Chicago Booth MBA Class Of 2027: New School Record For Applications by: Kristy Bleizeffer on November 11, 2025 | 773 Views November 11, 2025 Copy Link Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email Share on LinkedIn Share on WhatsApp Share on Reddit The Charles M. Harper Center, home to the University of Chicago Booth School of Business. The M7 B-school received a record-breaking 5,876 MBA applicants for its MBA Class of 2027. Photo courtesy of Chicago Booth MBA applications surged again for Chicago Booth School of Business, setting a school record for the second straight year. Apps soared 21% last fall for the Class of 2026, hitting a historic high of 5,125. They surged another 15% for the Class of 2027, setting a brand new school record at 5,876. Booth has now topped 5,000 applications in three of the last five admission cycles. The class enrolled 635 students, up slightly from 632 last year and among the second largest since fall 2021. CHICAGO BOOTH MBA CLASSES 2023-2027: BY THE NUMBERS Class of 2027 Class of 2026 Class of 2025 Class of 2024 Class of 2023 Applications Received 5,876 5,125 4,184 4,352 5,037 Enrolled 635 632 637 634 620 Women 41% 42% 42% 40% 42% US Minority NA 52% 49% 48% 44% URM 12% 18% 22% 19% 12% International 37% 35% 36% 37% 39% Countries 63 66 54 57 56 Average Work Experience 5 years 5 years 5 years 5 years 5 years Average Age NA 28 28 28 28 First-Generation 12% 11% 12% 11% NA LGBTQ+ NA 9% 12% 7% NA Veterans 11% 10% 11% 8% NA BOOTH SEES MIXED DIVERSITY PROGRESS Last cycle, Chicago Booth was among several top business schools to see growth in U.S. minority representation last year. Students of color – including Asian, Black, and Hispanic Americans – made up 52% of U.S. citizens and permanent residents, up three points from the year before. While Booth’s official 2027 MBA profile does not report this percentage, its representation for underrepresented U.S. minorities (URM) – excluding Asian Americans – suggests a step back in domestic diversity. Black and Latino enrollment dropped from 18% to 12% this cycle. That’s the lowest representation since the fall of 2021. Booth did manage a slight rise in its international mix, from 35% last fall to 37% with Class of 2027 students coming from 63 countries. That makes it the second M7 this week to release profiles with a larger share of international students than the previous class: MIT Sloan School of Management managed a modest increase of 2 points (enrolling 42% international students compared to 40% last fall). Stanford Graduate School of Business, meanwhile, dropped just 1 percentage point in its global mix at 38%. Other U.S. business schools haven’t fared as well. A fellow M7, The Wharton School, international representation fell 5 percentage points from last year’s 31%. Just 26% of the new class comes from outside the United States. Duke (Fuqua) similarly reported a 9% drop in international students while Carnegie Mellon (Tepper) saw a 16 percentage point drop since 2023. UCLA (Anderson)’s slipped from 47% two years ago to 35% today. This, of course, comes even before the full effect of the Trump administration’s aggressive education and visa policies becomes apparent. Gender diversity at Booth slipped slightly to 41% women, while first-generation students (12%) and veterans (11%) each rose a point. CHICAGO BOOTH MBA ACADEMICS: CLASSES 2023-2027 Class of 2027 Class of 2026 Class of 2025 Class of 2024 Class of 2023 GMAT Average 736 729 728 729 732 GMAT Range 690-770 590-780 600-780 600-780 590-790 GMAT Focus Average 670 — — — — GMAT Focus Range 615-725 — — — — GRE Average 324 324 325 327 325 % Submitting GRE 42% 38% 29% 26% 18% GPA Average 3.6 3.6 3.6 3.6 3.6 GPA Range 2.5-4 2.36-4 2.4-4.0 2.4-4.0 2.7-4.0 CONSULTING DOWN, FINANCE BACK ON TOP Looking at the industry mix among incoming Boothies, consulting fell four points to 23%, while financial services climbed four to 22%.Technology slid to 10%, down from 13%, while nonprofit and government work rose one point to 12%. Booth’s average GMAT jumped to 736, its highest in at least five years and a notable rise from 729 last cycle. The GMAT range also tightened significantly, from 590–780 to 690–770. One caveat: Only 14% of applicants submitted a legacy GMAT score, while 39% reported the new GMAT Focus. (The focus average score was 670.) Meanwhile, GRE submissions climbed sharply: 42% of admits applied with GRE scores, up from 38% last year and more than double the rate from 2023 when 18% of applicants submitted the test. The average GRE remained steady at 324. DON’T MISS: BERKELEY HAAS MBA CLASS OF 2027: SMALLER CLASS REBOUNDS IN GLOBAL DIVERSITY and MIT SLOAN MBA CLASS OF 2027: INTERNATIONAL RANKS GROW, BUT U.S. DIVERSITY STAYS FLAT © Copyright 2025 Poets & Quants. All rights reserved. This article may not be republished, rewritten or otherwise distributed without written permission. To reprint or license this article or any content from Poets & Quants, please submit your request HERE.