You’re considering an MBA; it won’t be all too long before you come across the Stanford Graduate School of Business, universally recognized as one of the world’s premiere Graduate Schools of Business. Stanford offers three full-time degree programs: the MBA, the MSx (a compressed one-year program generally pursued by mid-career professionals), and a Ph.D. We’ll focus on the Stanford MBA in this article.
Stanford MBA Profile
An inordinate amount of the buzz surrounding the Stanford Graduate School of Business addresses its continually increasing selectivity. The Class of 2022 had 7324 applicants, and 436 new students were accepted.
If we grind a few numbers, we see that the Stanford MBA acceptance rate is just under 6%, or just over 1 of every 16 is admitted. It is indeed a tight cut, but that ought not to discourage you when you believe you’ve got the academic chops to be a serious candidate.
| Total enrollment | 436 |
| Median GRE score | 164 - 84th percentile (Q) 165 - 96th percentile (V) |
| Median GMAT score | 733 - 96th percentile |
| Median TOEFL score | 113 - 96th percentile |
| Median GPA | 3.8 |
| Acceptance rate | 6% |
| Women | 47% |
| First generation university students | 9% |
| Students of Color | 37% |
| International citizens | 35% |
| Average work experience | 4.7 years |
| Undergraduate majors |
|
(Source: Stanford Graduate School of Business)
The takeaway from this data is that you can take the Stanford GSB adcom at its word when it tells you to be yourself and to put your best foot as you see it forward. In its admissions process, the university will give you every opportunity to show how you will both contribute to the program as a student and how you will use your education, to, in the words of the university, “Change lives, change organizations, change the world.”
There are a lot of ways to demonstrate these qualities in addition to strong academics. If you’ve got the stuff, they want to consider your application!
Rankings
Both US News and Financial Times ranked Stanford as the #1 business school of 2021, while Fortune ranked it as #2 in their 2021 Best MBA Program rankings.
General Evaluation Criteria
Intellectual vitality, demonstrated leadership potential, and personal qualities and contributions

What are the requirements for a Stanford MBA?
At risk of repetition, if you believe you’ve got the academic capabilities and like the program, you really ought to apply. Stanford has a well-deserved reputation of being far more friendly and less competitive than many of its similarly ranked peers, and the admissions criteria reflect this approach. Stanford GSB has no preferred undergraduate curriculum and no minimum GPA.
There really is no prototypical student. Furthermore, DACA recipients and undocumented students who otherwise meet the criteria are encouraged to apply.
In the application process, you can show them how you shine via a number of paths: undergraduate GPA, GMAT or GRE Scores (or TOEFL scores if appropriate), examples of activities and awards, a recounting of your professional experience, and two letters of reference.
Stanford GMAT Scores
Stanford GSB has one of the highest average GMAT scores around; the score range of those admitted to the class of 2022 ranges from 600–790 (the 99th percentile!). Even candidates with strong scores will need some luck or some pull.
See where your score falls below:
| Score Range | Assessment | What You Need |
|---|---|---|
| 750–800 | The safe zone | Make sure the rest of your application is on track, and keep your fingers crossed just in case! |
| 710–750 | The go-for-it zone | You have a chance, but make sure the rest of your application is impressive, or helps round out the diversity of the class. |
| 660–710 | The questionable zone | You'll face scrutiny, so you'll have to offer something no one else is bringing (or do some serious prep to help your scores). |
| 500–660 | The shot-in-the-dark zone | To get in with this score, Stanford has to consider you exceptional. Do some serious prep, consider another test, or look at alternative schools. |
If your scores are in the “questionable” or “shot-in-the-dark” ranges, I highly recommend you do some serious GMAT prep (75% of the class of 2022 submitted GMAT scores) or consider the GRE as an alternative. For more information on the relative merits of the GMAT and the GRE as vehicles for admission to a top MBA program, see our GMAT vs. GRE comparison.
Essays
Additional parts of the application include two essays whose combined total word count is less than 1,050 words. They address two very broad topics that permit you to show Stanford what a great match you and the Graduate School of Business will be: “What matters most to you, and why?” and “Why Stanford?”
Letters of Recommendation
The recommendations are particularly important at Stanford; it is here that you get to shine and at the same time be reasonably humble, so choose your recommendations authors carefully – try to show your leadership / contributions to something larger than yourself here.
Optional Items
There are also two optional essay questions that permit you to add any information you’d like the committee to know about that did not come up elsewhere in your package.
Stanford MBA Program: Curriculum, Cost, and More
There are a lot of in-person and virtual admissions events that offer great opportunities to learn more about the program, and the university strongly encourages applicants to attend.
