Rhode Island School of Design
Providence, RI · Northeast
- Acceptance rate
- 18.7%
- SAT mid-50
- 1396-1530
- Cost after aid
- $50,507
- Graduation rate
- 89%
About Rhode Island School of Design
Rhode Island School of Design is a very small private university in Providence, RI, in a city setting.
What Rhode Island School of Design looks for
Rhode Island School of Design accepts roughly 19%, which means a strong application is necessary but not sufficient. Most admitted students are at or above the mid-50 in test scores and have at least one extracurricular thread that AOs read as substantive. The supplements matter. The "why us" essay is where many otherwise-strong applications fall apart, because it reads as a Mad Libs of the school's website rather than a real plan.
Frequently asked
What SAT score do I need for Rhode Island School of Design?
Rhode Island School of Design's middle 50% SAT range is 1396 to 1530. A score in or above that band keeps you in the conversation; below it, the rest of your application has to do more work.
What ACT score do I need for Rhode Island School of Design?
Middle 50% ACT range is 31 to 34. The top of that range or above is what most admitted students submit when they choose to send a score.
What is the acceptance rate at Rhode Island School of Design?
Rhode Island School of Design admits roughly 19% of applicants. Selective, but stats inside the middle 50% put you in real contention.
What does Rhode Island School of Design actually cost after financial aid?
Average net cost (after institutional aid) is about $50,507 per year. Net cost varies enormously by family income; run the school's net price calculator for an estimate that reflects your situation.
Is Rhode Island School of Design a reach, match, or safety for me?
Compare your stats to the middle 50% above. If you are at or below the 25th percentile, treat Rhode Island School of Design as a reach. If you are in the middle 50%, it is a match. Above the 75th percentile and the school accepts above 25% overall, it is closer to a safety. Selectivity below 20% should be treated as a reach for everyone, period.