When This School Pulls From the Waitlist.
The typical date range when this school has worked its waitlist in the last three cycles.
Today is marked on the bar. If it's before the range, you're early. If it's inside, you're
in the typical window. If it's past the range, most historical movement has already happened.
Who's Currently on the Waitlist.
The current waitlist pool, broken into live, holding a higher-ranked offer, deposited at
a lower-ranked school, and deposited at a peer or higher-ranked school. Not everyone on a
waitlist is gone just because they deposited — someone who deposited at a lower-ranked
school may still flip if pulled. The live bucket is who the school is competing for, and
the LSAT/GPA profile underneath describes that group.
Past Waitlist Pulls vs Your Stats.
The LSAT and GPA range of applicants this school has pulled off its waitlist in recent
cycles, alongside its most recent reported class medians. If the WL band sits below the
class band, the school locked its medians from regular admits and used the waitlist to
fill sub-median seats — the normal pattern. If it sits above, the school has been
pulling mainly high-stat waitlistees.
Waitlist Pull Pace.
This school's historical pull curve with the current cycle traced on top. A flat line means
pulls haven't started this cycle. A climbing line means they're underway.
Seats Freeing Up.
How many of this school's admits have flipped to attending at another school this cycle,
compared to the same day of cycle in prior years. Each one is a seat opening up here.
Higher than baseline means more reason for the school to work its waitlist.
Direct Admit Pace.
Non-waitlist admits this cycle against the school's historical curve. Ahead = the class
is filling from the first round, so waitlist pulls will probably be fewer. Behind = the
class isn't filling on its own, so the waitlist has more work to do.