Choosing where to study STEM is one of the most consequential decisions a high school student makes. Rankings alone don't capture what matters: the culture of collaboration versus competition, whether undergraduates get real research access, the strength of career placement, and whether the campus feels like home for four years. This guide goes beyond the numbers.
We've compiled data from U.S. News, QS World Rankings, and institutional reports to rank the top 30 STEM universities for 2026. For each school, we provide acceptance rates, median SAT/ACT scores, distinctive STEM strengths, and honest assessments of campus culture.
The table below summarizes key data points for all 30 schools. Click any school name to jump to its detailed profile (top 10) or summary (11–30).
| # | University | Acceptance Rate | Median SAT | STEM Strength |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | MIT | 3.4% | 1560 | Engineering, CS, Mathematics, Physics |
| 2 | Caltech | 2.7% | 1570 | Physics, Engineering, Chemistry |
| 3 | Stanford | 3.7% | 1550 | CS, Engineering, AI/ML |
| 4 | Princeton | 3.5% | 1550 | Mathematics, Physics, CS |
| 5 | Harvard | 3.2% | 1540 | Applied Math, Statistics, Biology |
| 6 | Carnegie Mellon | 11.2% | 1540 | CS, Robotics, AI |
| 7 | UChicago | 5.1% | 1545 | Mathematics, Statistics, Economics |
| 8 | Columbia | 3.9% | 1540 | Applied Physics, Data Science |
| 9 | Yale | 4.4% | 1535 | Mathematics, Biomedical Engineering |
| 10 | UC Berkeley | 11.6% | 1480 | CS, Engineering, Mathematics |
| 11 | Cornell | 7.3% | 1520 | Engineering, CS, Applied Math |
| 12 | Georgia Tech | 16.0% | 1490 | Engineering, CS, Aerospace |
| 13 | University of Michigan | 15.4% | 1470 | Engineering, Mathematics, Data Science |
| 14 | Duke | 5.0% | 1530 | Biomedical Engineering, CS, Mathematics |
| 15 | Northwestern | 5.6% | 1525 | Materials Science, CS, Applied Math |
| 16 | UCLA | 8.6% | 1460 | Mathematics, CS, Engineering |
| 17 | Johns Hopkins | 6.5% | 1530 | Biomedical Engineering, Applied Math |
| 18 | Penn (UPenn) | 5.4% | 1530 | CS, Data Science, Wharton Analytics |
| 19 | UIUC | 43.7% | 1430 | CS, Engineering, Physics |
| 20 | Rice | 7.7% | 1530 | Engineering, Applied Mathematics |
| 21 | Brown | 5.0% | 1520 | Applied Mathematics, CS |
| 22 | Purdue | 49.2% | 1380 | Engineering, CS, Aerospace |
| 23 | USC | 9.2% | 1490 | CS, Engineering, Data Science |
| 24 | UT Austin | 28.7% | 1410 | CS, Engineering, Mathematics |
| 25 | UW Madison | 49.8% | 1390 | Mathematics, CS, Engineering |
| 26 | Dartmouth | 5.5% | 1520 | CS, Engineering Sciences |
| 27 | Washington U (St. Louis) | 9.8% | 1520 | Biomedical Engineering, Data Analytics |
| 28 | Virginia Tech | 57.0% | 1340 | Engineering, CS |
| 29 | Harvey Mudd | 10.8% | 1530 | Mathematics, Physics, Engineering (all STEM) |
| 30 | UW Seattle | 43.6% | 1400 | CS, Applied Mathematics |
Why #1: MIT isn't just a school — it's an ecosystem. The "mens et manus" (mind and hand) philosophy means even pure math majors end up building things. The UROP (Undergraduate Research Opportunities Program) places over 90% of undergraduates in research labs before graduation, many by their first year.
STEM culture: Intensely collaborative. Problem sets (psets) are designed to be solved in groups, and the pass/no-record first semester removes competitive pressure early on. The culture is "work hard, build cool things, help each other."
Math department: Home to 12 Fields Medalists. The mathematics department is uniquely integrated with theoretical computer science and physics. Course 18 (Mathematics) offers both pure and applied tracks, with legendary courses like 18.06 (Linear Algebra with Gilbert Strang) available to all.
Best for: Students who want to combine mathematical theory with engineering, CS, or scientific application. If you want to prove theorems AND build robots, MIT is hard to beat.
Why #2: Caltech is the most concentrated STEM environment in the world. With fewer than 1,000 undergraduates and a 3:1 student-to-faculty ratio, every student gets personal attention from world-class researchers. The honor code system means exams are take-home and unproctored.
