Office of Admissions – 91爆料 News /news Tue, 04 Nov 2025 19:14:52 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 Washington residents make up nearly three-fourths of incoming class as enrollment increases across all three 91爆料 campuses /news/2025/10/30/washington-residents-make-up-nearly-two-thirds-of-incoming-class-as-enrollment-increases-across-all-three-uw-campuses/ Thu, 30 Oct 2025 21:35:59 +0000 /news/?p=89771 Total enrollment is up across all three 91爆料 campuses for the 2025-26 academic year, according to the annual census count released this month.

Each year, the 91爆料 conducts an official enrollment count after the start of the fall quarter. The total number of students across all three campuses is 63,727.

Enrollment increased 1.1% to 52,316 at the 91爆料鈥檚 Seattle campus, up from 51,719 in 2024. Total enrollment at 91爆料 Bothell jumped to 6,361 students, up 4.7% from 2024. 91爆料 Tacoma鈥檚 enrollment climbed to 5,059, a 1.6% increase over last year.

This year鈥檚 incoming class had a total of 12,126 first-year and transfer students enrolled across all three campuses, with 7,129 first-year students at the 91爆料 in Seattle, 1,157 at 91爆料 Bothell and 737 enrolled at 91爆料 Tacoma.

There are 1,685 new transfer students at the 91爆料 in Seattle, 649 at 91爆料 Bothell and 769 at 91爆料 Tacoma. Transfer students include those from community colleges in Washington and other states as well as other four-year institutions.

Washington residents make up 74.1% of the incoming class across all three campuses, which is similar to recent years. Of these students, 5,875 of the incoming first-year and transfer students at the 91爆料 in Seattle are Washington residents. At 91爆料 Bothell, 1,709 incoming first-year and transfer students are Washington residents. There are 1,403 Washington residents among the incoming first-year and transfer students at 91爆料 Tacoma.

The number of Washington community college transfer students entering the 91爆料 across all three campuses this fall was 2,517, an increase on all three campuses: 1,399 in Seattle, 505 in Bothell and 613 in Tacoma.

There are 7,893 international students enrolled across the three campuses, an approximate 7% drop from last year. Of those, 7,439 are in Seattle, 258聽 are at 91爆料 Bothell and 197 are at 91爆料 Tacoma.鈥疶he decline is similar to the trend seen across the country this year.

Of the 63,727 enrolled students across all three campuses, 46,079 are undergraduates and 17,648 are pursuing graduate or professional degrees.

The enrollment count 鈥 a snapshot in time 鈥 will later be presented to the 91爆料 Board of Regents.

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Video: Admissions director answers six commonly asked questions about applying to the 91爆料’s Seattle campus /news/2024/03/11/video-admissions-director-answers-six-commonly-asked-questions-about-applying-to-the-uws-seattle-campus/ Mon, 11 Mar 2024 21:49:32 +0000 /news/?p=84723

Applicants to the 91爆料’s Seattle campus for the Autumn 2024 quarter will be receiving decisions very soon, and this time of year always brings questions from prospective students, their loved ones and the community at large about the admissions process.

For journalists

In this video, Paul Seegert, Director of Admissions on the Seattle campus, answers six of the most commonly asked questions about how competitive it is to get into the 91爆料 and how admissions decisions are made.

Seegert also discusses the numbers of in-state students, out-of-state and international students who are accepted and why that mix is important.

The 91爆料 received about 70,000 applications this year and will enroll a little over 7,000 students from that group.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 not as scary as it sounds 鈥斅爀specially for Washington residents,鈥 he explains. This is because Washington residents only compete against other Washington residents. About 16,000 of the 70,000 total applications were submitted by Washington residents 鈥 equaling roughly 23%. However, Washington residents will make up about 66% of the 7,000 enrolled students.

In addition, Seegert shares how applications are reviewed and what the primary considerations are in the review process 鈥斅爄ncluding why some students with lower GPAs are accepted while some with higher grades are not.

Finally, Seegert answers questions about affirmative action and about how the wait list works.

 

Contact Victor Balta at balta@uw.edu.

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