Waitlisted from University of Chicago: What to Do
If the University of Chicago just placed you on the waitlist, you are dealing with the most opaque waitlist process at any elite university in the country. UChicago does not publish its waitlist data. Unlike MIT, Carnegie Mellon, UVA, or virtually every other school in this selectivity range, Chicago has consistently declined to report waitlist figures in its Common Data Set filings. There is no official number for how many students are waitlisted, how many accept a spot, or how many are ultimately admitted. The admissions office has not released this data for any recent cycle.
This means that anyone who quotes you a UChicago waitlist acceptance rate is guessing. What we do know, based on publicly available information and what the admissions office has communicated directly to applicants and counselors, is the following: UChicago does turn to its waitlist, and in some years it turns to it before May 1. The waitlist is not ranked. And the 88% yield rate for the Class of 2028, one of the highest in American higher education, means that in a typical year, the overwhelming majority of admitted students choose to enroll, leaving very little room for waitlist movement.
That yield rate is the number you need to internalize. When nearly nine out of ten admitted students say yes, the math leaves almost no seats for the waitlist. In a class of roughly 1,800, an 88% yield on approximately 1,955 offers means only about 230 students declined. Some of those seats may have been intentionally left open for waitlist admits. Some may not. You cannot know.
What you can know is that UChicago has given waitlisted students specific instructions, and the students who follow those instructions precisely and compellingly are the ones who give themselves the best shot.
Accept Your Spot on the Waitlist Through Your UChicago Account
The only thing you must do to remain on the waitlist is accept your place through your UChicago Account. If you do not accept, you will not be considered. This is the minimum threshold, and it should be completed immediately.
Commit to Another School Before May 1
UChicago's admissions office has stated that it is imperative that waitlisted students accept and secure a place at another school by May 1. They do not know if or when they will be able to extend offers from the waitlist, and they strongly encourage you to look carefully and thoughtfully at your options and find a school that will be a good intellectual, social, and financial fit should UChicago not become an option.
Take that advice seriously. Put down your deposit at the best school that admitted you. If UChicago calls later, you can switch and forfeit the deposit at the other school. If they do not, you need to feel excited about where you are heading.
Write a Letter of Continued Interest to Your Regional Admissions Counselor
UChicago has indicated that waitlisted students may email their regional admissions counselor to express continued interest. The admissions office has described this as a "brief note" explaining why UChicago remains your top choice. But UChicago does not prohibit a fuller letter of continued interest, and given the stakes involved at a school with a 4.5% acceptance rate, you should not leave anything on the table. Write a proper letter of continued interest of up to 650 words, roughly the length of a Common App personal statement, and email it to your regional admissions counselor.
This letter is the single most important thing you can do after accepting your waitlist spot, and at a school like UChicago, the way you write it matters more than at almost any other institution in the country.
Chicago is a school that loves to be loved, and it loves to be loved for the right reasons. The admissions office famously asks what are widely considered the most unconventional essay prompts in elite college admissions, quirky, intellectually playful, deeply weird prompts designed to identify students who genuinely think the way UChicago thinks. The "Why UChicago" essay is intentionally long precisely because the admissions office wants to know that you wrote it for them and not for any other school. Your letter of continued interest should carry that same energy. It should be unmistakably, irreplaceably written for Chicago.
Your letter should function as a love letter to UChicago. Not a brag sheet. Not a resume update. Not a list of accomplishments you have accumulated in the three months since you applied. A love letter that makes the admissions officer reading it understand, through vivid and specific detail, exactly who you will be on that campus and why the University of Chicago is the only place where your intellectual life can fully come alive.
Fill the letter with specific after specific of how you intend to contribute your singular academic hook to UChicago's programs, culture, and community. Reference specific aspects of the Core Curriculum and how its emphasis on foundational inquiry connects to how you think about your own education. Reference specific faculty whose research or teaching intersects with your interests. If you are drawn to Chicago's economics department, name specific seminars, research centers, or faculty members. If the Committee on Social Thought excites you, articulate why. If the Becker Friedman Institute, the Oriental Institute, the Institute of Politics, or any other center speaks to the work you want to do, say so in concrete terms. Reference specific traditions that resonate with you, whether that is Scav, Kuviasungnerk/Kangeiko, the annual Latke-Hamantash Debate, or the culture of late-night intellectual conversation that defines the house system.
Do not write generic sentences about Chicago's rigorous academics or its intellectual culture. Every school claims to be intellectually rigorous. The admissions officer reading your letter needs to feel that you understand what makes Chicago different from every other elite university you applied to and that you want to be there for reasons that are specific, genuine, and grounded in how you actually think.
Do not brag. Do not list your accomplishments or your other college acceptances. Any genuinely significant updates, a major award, a published piece of work, a meaningful new development, should come from your guidance counselor during an advocacy call, not from you in the letter. When you brag, you become less likable. When you show the admissions officer a portrait of yourself engaged in the intellectual life of their campus, contributing your singular hook to their community, you become someone they want to fight for.
Make it clear that if admitted, you will enroll. At a school with an 88% yield rate, the admissions office is accustomed to students saying yes. They need to know that a waitlist offer will not be wasted on a student who is going to turn them down for another school.
Address the letter to your regional admissions counselor and send it by email. Submit it within days of accepting your waitlist spot. Do not wait until late April or May. The primacy effect matters: admissions officers tend to form attachments to the students who make compelling impressions first, and those impressions stick when the committee turns to the waitlist.
Have Your School Counselor Make an Advocacy Call
Even at a university as large and prestigious as UChicago, a phone call from your school counselor to your regional admissions representative can carry weight. Your counselor should communicate that UChicago is your first choice, that you will enroll if admitted, and that your academic performance has remained strong.
The counselor should present you consistently with how you presented yourself in your original application and in your email to the regional counselor. If there are genuinely new developments worth noting, the counselor is the right person to share them. When advocacy comes from a third party, it carries more credibility.
If your counselor resists making the call, push back. Counselors at other schools will be making these calls, and a counselor who refuses is putting their student at a competitive disadvantage.
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.