STEM culture: Intimate and intense. Everyone takes the same core curriculum in math, physics, and chemistry regardless of major. The house system creates tight-knit communities. Pranks are an institutional tradition.
Math department: Small but extraordinary. Caltech's math faculty includes several Abel Prize and Fields Medal winners. The department emphasizes connections between pure mathematics and theoretical physics (Caltech manages JPL and has deep NASA ties).
Best for: Students who thrive in small, intense environments and want deep research immersion from day one. Not for those who want a large campus social scene.
Why #3: Stanford's proximity to Silicon Valley creates an unmatched pipeline from classroom to industry. CS is the most popular major, and the entrepreneurial culture means many students launch companies before graduating. The d.school (Hasso Plattner Institute of Design) teaches design thinking to engineers.
STEM culture: Entrepreneurial and interdisciplinary. The boundaries between departments are unusually porous — a math major might take a seminar at the business school and an art studio in the same quarter. The quarter system moves fast.
Math department: Strong across the board, with particular depth in algebraic geometry, number theory, and probability. The joint CS/Math degree is increasingly popular. Stanford's math faculty includes multiple ICM invited speakers and MacArthur Fellows.
Best for: Students who want STEM rigor with Silicon Valley access. Ideal if you're considering both graduate school and industry.
Why #4: Princeton's mathematics department is arguably the strongest in the world for pure mathematics. The department has produced more Fields Medalists than any other US institution. The junior paper and senior thesis requirements ensure every math major engages in original research.
STEM culture: Intellectual and traditional. The residential college system and eating clubs create a strong social fabric. Princeton is undergraduate-focused compared to peer institutions — no medical school, no law school, no business school means resources concentrate on undergraduate and PhD programs.
Math department: Legendary. Andrew Wiles (Fermat's Last Theorem), Terence Tao, and many other luminaries have been affiliated. The department's seminar culture is vibrant, and undergraduates are welcomed into graduate-level seminars. Fine Hall (the math building) has its own library and common room.
Best for: Students serious about pure mathematics who want a beautiful campus, strong undergraduate focus, and access to the world's top mathematicians.
Why #5: Harvard's breadth is its strength. The concentration system allows math students to easily access economics, philosophy, physics, and computer science. Math 55 — widely considered the hardest undergraduate math course in the country — attracts mathematical talent from across the world.
STEM culture: Harvard is a liberal arts university first. STEM students are expected to be broadly educated, with General Education requirements spanning humanities and social sciences. This produces well-rounded graduates but means less STEM immersion than MIT or Caltech.
Math department: World-class, with particular strength in number theory, algebraic geometry, and mathematical physics. The joint Math/CS concentration has grown rapidly. Harvard's statistics department (a separate entity) is the birthplace of many modern statistical methods.
Best for: Math-inclined students who also want a broad liberal arts education and the most extensive alumni network in the world.
Why #6: CMU's School of Computer Science is consistently ranked #1 in the US. The Robotics Institute is the largest university robotics research center in the world. For students at the intersection of math and CS, CMU offers unparalleled depth.
STEM culture: Intense and specialized. Students are admitted to specific colleges (SCS, MCS, Engineering), and transferring between them is difficult. The workload is famously heavy — "My heart is in the work" is the school motto.
Best for: Students who know they want CS, AI/ML, or robotics and are ready for a demanding, specialized education in Pittsburgh.
Why #7: UChicago's "life of the mind" culture produces rigorous thinkers. The mathematics department has deep historical roots — the Chicago school of mathematics shaped modern analysis and algebra. The economics department (home to more Nobel laureates than any other) draws mathematically minded students.
STEM culture: Intellectual rigor above all. The Core Curriculum ensures every student engages with foundational texts across disciplines. UChicago students are known for being "where fun comes to die" — the workload is serious, but so is the intellectual community.
Best for: Students who want mathematics embedded in a deeply intellectual, discussion-based academic culture.
Why #8: Columbia's location in New York City provides unique access to finance (Wall Street), tech (Silicon Alley), and media. The Data Science Institute bridges mathematics, statistics, and CS. Columbia's applied mathematics program has strong ties to industry.
STEM culture: Urban and fast-paced. The Core Curriculum (similar to UChicago's) ensures breadth. Columbia Engineering (SEAS) and Columbia College have distinct cultures. NYC internship access during the semester is a major advantage.
Best for: STEM students who want big-city life, finance/tech industry access, and a strong Core Curriculum foundation.
Why #9: Yale has invested heavily in STEM over the past decade, opening new science buildings and hiring aggressively. The residential college system creates an intimate social experience within a larger university. Math majors benefit from small class sizes and accessible professors.
