ACT Requirements for Colleges 2026 Score Benchmarks by School

ACT Score Benchmarks by School Tier: 2026 Admissions Data
Quick Facts: ACT Score Benchmarks by School Tier: 2026 Admissions Data
- Elite schools (MIT, Harvard, Yale): 34–36 composite range
- Highly selective (Top 25): 32–35 composite range
- Selective state flagships (UNC, Michigan, UVA): 29–34 composite
- Broad-access universities and regional schools: 20–26 composite
What Is a Good ACT Score for College Admissions in 2026?
Understanding where your ACT score falls relative to national benchmarks helps you target schools where you'll be competitive for admission.

ACT Requirements at the Top 50 Universities: School-by-School Breakdown
How Colleges Use ACT Scores in Admissions Decisions
Large state flagships use minimum ACT composites to filter at scale — University of Florida's direct-admission requires a 27+ composite; Georgia's Honors College sets an informal 30 floor; UNC-Chapel Hill's middle 50% (27–34) signals a de-facto screen below 25. At highly selective privates, no published floor exists, but applicants below the 25th percentile of admitted students face single-digit acceptance odds regardless of other factors.
- UF Direct-Admit Floor: 27+ composite
- UGA Honors Floor: 30+ composite
- UNC-Chapel Hill 25th %ile: 27 composite
- Risk Zone: Below class 25th percentile
At selective colleges, ACT is one input in a multi-factor committee review. NACAC surveys consistently show high school GPA and transcript rigor rank above test scores at roughly 80% of four-year institutions. At schools like Duke, Columbia, and Georgetown, a 34 from a student at an underfunded public school is weighted differently than a 34 from a test-prep-intensive private school — admissions officers apply context explicitly. How colleges use ACT scores in this model: as a validity check on GPA, not a primary gate.
- Factor Ranked #1: GPA / transcript rigor (~80% of schools)
- ACT Role: GPA validity check + academic signal
- Context Applied By: Duke, Columbia, Georgetown, Stanford
- Other Factors Weighed: Essays, recs, extracurriculars, course rigor
Many flagship and regional universities attach automatic merit scholarships to specific ACT composites — separate from admissions decisions entirely. University of Mississippi's Chancellor's Excellence Scholarship requires a 28+; Auburn's Presidential Scholarship requires 32+; University of South Carolina's Palmetto Fellows requires 30+. These thresholds are binary: one composite point below the cutoff forfeits the award regardless of GPA or other credentials.
- Ole Miss Chancellor's Excellence: 28+ composite
- Auburn Presidential: 32+ composite
- USC Palmetto Fellows: 30+ composite
- Policy Note: Merit thresholds are independent of admissions policy
Superscoring takes the highest individual section scores across multiple ACT test dates to compute a new composite. MIT, Georgetown, Carnegie Mellon, Notre Dame, and UVA all officially superscore the ACT. ACT itself launched an official superscore report in 2020, making it easier for students to submit. However, not all schools superscore — Florida State and several UC campuses use the highest single-sitting composite — so confirming each school's policy before registering for a retake can directly affect your effective composite.
- Schools That Superscore: MIT, Georgetown, CMU, Notre Dame, UVA
- Official ACT Superscore Launch: 2020 (ACT-provided report)
- Single-Sitting Schools (examples): Florida State, some UC campuses
- Strategy Impact: Retake only weak sections; overall composite rises
ACT Admissions Requirements Checklist: What Schools Actually Evaluate

How Long Is the ACT Exam and What Does Each Section Cover?
English — 75 Questions
Mathematics — 60 Questions
Reading — 40 Questions
Science — 40 Questions
Writing/Essay (Optional)
Total Time Commitment
Strategies to Hit Your Target College's ACT Score Requirement
Should You Submit Your ACT Score? Pros and Cons for Test-Optional Applicants
Deciding whether to submit your ACT score under test-optional policies is one of the highest-stakes choices in your application strategy, and the right answer depends entirely on where your score falls relative to each school's admitted student profile.
- +A score at or above the 75th percentile for a school's admitted class is a genuine strength signal — it tells admissions officers you exceed the typical academic baseline and can handle the coursework.
- +Submitting a strong score unlocks merit scholarship eligibility at hundreds of colleges that tie automatic award thresholds directly to ACT benchmarks, meaning withheld scores can silently cost you thousands in aid.
- +A high ACT score can offset a weaker GPA or a difficult junior year in holistic review, giving readers a concrete data point that supports your academic potential beyond your transcript.
- +Selective schools that track submitted-score applicants separately often show higher admit rates among that group when scores are strong, so submitting a competitive result aligns you with the more successful applicant pool.
- +For STEM, nursing, or business programs with quantitative rigor, a high math subscore can reinforce your fit for the major even when the composite is only slightly above median.
- −A score below the 25th percentile of a school's admitted class statistically hurts your chances even at test-optional institutions — internal admit-rate data consistently shows lower acceptance rates for below-range submitters than for non-submitters.
- −Submitting a mediocre score eliminates the benefit of the doubt that holistic reviewers extend to non-submitters, replacing an open question with a concrete liability in your file.
- −Many schools track submitted-score and non-submitted-score applicant pools separately in their admissions analytics, which can structurally disadvantage mid-range submitters who are compared against other submitters rather than the full applicant pool.
- −If your score falls in the middle band — above the 25th percentile but below the 50th — submitting may anchor reviewer expectations lower than your other credentials would on their own.
- −For merit aid purposes, a score that misses a school's automatic scholarship cutoff by even a few points provides no financial benefit while still carrying the admissions risk of a below-median submission.
ACT Questions and Answers
More ACT - American College Testing Resources
About the Author
Educational Psychologist & Academic Test Preparation Expert
Columbia University Teachers CollegeDr. Lisa Patel holds a Doctorate in Education from Columbia University Teachers College and has spent 17 years researching standardized test design and academic assessment. She has developed preparation programs for SAT, ACT, GRE, LSAT, UCAT, and numerous professional licensing exams, helping students of all backgrounds achieve their target scores.





