Once we’ve processed all of the supporting documentation we’ve received, we’ll begin to notify students who are missing a portion of their applications. At that time, it is your responsibility to promptly send the required documentation. You can check your application via your applicant status portal to ensure we have received all required materials.
We appreciate your concern for your application, but contacting our office close to the application deadline is unlikely to be productive. If we receive the missing portions of your application in a timely manner, the evaluation of your application will not be negatively affected.
In order to evaluate your application we require: the Common Application or Coalition Application, which include the Notre Dame writing supplement, the application fee, your essay, one teacher’s evaluation, your full transcript, and, if you choose, a standardized test score (either SAT or ACT). You will receive a final communication from our office via email stating that your application is complete and ready for review.
Payment of the required $75 application fee is available online through the Common Application or Coalition Application website.
Payment methods include the following:
Your admission decision will be shared to your applicant status portal in mid-December for Restrictive Early Action and late March for Regular Decision.
You should have received an email to the email address you provided on your application notifying you that your admissions decision is ready to view. Included in the email were instructions on how to access your applicant status portal.
You can find information about how to apply for financial aid here. Priority submission dates for your financial aid applications are based on whether you apply in Restrictive Early Action (November 15) or Regular Decision (February 15).
Our Restrictive Early Action application process is non-binding, and admitted students have until May 1 to indicate their decision to attend. Every college and university uses Restrictive Early Action in a different way. The easiest way to understand how Notre Dame uses it is to describe what it is not. It is not the avenue students should take merely because Notre Dame is their first choice. Nor is it easier to gain admission through the Restrictive Early Action process.
In deciding whether or not to apply Early, ask yourself: can I submit my best application in October of my senior year? If so, then Restrictive Early Action is probably the correct route for you. However, if you believe that an extra semester could be beneficial for whatever reason (to raise your grades a little, to add on to your resume) then you should consider applying during Regular Decision.
Learn more about when to apply. Note: Applications become available each year on August 1.
To get an idea of the kinds of credentials our admitted students come in with, check out these stats on the most recent first-year class.
Notre Dame has a need-blind admissions policy for all U.S. citizens and permanent residents, meaning that a student’s financial situation is not considered in the evaluation of his or her application. We are committed to meeting 100 percent of each family’s demonstrated financial need, which is completely separate from our admissions process.
The Common Application, Coalition Application, and QuestBridge application are online-only and are not available in paper form. After your application is submitted electronically, letters of recommendation and transcripts can still be sent to complete your application. You will be able to print-preview the application, but please do not mail the print-preview to us. We recommend printing a copy of your completed application to keep for your files.
Note: Applications become available each year on August 1.
The University requires the completion of the following high school courses in order to be considered for admission. A unit is equivalent to the credit for a year of satisfactory work in an accredited secondary school. The two language units must be in the same language and a language offered by the University of Notre Dame.
Students are required to take 16 units during their high school career. This distribution will differ slightly based on the student’s intended area of study, but must include the following:
*For students with an intended major within the College of Science, the College of Engineering, the School of Architecture, or certain majors within the College of Arts & Letters (Neuroscience and Behavior, Arts & Letters Pre-Health), 4 units of Mathematics are required, which must include an advanced Mathematics course (Pre-Calculus or Calculus).
**Students with an intended major within the College of Science or the College of Engineering must take a unit of Chemistry. Additionally the following majors require a unit of Physics:
It is also strongly recommended that students with the following intended majors take a unit of Physics:
Although we require at least 16 academic units for admission, our most competitive applicants will have four units in each major academic area and in the most rigorous level their high school offers. We do include algebra and/or foreign language courses completed during eighth grade in our count of admissions requirements. For example, if you earned credit for one full-year introductory French course as an eighth grader, then completed French II in ninth grade, both credits will be counted.
Notre Dame is test-optional for the 2024 and 2025 application cycles, meaning students may choose whether or not to submit a test score with their application. See test-optional questions below for further details.
Applicants may self-report their SAT and/or ACT scores via their application or applicant student portal. Once an admitted student confirms their enrollment to Notre Dame, they will then be required to submit official score reports from SAT and/or ACT before they enroll.
Please note that we will verify scores for all enrolling students, and any discrepancies between official and self-reported scores may jeopardize a student's place in the class.
If you choose to submit multiple scores, we will superscore the tests for our evaluation. This means we will consider the highest composite score and highest scores on each section, regardless of test date. Note that we do not require the writing portion of the ACT or the SAT.
Please visit the ACT website and College Board website for testing dates.
Notre Dame is test-optional for the 2024 and 2025 application cycles. If you choose to have test scores included in our review of your application, you may self-report any test scores (SAT, ACT, AP Exam scores, IB Exam scores) on your application or upload through your applicant status portal. Please note that English Proficiency test results must be sent directly from the testing agency.
Yes: We will view these test scores equally and, as a result, we will superscore both versions of the test when applicable.
You can send the Admissions Office supplementary material to be reviewed by a particular department at Notre Dame. We encourage this only for students interested in studying art, music, or architecture. Use the SlideRoom application available through the Common Application or Coalition Application for your submissions. The University will not accept physical submissions.
All applicants must submit the Common Application or Coalition Application before uploading media through the SlideRoom application. The admissions office will then direct the material to the appropriate department for review.
