One of America's most outstanding liberal arts colleges, Haverford is a close-knit intellectual community founded on the Quaker values of individual dignity, academic strength and tolerance. We combine a rigorous academic program with an informal atmosphere of mutual respect and collaboration among students, faculty and staff. Haverford's Honor Code is one of the oldest in the country, and one of the few with a social dimension.
About Our Students
FALL 2020 ADMISSIONS
Numbers are for degree-seeking students applied, admitted, and enrolled in the fall of 2020.
Middle 50% SAT Range for Freshman Class
Numbers are for degree-seeking students applied, admitted, and enrolled in the fall of 2020.
Mathematics
690 - 770
Evidence-Based Reading and Writing
670 - 750
Freshmen Returning for Sophomore Year
FALL 2020 ENROLLMENT
Numbers are for degree-seeking undergraduate students and graduate students enrolled in the fall of 2020.
Graduate Student:
A student that holds a bachelor's degree or equivalent, and is taking courses at the post-baccalaureate level. Students formerly designated as first-professional students are now captured in the graduate student enrollment numbers.
FALL 2020 FRESHMAN CLASS
GEOGRAPHICAL PROFILE
Percentages are for the origins of first-time freshmen enrolled in the fall of 2020.
GENDER: ALL UNDERGRADUATES
DIVERSITY: ALL UNDERGRADUATES
What Students Pay
Price of Attendance in 2020 - 2021
Note: Numbers are estimates only for full-time undergraduate students living on campus in academic year 2020 - 2021.
Room & Board: This figure assumes double occupancy in institutional housing and 19 meals per week (or the maximum meal plan).
Books and Supplies: These costs include the average cost of books and supplies for a typical full-time undergraduate student living on campus. Unusual costs for special groups of students (for example, engineering or art majors) are not included unless they constitute a majority of the students at the institution.
Transportation: These costs include two round trips per year to the hometown of a typical full-time undergraduate student living on campus.
Other Expenses: These expenses include average costs for a typical full-time undergraduate student living on campus, for clothing, laundry, entertainment, medical (if not a required fee), and furnishings.
Estimated Tuition & Fees$58,900
Estimated Room & Board$17,066
Estimated Books & Supplies$1,194
Estimated Transportation$222
Other Expenses$1,866
Average Undergraduate Loans Owed At Graduation
The average per-undergraduate-borrower cumulative principal borrowed of the 2020 undergraduate class (does not include students who transferred in or any money borrowed while at other institutions) who started at this institution as first-time students and received a bachelor’s degree between July 1, 2019 and June 30, 2020. Includes loans through all loan programs: institutional, state, Federal Perkins, Federal Stafford Subsidized and Unsubsidized, Federal Direct Student Loans and Federal Family Education Loans, and private loans certified by this institution; parent loans are excluded but co-signed loans are included.
Use Our Net Price Calculator
An institution's Net Price Calculator provides an individualized estimate of the net price of attendance for a first-time, full-time aided undergraduate at that institution. The federal definition of net price is as follows: an institution's cost of attendance for first-time, full-time undergraduate students less the total need- and merit-based federal, state and institutional grant aid awarded (i.e., monetary awards that do not have to be paid back) divided by the number of first-time, full-time undergraduate students receiving such aid.
The estimates generated by an institution's Net Price Calculator do not represent a final determination, or actual award, of financial assistance or a final net price; they are only estimates.
Our Graduates
Percentage of Students Who Graduate
Percentages are for full-time first-time bachelor's (or equivalent) degree-seeking undergraduate students who entered this institution in the summer or fall of 2014 and completed their degree at this institution by the fall of 2020.
Within 4 Years
85%
Within 5 Years
92%
Within 6 Years
93%
Bachelor’s Degrees Awarded Last Year*
This graphic represents the four majors in which the most bachelor's degrees were awarded between July 1, 2020 and June 30, 2021. The category of “All Others” is the sum of all the other majors earned at the institution in that year. Students with a double major will only be represented by the category of their first major.
Number of Degrees Awarded in 2020
Numbers are for degrees awarded between July 1, 2019 and June 30, 2020.
