Princeton University - Master in Finance

Princeton MFin Princeton Master in Finance admission results

I haven't applied to Princeton, but you can get a general idea from the tracker applications. They seem to offer admissions on a rolling basis from Feb by the looks of it. Majority of tracker applications have their result date in the first week of March though.
You have an excellent profile, I would be waiting for my admission letter if I were you.
Thank you for the motivation mate! Has anyone received an invitation for the alumni Interview? I had asked Ms. Bracken about this and she mentioned that some admits might have one this cycle as well.
 
I didn't get an invite, but was informed that there is a possible (but not certain) alumni interview this year
 
Curious whether the alumni interview on top of regular is good or bad or means people are a borderline case. any insights anyone? i know some people get in without but what does it mean for chances?
 
If I recall correctly Princeton invites ~100 people for the first interview and admit ~25-30 of them? I guess depending on your confidence, getting a second interview could mean anywhere between "Yay I'm close to the top 30" to "Shit I'm not among the top 10".
 
Curious whether the alumni interview on top of regular is good or bad or means people are a borderline case. any insights anyone? i know some people get in without but what does it mean for chances?
I think an alumni interview is generally a good thing, because based off prior years posts it seems like most people who got in had Alumni interviews. That being said Ms. Bracken hadn't even mentioned an alumni interview when I asked about it, so I either bombed it or it doesn't really matter :^)
 
If I recall correctly Princeton invites ~100 people for the first interview and admit ~25-30 of them? I guess depending on your confidence, getting a second interview could mean anywhere between "Yay I'm close to the top 30" to "Shit I'm not among the top 10".
I think they admit somewhere around 40 or so folks because the total class size they target is around 20-30, assuming that like 50-60% of the accepted candidates take the offer that would land around 20-30 students in the forthcoming classes, don't know how COVID is changing things though
 
If I recall correctly Princeton invites ~100 people for the first interview and admit ~25-30 of them? I guess depending on your confidence, getting a second interview could mean anywhere between "Yay I'm close to the top 30" to "Shit I'm not among the top 10".
Are the top people in the pool usually not interviewed by alumni at all?
 
Are the top people in the pool usually not interviewed by alumni at all?
I don't think anyone can really answer that other than those in the admission office of the program. I do seem to recall that there have been people with exceptional background who got admitted without a second interview, but of course I have no idea if they were among the top of the applicant pool or not.
 
I don't think anyone can really answer that other than those in the admission office of the program. I do seem to recall that there have been people with exceptional background who got admitted without a second interview, but of course I have no idea if they were among the top of the applicant pool or not.
Got it thank you. Also do you know if these alumni interviews are technical?
 
There was at least one candidate who had their second round interview scheduled prior to their first last year, so if that was truly the case then the alumni interview seems more like it's an additional data point for the committee (maybe if a candidate doesn't have a strong finance/quanty background, I don't really have a good intuition for this)
 
Last year people got in without second round interviews. That being said alumni interviews are some what technical from what I’ve heard. Think markets and stats. Also this year the director has changed so the entire admissions process could’ve changed.
 
Last year people got in without second round interviews. That being said alumni interviews are some what technical from what I’ve heard. Think markets and stats. Also this year the director has changed so the entire admissions process could’ve changed.
Stats as in statistics or stats as in market stats
 
Interviews are an arbitrary thing to begin with since every candidates application is different. Depending on what you've stated in your SOP / shown in your resume & application, the committee probably has different things they want to get out of each candidate before providing admission. I guess it also helps that the program is so selective / small, I'm guessing if the program was much larger they would have to standardize the process like some of the MBA programs do (i.e. Wharton or even MIT's MFIN)
 
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