Post-SFFA: Black enrollment dropped from ~10% to ~8%, Hispanic from ~11% to ~10%
Financial Aid
Carolina Covenant: debt-free for families at/below 200% poverty (~$26K median income)
Net price by income (IPEDS, Title IV recipients):
$0-30K: $4,026
$30K-48K: $6,063
$48K-75K: $11,060
$75K-110K: $18,354
$110K+: $22,235
Athletics
~800 student-athletes across 28 varsity sports
~3.8% of undergraduate enrollment
Major revenue sports: basketball, football, lacrosse, soccer
Simulation Notes
Category: public_elite -- among the most selective public universities in the US
The in-state mandate makes overall acceptance rate misleading for simulation; OOS rate is Ivy-comparable at ~8%
Very high yield (45%) compared to peer publics
EA is non-restrictive, no ED offered
Strong financial aid for low-income (Carolina Covenant)
Community Insights (Reddit/Forums)
Admissions Strategy
Massive in-state vs OOS gap: ~38% in-state vs ~8% OOS acceptance rate. State mandate caps OOS enrollment at 18% of the class, making OOS admission Ivy-comparable in difficulty.
GPA-focused review: Forum consensus is that UNC weighs GPA and course rigor very heavily; test scores matter less (test-optional policy). A 4.5+ weighted GPA is nearly table-stakes for OOS admits.
EA is important but not binding: Non-restrictive EA is offered; recruited athletes are heavily represented in EA admits, inflating the published EA rate (~23%).
Geographic diversity helps at the margins: Applicants from underrepresented states (e.g., Maine, Montana) may have a slight edge in holistic review.
Campus Culture & Fit
Students describe a classic Southern college town experience — strong Greek life, passionate basketball culture, and a "work hard, play hard" vibe.
Campus is politically moderate-to-liberal by Southern standards. Strong school spirit centered around UNC-Duke rivalry.
Business (Kenan-Flagler) requires secondary admission after 1st or 2nd year — not guaranteed even with strong grades. Forum posters warn applicants about this frequently.
Financial Aid Reputation
Carolina Covenant is widely praised: debt-free education for families below 200% poverty line.
OOS financial aid is very limited — forum consensus says "there will be no money at the end of the rainbow" for most OOS families. Merit scholarships (Morehead-Cain, Robertson) are extremely competitive.
OOS tuition (~$37K) makes it hard to justify vs private schools that may offer better aid packages.
Simulation-Relevant Takeaways
In-state preference is the single most important admissions factor: ~4.5x easier for NC residents (38% vs 8%).
Very high yield (45%) driven by in-state students getting exceptional value; OOS yield is likely much lower.
OOS applicants self-select heavily — those who apply tend to be very strong, further compressing the OOS admit rate.