Princeton UniversityPrevious feature
1   NASSAU HALL
2   HOLDER HALL
3   36 UNIVERSITY PLACE
4   EMMA BLOOMBERG CENTER FOR ACCESS AND OPPORTUNITY
5   MURRAY-DODGE HALL
6   FRIST CAMPUS CENTER
7   CENTER FOR JEWISH LIFE (CJL)
8   LOUIS A. SIMPSON INTERNATIONAL BUILDING
9   CARL A. FIELDS CENTER

36 University Place

This building holds the U-Store, Center for Career Development, the Emma Bloomberg Center for Access and Opportunity and the Undergraduate Admission Information Center.

Media Gallery

Admission Student Ambassadors at Welcome Desk
Admission Officers at Admission Event
People talking and mingling at the Center for Career Development Startup Fair
Outside of 36 University Place
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Admission and Financial Aid

Career Services and Post Graduate Success

⭐ Admission and Financial Aid

Princeton has a holistic admission process and a robust financial aid program.

Admission

For each class, we bring together a varied mix of high-achieving, intellectually gifted students from diverse backgrounds to create an exceptional learning community. We care about what students have accomplished in and out of the classroom. Our review process will be a holistic one, focused not just on an applicant’s academic strengths, but also on the talents and perspectives that they will bring to the Princeton campus.

For more information visit our admission website.

International Students

Princeton welcomes applications from students around the world. We review all applications in the same manner, regardless of citizenship or country of residence.

Transfer Admission

The University reinstated the transfer program in 2018 after a nearly 30-year hiatus. Princeton's Transfer program looks for a small group of exceptionally well-prepared students from a range of backgrounds, and we particularly encourage applications from students from lower-income backgrounds, community college students, and U.S. military veterans.

Transfer students will be able to enroll in the fall term only, and most are expected to begin in their sophomore year. In all cases, Princeton faculty and college deans will determine placement in a class year after reviewing their transfer credit.

Undocumented or DACA Students

The University is committed to supporting undocumented and DACA students. Princeton’s admission and financial aid policies are the same for undocumented or DACA students as they are for all other students applying to the University. If admitted, undocumented students can be confident that their full financial need, as determined by the Undergraduate Financial Aid Office, will be met.

U.S. Military Affiliated Students

Princeton especially welcomes applications from individuals who have actively served in the U.S. military, confident that they bring a valuable perspective to our community of diverse students.

Princeton is a proud partner with Service to School (S2S), a 501(c)(3) non-profit that provides higher education counseling through professional advisers and peer networks at no cost to veteran applicants. We are part of a small group of institutions involved in their Service to School (S2S) VetLink initiative, launched in 2015 to connect these counselors with our admission representatives.

Princeton is also proud to be a host campus to the Warrior-Scholar Project, a national non-profit that provides intensive academic workshops to assist the transition between the military and higher education.

Princeton is also a close partner of the Leadership Scholar Program, which works to assist Marines in pursuing their education at highly selective institutions after their transition out of the Marine Corps.

Financial Aid

Princeton has one of the most generous financial aid polices in the country. About 61% of students receive financial aid. We provide financial aid in the form of grants, which do not have to be repaid. Our aid program does not require any borrowing, so students may graduate debts free. As a result 83% of senior graduate debt free. The average debt of graduating students who chose to borrow is $9,000.

Our aid program is designed to encourage all qualified students — regardless of financial circumstances — to consider applying for admission to Princeton.

To learn more about our financial aid visit our website.

Financial Aid for International Students

Princeton is one of the only colleges nationwide that offers need-blind admissions and meet 100% of demonstrated need for all students regardless of citizenship or citizenship status.

⭐ Career Services and Post Graduate Success

Princeton's Center for Career Development is one of many University offices dedicated to ensuring a successful transition into post-Princeton life.

Finding Success Beyond Princeton

The mission of the Center for Career Development is to empower students to develop the insights, experience and connections to pursue personally meaningful careers throughout their lives.

Through individual appointments, workshops, summer programs, peer advising, and connections with alumni, the Center for Career Development works with students throughout their time at Princeton to ensure that they are taking the appropriate steps to achieve their post-graduation goals.

Our students find great success after finishing their four years at Princeton, and we’re proud that the connections they made with the community, their peers, and the faculty and staff, keep them coming back each year for reunions.

- Within 6 months of graduation, 75% of our graduates are employed and 19% are in graduate school.

- 75% of Princeton graduates earn a higher degree at some point after they graduate.

- Acceptance rate of Princeton graduates to medical school is between 85-95% percent.

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