STEM culture: Yale is primarily a liberal arts institution, and STEM students are a growing minority. This means less "tech bro" culture and more interdisciplinary thinking. The new Wu Tsai Institute focuses on neuroscience and AI.
Best for: Students who want a top-tier math education within a broader liberal arts environment, with strong extracurriculars and residential life.
Why #10: Berkeley punches above its weight as a public university. The mathematics department ranks top 5 nationally, and EECS (Electrical Engineering and Computer Science) is one of the most competitive programs in the country. The cost advantage for California residents is significant.
STEM culture: Large, diverse, and meritocratic. Berkeley is sink-or-swim — large lecture courses in lower division mean you need self-motivation. But the student community is incredible: hundreds of student organizations, research groups, and study teams.
Math department: Home to Evans Hall (the math building) and a department with deep roots in analysis, topology, and logic. Math 1A (Calculus) enrolls thousands each semester. The honors track (Math H1A/B) is rigorous and well-taught.
Best for: High-achieving students who want Ivy-level academics at a public university price, and who thrive in large, independent environments. Outstanding value for California residents.
These universities offer world-class STEM programs that rival the top 10 in specific areas. Many have lower acceptance rates than their "ranking" suggests and produce graduates who compete directly with top-10 alumni in industry and graduate school.
The largest Ivy, with outstanding engineering and CS programs. Cornell's math department is strong in topology, algebra, and dynamical systems. The rural Ithaca campus is beautiful but isolated — you'll want to like winter. The College of Engineering admits separately from Arts & Sciences, so choose carefully when applying.
Georgia Tech offers elite engineering and CS education at public university tuition. The math department has a strong applied focus, with connections to the world-leading School of Industrial and Systems Engineering. Atlanta provides excellent internship and job opportunities. The best value on this list for out-of-state students after Berkeley and UIUC.
Michigan's math department is one of the largest and most productive in the country. The Ross Mathematics Program for high school students is legendary. The campus in Ann Arbor has a college-town feel with Big Ten athletics culture. Strong placement into both industry (automotive, tech) and graduate school.
Duke's math department is particularly strong in geometry, topology, and mathematical biology. The Research Triangle location (with UNC and NC State nearby) creates an unusually rich academic ecosystem. Duke's undergraduate research opportunities are extensive, and the campus culture balances academics with Division I athletics.
Located in Evanston on Lake Michigan, Northwestern combines strong STEM programs with a leading journalism school and performing arts scene. The math department has notable strength in number theory and algebraic geometry. Chicago is 30 minutes away by train, providing urban access without urban campus drawbacks.
UCLA's math department is top-10 nationally, with particular strength in analysis and number theory. The campus in Westwood (Los Angeles) provides excellent weather and access to the tech industry. Like Berkeley, UCLA offers world-class academics at a public university price for California residents. Extremely competitive admission for CS and engineering.
Johns Hopkins leads in biomedical engineering and applied mathematics for medicine. The Applied Mathematics & Statistics department is distinct from the pure math department, offering specialized training in mathematical modeling, optimization, and data analysis. Strong pre-med culture permeates campus.
Penn's unique strength is the intersection of STEM and business through Wharton. The Networked & Social Systems Engineering (NETS) program combines CS, economics, and network science. Math majors often double-major with economics or finance. Located in Philadelphia with strong industry ties.
UIUC's CS program ranks top 5 nationally, and acceptance into the CS program (within Grainger Engineering) is dramatically more competitive than the university's overall 44% acceptance rate. The math department is excellent in number theory, combinatorics, and mathematical logic. Outstanding value — one of the best STEM educations per dollar in the country.
Rice offers a small-school feel (4,000 undergraduates) with research-university resources. The residential college system (similar to Yale's) creates tight-knit communities. Located in Houston with strong ties to NASA Johnson Space Center and the Texas Medical Center. The math department is small but high-quality, with accessible faculty.
These schools are sometimes overlooked in favor of "name-brand" institutions, but their STEM programs are exceptional. Several offer better student-to-faculty ratios and more research access than higher-ranked schools.
Brown's open curriculum means no required courses outside your concentration — math students have total flexibility. The applied math department (separate from math) is one of the strongest in the country. The collaborative, low-pressure culture makes Brown unique among Ivies.
Purdue's engineering programs are legendary (Neil Armstrong was an alumnus). The math department's actuarial science program is among the best in the US. Acceptance rate is relatively high, but the engineering and CS programs are far more selective. Exceptional value at in-state tuition.
USC's Viterbi School of Engineering has risen dramatically in rankings over the past decade. The Los Angeles location provides unmatched access to the entertainment, aerospace, and tech industries. The new School of Advanced Computing opened in 2024.