The program itself is a high-end intellectual playground. The Stanford GSB faculty of 111 is chock full of Nobel Laureates, including recipients of 5 Nobel prizes for economics alone since 1990, not to mention the countless recipients of additional academic awards. These scholars are distributed across eight broadly defined academic areas – Accounting, Economics, Finance, Marketing, Operations, Information and Technology, Organizational Behavior, and Political Economy.
Curriculum
The Graduate School of Business operates on a quarter system. First-year MBA students typically take core courses, with one or two electives in the Winter and Spring quarters. This is typically followed by the Global Management Immersion Experience requirement–four weeks abroad with a group of 20–30 students and a professor, working in a sponsoring organization. Student may also self-design and direct an individual Global Experience. COVID has of course had an effect on this program’s recent implementation, but Stanford GSB is keeping its finger on the pulse as circumstances evolve.
Second year students take almost exclusively elective courses. These courses come from the following disciplines, and at least 100 courses change year to year.
- Accounting
- Entrepreneurship
- Finance
- Global management
- Human resources
- Information technology
- Leadership
- Managerial economics
- Marketing
- Operations
- Organizational behavior
- Political economics
- Public management
- Strategic management
Students will also complete 12 additional academic credits which can come from any of the six schools that comprise the whole of Stanford University, including the Schools of Business, the School of Earth, Energy and Environmental Sciences, the Graduate School of Education, the School of Engineering, the School of Humanities and Sciences, the School of Law, and the School of Medicine. (12% of the class of 2020’s graduates’ new ventures were in healthcare.)
Dual Degrees
One Graduate School of Business alumnus in 6 gets a joint or dual degree. While the standard JD/MBA is certainly popular, 2020’s class also included MBA graduates who combined their degrees with an MA in education, an MPP in Public Planning, as well as with Masters degrees in engineering and computers. At the Stanford Graduate School of Business, the world really is your oyster!
How much does a Stanford MBA cost?
Once you manage to get in, can you afford it? As is the case with all the top programs, it’s expensive. Stanford estimates the cost per year for all tuition and expenses with a “moderate” lifestyle in Palo Alto at $119,964 for a single student at $144.042 for married students. You’ll need to add between $3,000 and $4,500 for the Global Experience requirement.
Here’s the good news. Once you get in, they’ll help you to get through.
More than $20 million in fellowships are awarded annually. The average need-based award (that’s right, “award” – you won’t be asked to pay it back) is $80,000 spread over the two years.
That’s just the beginning; there’s a load of financial aid Stanford makes available in addition to the above-mentioned fellowships. These include, but are by no means limited to, the Stanford GSB BOLD fellows fund, aimed at low-income students and/or those subject to intergenerational wealth disparities.
A lot of aid is based upon race and ethnicity, and a lot is further based upon geographic origins, religious beliefs, and even veteran status and a student’s need to support family members. Other FA opportunities include fellowships and loan forgiveness for students who pursue employment in the nonprofit and public service sectors, and Stanford has a web page dedicated to referrals to external scholarships available to international students as well as to US citizens and permanent residents.
Stanford GSB Employment Outcomes
One is naturally inclined to ask what the ROI on this heavy investment in intellectual excellence looks like. In a word (OK, two words), it looks bright and brilliant. Stanford MBA graduates are among the most heavily recruited students, and they are recruited by the world’s most innovative organizations.
Data for the class of 2020:
- 91% received offers within 90 days of graduation
- 34% in finance
- 24% technology
- 15% consulting
- Other 27% of grads spread across a number of industries, with 18% starting new ventures
- 63% of those reporting said they changed their function or industry
Not only will you be recruited, but you’ll be also well paid. The highest mean starting salary was in Finance, $182,706 annually. The lowest mean salary, not surprisingly in a category characterized as “Other”, was $129,088 annually.
As a point of comparison, the mean starting salary of all 2020 MBA graduates in California was $85,331. (Source: Investopedia)
Add to the above that 41% of the Stanford MBA class of 2020 got stock compensation of some sort, and 71% expect to receive a performance bonus, and the ROI looks impressive indeed.
How to Get Into Stanford GSB: Takeaways
The Stanford MBA is clearly an outstanding academic opportunity – indeed, a collection of outstanding academic opportunities. The hard part is getting accepted.
Some common threads:
Stanford Graduate School of Business likes students who are successful as a result of pursuing their passions to the fullest, as opposed to those who check off a large number of boxes as an end in itself.
Community involvement is highly valued; the school offers academic programs through the Center for Social Innovation and the Public Management program, and offers loan reduction for graduates who pursue employment in this space. Stanford is not a competitive cutthroat environment, but rather a place where differences are accepted and students support each other.
If you are an authentic person who’s a team player, the Stanford Graduate School of Management is a definite “must-see” during your exploration of top-notch MBA programs!
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