Please send only one letter of evaluation from a teacher you’ve had in a core academic discipline during high school. Ask the classroom teacher who is most familiar with your work ethic, classroom performance, and character. Your high school counselor also has the option of sending a letter of evaluation along with the “Counselor’s Report."
We don’t have quotas per region or state. We judge students on the merits of their academic and extracurricular talents rather than where they reside. If we have more students from one state over another, it’s simply because we receive more applications from that one state. For instance, we receive more applications from Illinois than from 10 other western states combined; it makes sense that we have more enrolled students from Illinois than from those other states.
The same holds true for high schools. There’s no guarantee that we’ll admit the same number of students the next year from a particular school or state, as the quality of the applicants may change.
We award credit for scores of 4 and 5 on AP exams and 6 and 7 on IB Higher Level exams. Check the First Year Advising website for specific tests and scores we accept for credit.
When reading an application, we do not put any preference on the type of school a student attends. Rather, we look at the strength of the school. To get a feel for a school’s strength, we look at its graduation rates, the percentage of its graduates who go on to two-year and four-year colleges, the types of classes offered, and the average SAT and ACT scores of the graduating class, among other factors. For the entering first-year class in fall 2022, 45 percent of students attended a public high school, 36 percent attended a Catholic high school, and 19 percent attended a private or chartered high school.
Many schools use different GPA scales and computation methods, so it’s difficult to give standardized information regarding Grade Point Averages. Instead, we rely more heavily on class rank when determining how competitive a student is within his/her school. Competitive students are near the top of their class, no matter how their GPA is computed.
Interviews are not part of our evaluation process. Let your story shine through on your application for admission.
You’re welcome to contact your regional admissions counselor to ask specific questions about Notre Dame or the admissions process.
Most students find it beneficial to visit Notre Dame to experience the academics, community, tradition, and spiritual nature of our campus. You may also register for one of our virtual experiences. On campus or virtually, you and your family can tour campus and attend an Information Session given by an admissions counselor. Families are welcome to ask the admissions counselor any questions they have. Learn more about campus visits and virtual programming and register for a visit.
Note: Because we receive applications from all over the world, a visit to Notre Dame will not affect an admissions decision.
Notre Dame is test-optional for the 2024 and 2025 application cycles, meaning students may choose whether or not to submit their test scores with their applications. See test-optional questions below for further details.
If you choose to submit your test scores, we will accept either the SAT or the ACT and have no preference for either test. Please submit all scores to Notre Dame for review. If you submit multiple scores, we will superscore the tests for our evaluation. This means we will consider the highest composite score and highest scores on each section, regardless of test date. Note that we do not require the writing portion of the ACT or the SAT.
In addition to our standard application requirements, we encourage applicants to submit an additional recommendation or two if teacher and school counselor evaluations are coming from a parent. Letters could come from a college professor if you’ve taken classes at a local college, or from an adult who has worked with you in an extracurricular activity and knows you well.
If you have any questions about applying as a home-schooled student, feel free to call the Admissions Office at (574) 631-7505.
Students will have the ability to indicate whether they would like Notre Dame to consider their standardized test scores when they apply through a question/answer within our application. We receive applications through the Common Application, Coalition Application, and QuestBridge application.
No, we want students to put forward the application they feel is best and we will review applications based on the materials that are submitted. Students should make this decision based upon the totality of their application as we conduct a holistic review. We will continue to review your transcripts and application answers detailing grades, rigor of curriculum, and involvement both inside and outside the classroom.
We conduct a holistic review of every application and could not provide advice on one separate piece without reviewing the entire application.
No, we are committed to a fair and equitable review of your application and will not compare your application to a classmate’s in our assessment.
Applicants have a grace period after the application deadline to log in to their applicant status portal and change their answer—once and only once—indicating whether they are including/not including testing results for our review.
Restrictive Early Action applicants need to indicate their choice by November 10.
Regular Decision applicants need to indicate their choice by January 10.
Yes, international students may also determine if they want to include an ACT or SAT test score for our review. We do still require proof of English proficiency in our review process. Learn more about the international application process.
For the Spring and Fall 2024 and 2025 application terms, transfer students will have the option to include testing with their application.
Yes, we will continue to accept self-reported test scores through the application or through your applicant status portal for those students who wish to have them included in our application review. We will still require official testing be sent from the testing agency for those who are admitted and enroll at Notre Dame.
Notre Dame will be test-optional for the 2024 and 2025 application cycles, meaning students may choose whether or not to submit their test scores with their applications.
As with your application for admission, we will rely on your transcripts and application answers detailing rigor of curriculum, grades achieved and involvement both in and out of the classroom. If you choose not to submit your test score(s), you will not be excluded from consideration for merit scholarships. All students are considered for possible merit opportunities as their applications are reviewed for admission. If you are invited to apply for a merit scholarship program, we will inform you of next steps at that time.
If a student indicates on the application that they do not wish to have a test score included in their review but have already sent a test score, we will remove that test score from our application review.
Potential student-athletes have the option to submit a test score for review for the 2024 application cycle, but it is not required. In addition to Notre Dame admission requirements, please follow all requirements for the NCAA recruitment process and be in touch with the appropriate coaching staff for questions.
The ACT and SAT are optional for all students.
McKenna Hall
University of Notre Dame
Notre Dame , IN 46556 USA Phone 574-631-7505 Fax 574-631-8865 admissions@nd.edu