even if you have many years of experience
  • Focus on measurable results (e.g., “Increased revenue by 25%” > “Helped grow accounts”)
  • Use active language with verbs like led, built, improved, launched, and managed
  • Make sure each role shows clear progression or added responsibility

Prepare for the Team-Based Discussion (TBD) + 1:1 Interview

Wharton is the only top business school that uses a Team-Based Discussion (TBD) as part of its standard interview process. It simulates a real group setting and gives the admissions committee insight into how you collaborate under pressure. To prepare for the TBD:

  • Practice group brainstorming and time-boxed discussions
  • Learn to listen and respond, not just push your ideas
  • Speak, stay on topic, and include others in the conversation
  • Don’t dominate or withdraw. Wharton is evaluating how you contribute to a team

Note: After the TBD, you’ll have a 1:1 interview, often with a second-year student or alum. This part is more traditional, but interviewers may ask follow-up questions based on your performance in the TBD and what you wrote in your application.

Consider Working With a Wharton Admissions Coach

Wharton’s process is competitive, and even small errors in your MBA application can affect your chances. Many MBA students who get in work with coaches who helped them:

  • Refine their career goals
  • Build a strong “Why Wharton” narrative
  • Strengthen their resume and recommendations
  • Practice for the TBD and 1:1 interviews

Whether you’re coming from finance, consulting, nonprofit, or a non-traditional field, a coach with Wharton expertise can help you tell your story in a way that makes sense to the admissions committee.

What Leland Coaches Say About Wharton Admissions

Coach Insights from Former Wharton Adcoms and Admits

Leland’s Wharton MBA admissions coaches, including former admissions officers and successful Wharton MBA students, focus on what truly moves the needle for applicants. Based on their experience reviewing thousands of MBA applications, here are the top three things they recommend:

1. Show Leadership Beyond Your Title

The Wharton School cares more about results than job titles. Whether you’ve led a team, launched a side project, built a product, or mentored junior colleagues, your application should show clear examples of leadership. The admissions committee is looking for initiative, ownership, and measurable impact.

2. Be Clear and Honest About Your Goals

Strong MBA applicants don’t try to guess what the committee wants to hear. Your career goals should be well thought out and personal. Explain why you’re pursuing an MBA, how your undergraduate degree and experience have prepared you, and why the Wharton MBA program is the best next step.

3. Know Why You’re Choosing Wharton

Saying “Wharton is a top business school” isn’t enough. The admissions committee wants to know which programs, clubs, or academic tracks at Wharton match your goals. Whether it’s the executive MBA program, business analytics curriculum, or access to entrepreneurship resources, your reasons for applying should be specific and relevant.

Common Mistakes Applicants Make — and How to Avoid Them

  • Generic essays that sound like they could be sent to any graduate school. Wharton wants to know why this school, now, and you.
  • Letters of recommendation that lack substance. Choose recommenders who know you well and can give examples, not just high-ranking people.
  • Not preparing for the Team-Based Discussion (TBD). Wharton is the only M7 school that uses a team-based format as a core part of its interview. If you don’t practice this, it will show.
  • Failing to show fit with the Wharton MBA class. The school is building a community. You need to show what you’ll add to the incoming class, whether through leadership, professional perspective, or extracurricular activities.

Real Testimonials from Admitted Leland Clients

"Truthfully, I do not know if I could have had a better coach than Amy when preparing for my deferred MBA applications. She was flexible, responsive, and incredibly respectful of what I felt comfortable with regarding the extent of her coaching and the standard of personal work that I wanted to maintain. Ultimately, thanks to Amy's guidance, I was admitted to Wharton!"

– Coached by Amy H., Accepted to Wharton

"Working with Becky for my MBA admissions was an absolute game-changer. From day one, she took the time to understand my unique story and helped me shape it into a compelling narrative that truly stood out. Her strategic advice was spot-on, and she pushed me to think deeper and bring out my best self in every essay. The mock interviews we did were invaluable; they boosted my confidence and polished my answers. Beyond her expertise, Becky was always supportive and genuinely invested in my success. I couldn't have navigated this process without her guidance and encouragement."

– Coached by Becky S., Admitted to Wharton & Kellogg

"Jeremy was extremely helpful in my MBA journey. He was very responsive to any questions I had regarding all steps of the application process, and always with great enthusiasm! He's especially good at tackling the Wharton and Booth MBA applications, and I could not recommend him more!"

– Coached by Jeremy H., Accepted to Wharton, Booth, and Harvard Business School

The Bottom Line

Wharton’s 21% acceptance rate makes it one of the most competitive MBA programs in the world, but successful applicants aren’t just defined by test scores or job titles. What sets them apart is a clear and compelling story, demonstrated leadership, and a strong alignment with Wharton’s academic strengths and collaborative culture. Whether your background is in finance, STEM, the humanities, or a non-traditional field, standing out comes down to clarity, self-awareness, and showing how you’ll contribute to the Wharton community.

Wharton Is Competitive, But You Can Stand Out

The Wharton MBA program is one of the most competitive business school options in the world. With an estimated Wharton acceptance rate of 21%, you're competing with candidates from top firms in consulting, finance, technology, and entrepreneurship, many of whom also have strong GMAT scores, impressive work experience, and advanced degrees. But your background doesn’t have to look like everyone else’s. Whether you come from STEM, humanities, education, or a non-traditional field, what matters is how you present your story. Your MBA application should clearly explain your impact, your direction, and how you fit with the Wharton MBA class and culture.

Leland Can Help You Craft a Standout Application

Leland connects you with expert MBA admissions coaches, including former Wharton admissions officers and successful Wharton MBA students. Whether you’re early in the process or reapplying, we help you submit a competitive application that reflects your leadership, career goals, and values. Book an MBA Coach Matching Call Today!

Read these next:


FAQs

What GPA do you need for Wharton?

  • Wharton does not have a minimum required GPA, but the average GPA for admitted students is around 3.7. A strong academic record, especially in quantitative coursework, can strengthen your application, even if your GPA is slightly below the average.

Is Wharton or Dyson harder to get into?

  • Both Wharton and Dyson are highly selective, but they differ in focus and applicant pool. Wharton, as part of the University of Pennsylvania, has a broader business curriculum and a lower acceptance rate overall, making it more competitive for MBA applicants. Dyson, part of Cornell University, is more focused on applied economics and management at the undergraduate level.

Is Wharton in the Ivy League?

  • Yes, the Wharton School is part of the University of Pennsylvania, which is a member of the Ivy League. Wharton is the Ivy League’s oldest business school and is widely regarded as one of the top MBA programs globally.

Why is Wharton so prestigious?

  • Wharton’s prestige comes from its rigorous academic programs, influential faculty, global alumni network, and consistent placement in top industries like finance, consulting, and technology. It also offers unique resources such as the Wharton Venture Lab, specialized analytics tracks, and a data-driven approach to leadership education.

Browse Related Articles