Waitlisted from Johns Hopkins: What to Do
If Johns Hopkins just placed you on the waitlist, you are staring at some of the most unforgiving numbers in the entire waitlist landscape. In most years, Hopkins admits fewer students from its waitlist than a single section of an introductory chemistry course. The waitlist acceptance rate has averaged roughly 1.5% over recent cycles, and in one recent year, the number admitted was zero.
Here are the numbers. For the most recent cycle with published data (the 2024-2025 Common Data Set, reflecting enrollment for the Class of 2029), Hopkins offered 2,347 students a place on the waitlist. Of those, 1,614 accepted a spot. From that pool, 30 were admitted, a waitlist acceptance rate of 1.86%. The year before, 71 were admitted from 1,748 who accepted, a rate of about 4%. The year before that, zero. Zero students admitted from the entire waitlist.
Those numbers are not typos. Johns Hopkins' waitlist ranges from total inactivity to modest movement depending entirely on yield, and yield at a school with a 5.14% acceptance rate, two rounds of binding Early Decision, and one of the most generous financial aid programs in the country is increasingly stable. When yield holds, the waitlist does not move. When it dips, Hopkins may admit 30 to 70 students. You have no way of predicting which scenario will unfold this year.
Accept Your Spot on the Waitlist
Hopkins requires you to complete the Waitlist Reply Form in your applicant portal. This is the only requirement to remain on the waitlist. If you do not complete this form by the deadline, you will be removed from consideration. Do it immediately.
The waitlist is not ranked. Hopkins states that all waitlisted students are reviewed holistically based on the priorities and specific needs of the incoming class. There is no positional advantage to when you opted in, but there is a strategic advantage to what you do next.
Commit to Another School Before May 1
Hopkins states directly: "The decision of whether we will admit students off the waitlist will not be made prior to May 1. We strongly recommend you submit your deposit to a school where you have been admitted." Take their advice. Put down your deposit, attend admitted student events, and start investing emotionally in the school where you will enroll.
If Hopkins later admits you from the waitlist, you can withdraw from the other school and forfeit your deposit. But with a waitlist acceptance rate that has averaged 1.5% and has been zero in at least one recent cycle, banking on this outcome is not a plan. It is a fantasy.
Write a Letter of Continued Interest
Hopkins explicitly invites waitlisted students to submit additional materials. Their official FAQ suggests a one-page letter of interest that states why you continue to be interested in Hopkins and why you feel it is the right school for you. They also note that any updates should "contribute in a substantive way or provide new information."
Do not interpret "one page" as a constraint on ambition. Your letter should be the most compelling piece of writing you submit anywhere this cycle. At a school that admits an average of 26 students per year from a waitlist pool of over 1,600, your letter is the only tool you have to differentiate yourself from the other 1,599 students sitting in the same position.
Your letter should function as a love letter to Johns Hopkins. Not a recitation of your resume. Not a list of other schools that admitted you. Not a paragraph of generic enthusiasm about Baltimore. A letter that makes the admissions officer reading it understand exactly who you will be on Hopkins' campus and why this specific institution is the only place where your academic and personal goals can be fully realized.
Hopkins' identity is built on a few foundational pillars, and your letter should connect your story to at least one of them with genuine specificity.
The first is research. Johns Hopkins consistently ranks first in the nation in federal research and development expenditures. This is not an abstract statistic. It means that undergraduates at Hopkins have access to research infrastructure, faculty mentorship, and funded opportunities at a scale that no liberal arts college and very few peer research universities can match. If your academic hook involves research in any discipline, whether biomedical engineering, neuroscience, public health, applied mathematics, materials science, international studies, or any other field where Hopkins has world-class faculty and labs, your letter should articulate a specific research trajectory. Name faculty. Name labs. Name the questions you want to investigate and explain why Hopkins is where those questions can be answered.
The second is the open curriculum. Hopkins does not have a core curriculum. Students in the Krieger School of Arts and Sciences and the Whiting School of Engineering have extraordinary freedom to design their own academic paths. If that freedom is meaningful to you, if it is not just a convenience but a reflection of how you think about learning and intellectual exploration, say so, and explain what your self-designed path would look like.
The third is the applied, world-facing orientation of the university. Hopkins is not a school that treats knowledge as an end in itself. From the Bloomberg School of Public Health to the School of Advanced International Studies to the Applied Physics Laboratory, the institutional ethos is that research should solve real problems. If your work, your interests, or your goals are oriented toward impact, toward translating knowledge into action, that is the language Hopkins speaks.
Do not brag. Do not list your accomplishments. Do not open with "My name is..." and do not tell the admissions officer that Hopkins is your first choice without backing that claim up with the kind of specificity that makes it believable. When you brag, you become less likable. When you paint a vivid, specific picture of yourself on Hopkins' campus, contributing to a particular lab, taking a particular seminar, engaging with a particular community, you become someone the admissions officer wants to advocate for when the committee turns to the waitlist.
Submit your letter by emailing it to applyhelp@jhu.edu. Do not delay. The primacy effect matters: admissions officers form attachments to students who make compelling impressions early, and those impressions stick.
Have Your Guidance Counselor Make an Advocacy Call
After your letter is submitted, your guidance counselor should call your regional admissions representative at Hopkins. The counselor should communicate three things: that Hopkins is your top choice, that you will enroll if admitted, and that your academic performance has remained strong. If there are genuinely significant new developments worth sharing, a major award, a publication, a meaningful new commitment, the counselor is the appropriate person to deliver them. When advocacy comes from a third party, it carries more weight than self-reported achievements.
If your counselor resists making the call, push back. At a school where 30 students are admitted from a pool of 1,600, every legitimate point of contact matters.
Keep Your Grades Up
Hopkins enrolled a class where the middle 50% SAT range was 1530 to 1570 and 21% were first-generation college students. The academic bar is extraordinarily high. A dip in your senior year grades can remove you from contention. Continue performing at the level that made you competitive here.
Make sure your school has sent your updated transcript. Hopkins' FAQ mentions that updated transcripts are welcome as supplemental material.
If you'd like help maximizing your chances of getting off the waitlist and into your current top-choice colleges, schedule a free consultation with an admissions expert today.