Bachelor’s:
Bachelor’s degrees are any degrees that normally require at least four but not more than five years of full-time equivalent college-level work. This includes ALL bachelor’s degrees awarded in a five-year cooperative (work-study plan) program which provides for alternate class attendance and employment in business, industry, or government and thus allows students to combine actual work experience with their college studies. Also, it includes bachelor’s degrees in which the normal four years of work are completed in three years.
Master’s:
Master’s degrees require the successful completion of a program of study of at least the full-time equivalent of one but not more than two academic years of study beyond the bachelor’s degree. Some of these degrees, such as those in Theology (ex., M.Div., M.H.L./Rav) that were formerly classified as first-professional degrees, may require more than two full-time equivalent academic years of work.
Doctoral
Doctoral degrees are the highest award a student can earn for graduate study. There are three categories of Doctoral degrees:
- Doctor's degree-research/scholarship: Requires advanced work beyond the master's level, including the preparation and defense of a dissertation based on original research, or the planning and execution of an original project demonstrating substantial artistic or scholarly achievement.
- Doctor's degree-professional practice: A doctor's degree that is conferred upon completion of a program providing the knowledge and skills for the recognition, credential, or license required for professional practice. The degree is awarded after a period of study such that the total time to the degree, including both pre-professional and professional preparation, equals at least six full-time equivalent academic years. Some of these degrees were formerly classified as first-professional and may include: Chiropractic (D.C. or D.C.M.); Dentistry (D.D.S. OR D.M.D.); Law (L.L.B. or J.D.); Medicine (M.D.); Optometry (O.D.); Osteopathic Medicine (D.O.); Pharmacy (Pharm.D.); Podiatry (D.P.M., Pod.D., D.P.); or, Vetrinary Medicine (D.V.M.), and others, as designated by the awarding institution.
- Doctor's degree-other: A doctor's degree that does not meet the definition of a doctor's degree-research/scholarship or a doctor's degree-professional practice.
Thinking About Life After College
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About Our Faculty
Faculty Information
Student Faculty Ratio: Ratios are for full-time equivalent students to full-time equivalent instructional faculty for the fall of 2020. Full-time equivalent equals all the full-time individuals plus one-third of the part-time individuals. Faculty and students in stand-alone graduate programs such as medicine, law, veterinary, dentistry, social work, business, or public health in which faculty teach virtually only graduate level students are not included in the ratio calculations. Undergraduate or graduate student teaching assistants are not included as faculty.
Full-Time Faculty with Highest Degree: Full-time instructional faculty in the fall of 2020 who held a doctorate, first professional, or the highest degree available in their field. Instructional faculty is defined as those members of the instructional-research staff whose major regular assignment is instruction, including those with released time for research.
Student Faculty Ratio: 9:1
Full-time Faculty with highest degree: 98%
Undergraduate Class Size
Undergraduate Class Size:This table reports on the number of classes by class size that was offered in the fall of 2020.
Number of Classes:This is the number of classes per semester. A class is an organized course offered for credit, and not a subsection such as a laboratory or discussion section. Not included in this table is distance learning classes, noncredit classes, individual instruction such as thesis research and music instruction, independent studies, co-operative programs, internships, foreign language taped tutor sessions, practicums, and all students in one-on-one classes.
Number of Students |
2-19 |
20-39 |
40-99 |
100+ |
Total |
Number of Classes |
265 |
71 |
10 |
0 |
346 |
Life on Campus
Haverford is a 216-acre campus 10 miles from Philadelphia and features award-winning architecture and landscaping. 98% of students live on campus and the College has over 145 student organizations. Students are entrusted with freedom and responsibility, an act of trust aimed at developing the whole person.
What it's Like on Our Campus
Percent of Freshmen Who Live on Campus is for freshmen enrolled in fall 2021.
Percent of Undergraduates Who Live on Campus is for all degree-seeking undergraduates enrolled in fall 2021.
Freshmen who live on campus
100%
Undergraduates who live on campus
98%
Campus Safety
Haverford College is dedicated to keeping the campus a secure and healthy place to live, work and study. Haverford has experienced minimal problems to date with crime on campus. Life on any college campus, however, is subject to some of the same risks and problems as life elsewhere.
Student Life Helpful Links