[3]

Amherst College

[4]

Bowdoin College

[5] (Brown will be need-blind for international students beginning with the Class of 2029.)

Brown University

[6]

Dartmouth College

[7]

Harvard University

[8]

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

[9]

Minerva University

[10]

Princeton University

[11]

Yale University

Eight U.S. higher education institutions are need-blind towards all applicants. These institutions meet full demonstrated need for all applicants, including international students.[2] These are:

[114]

Georgetown University in Qatar

Singapore (formerly)[115][116]

Yale-NUS College

United Arab Emirates[117]

New York University Abu Dhabi

Both (1) need-blind and (2) aid covering full demonstrated need (if admitted): (Andover),[118] Phillips Exeter Academy,[119][120] Roxbury Latin School,[121] St. Albans School,[122] Woodberry Forest School[123]

Phillips Academy

Need-blind: ,[124] Groton School (also free for any student from families with incomes below $80,000),[125] Horace Mann School,[126] Hun School of Princeton,[127] 'Iolani School,[128] Wayland Academy,[129] Stanford Online High School[130]

Gonzaga College High School

In the United States, schools with large financial aid budgets—typically private, college-preparatory boarding schools—tend to offer either need-blind admission or a commitment to meet the full demonstrated need of the U.S. citizen students that they admit (as determined by the schools' respective financial aid departments).

an association of colleges practicing need-blind admission

568 Group

College admissions in the United States

Transfer admissions in the United States