UT Austin's CS program is top-10, and the math department has notable strength in topology and mathematical physics. The Austin tech scene (Apple, Google, Tesla, Samsung) provides strong career opportunities. Texas in-state tuition makes this outstanding value.
Wisconsin's math department is historically one of the strongest in the country, with deep roots in analysis, number theory, and combinatorics. The campus on Lake Mendota is beautiful. Strong research output with genuine undergraduate involvement.
The smallest Ivy, Dartmouth offers intimate STEM education in rural New Hampshire. The quarter system (D-Plan) includes mandatory off-campus terms. The math department is small but excellent, with a notably accessible faculty. Best for students who want close faculty relationships.
WashU has risen rapidly in rankings, with strong biomedical engineering and data analytics programs. The campus is one of the most beautiful in the country. Financial aid is generous (need-blind for US students). The math department has growing strength in probability and mathematical biology.
Virginia Tech's engineering college is one of the largest and best in the country. The Corps of Cadets tradition creates a unique campus culture. The math department emphasizes applied and computational mathematics. Outstanding value, especially for Virginia residents.
Harvey Mudd is the STEM specialist among the Claremont Colleges. With only 900 students, every student takes a common core in math, physics, chemistry, CS, engineering, and biology. The college has the highest percentage of STEM PhDs per capita of any US college. Cross-registration with the other Claremont Colleges provides breadth. The highest mid-career salary of any liberal arts college in the country.
UW's CS program benefits enormously from Amazon, Microsoft, and Boeing proximity. The math department has particular strength in combinatorics, number theory, and applied mathematics. Seattle's tech industry provides strong career placement. Admission to CS is extremely competitive (separate from general admission).
Rankings are a starting point, not a destination. Here are the questions that actually predict whether you'll thrive at a particular school:
STEM-immersive: MIT, Caltech, Georgia Tech, Harvey Mudd, CMU — nearly everyone around you will be in STEM. Problem sets are a shared language.
Liberal arts + STEM: Harvard, Yale, Princeton, Brown, Dartmouth — you'll take humanities courses, engage with non-STEM thinkers, and develop broader communication skills.
Very important: Caltech (3:1 ratio), MIT (UROP), Harvey Mudd, Rice, Dartmouth — small schools where undergraduates are essential to research.
Available but competitive: Berkeley, UIUC, Michigan, UT Austin — large schools with many opportunities, but you'll need to be proactive.
Urban: Columbia (NYC), Penn (Philadelphia), MIT (Cambridge/Boston), Stanford (Bay Area), USC (LA)
College town: Princeton, Cornell (Ithaca), Michigan (Ann Arbor), UW Madison, Purdue (West Lafayette)
Rural: Caltech (Pasadena), Dartmouth (Hanover, NH), Virginia Tech (Blacksburg)
Best financial aid (need-blind, generous): MIT, Princeton, Harvard, Yale, Stanford, Caltech — these meet 100% of demonstrated financial need.
Best value (public): Berkeley, Georgia Tech, UIUC, UT Austin, Purdue, UW Madison — especially for in-state students.
PhD in mathematics: Princeton, MIT, Chicago, Harvard, Berkeley — the strongest pipelines to top graduate programs.
Tech industry: Stanford, CMU, Berkeley, MIT, Georgia Tech — Silicon Valley and tech hub proximity matters.
Finance/consulting: Harvard, Penn (Wharton), Columbia, Chicago, MIT — Wall Street recruiting is strongest here.
If you have the opportunity to visit campuses, here's what to look for as a STEM-focused student:
If you're still preparing for standardized tests, here are realistic score targets by tier. Remember that holistic admission means scores alone don't determine outcomes — but they do set the baseline.
| Tier | Schools | SAT Target | AP Math Target |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tier 1 (1–5) | MIT, Caltech, Stanford, Princeton, Harvard | 1530+ | 5 on BC Calculus + Statistics |
| Tier 2 (6–15) | CMU, UChicago, Columbia, Yale, Berkeley, Cornell, Georgia Tech, Michigan, Duke, Northwestern | 1490+ | 5 on BC Calculus |
| Tier 3 (16–25) | UCLA, JHU, Penn, UIUC, Rice, Brown, Purdue, USC, UT Austin, UW Madison | 1430+ | 4–5 on AB or BC |
| Tier 4 (26–30) | Dartmouth, WashU, Virginia Tech, Harvey Mudd, UW Seattle | 1400+ | 4+ on AB or BC |
This guide is updated annually. Data was compiled from institutional websites, U.S. News & World Report (2026), QS World University Rankings (2026), and the National Center for Education Statistics. Rankings reflect a weighted combination of STEM research output, faculty quality, student outcomes, and program breadth. Individual program rankings may differ significantly from the overall institutional ranking.