Saint Joseph's College of Maine logoSaint Joseph's College of Maine

    Saint Joseph's College of Maine

    Standish, ME · Northeast

    Acceptance rate
    83.5%
    SAT mid-50
    960-1150
    Cost after aid
    $27,555
    Graduation rate
    66%

    About Saint Joseph's College of Maine

    Saint Joseph's College of Maine is a very small private university in Standish, ME, in a city setting.

    What Saint Joseph's College of Maine looks for

    Saint Joseph's College of Maine admits the majority of applicants who meet its baseline academic profile. For most students applying here, the work is in writing applications that reflect real fit rather than treating the application as a checklist. Demonstrated interest matters more here than at the most selective schools. Visiting, attending an info session, and asking real questions of admissions all move the needle.

    Frequently asked

    • What SAT score do I need for Saint Joseph's College of Maine?

      Saint Joseph's College of Maine's middle 50% SAT range is 960 to 1150. 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 is the acceptance rate at Saint Joseph's College of Maine?

      Saint Joseph's College of Maine admits roughly 84% of applicants. An acceptance rate above 40% means a strong application can land here without high-end stats.

    • What does Saint Joseph's College of Maine actually cost after financial aid?

      Average net cost (after institutional aid) is about $27,555 per year. Net cost varies enormously by family income; run the school's net price calculator for an estimate that reflects your situation.

    • Is Saint Joseph's College of Maine 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 Saint Joseph's College of Maine 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.

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