Tufts University: Fletcher International Relations, Engineering with Liberal Arts, and a “Near-Ivy” in Suburban Boston
Published on May 21, 2026
Tufts University: Fletcher International Relations, Engineering with Liberal Arts, and a “Near-Ivy” in Suburban Boston
Published on May 21, 2026
Ranked tied #37 among U.S. national universities by US News, home to the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, a global Top 5 graduate school for international relations, one of the rare U.S. models that truly combines Engineering with Liberal Arts, and Tisch College of Civic Life, the nation’s leading civic engagement education hub, Tufts is the Top 40 university with perhaps the strongest “first choice for Ivy League near-misses” energy.
Tufts in one sentence: “A small elite private university that is quirkier than the Ivy League, more research-oriented than a liberal arts college, and more engineering-oriented than Brown.” Tufts students, who call themselves “Jumbos,” are known for being “intellectually quirky”: the kind of students who may have been rejected by Brown or Yale, yet arguably love reading even more than students at those schools. Tufts has the attitude of “we are not Ivy, so we do not pretend; and we do not need to pretend, because we are genuinely smart.” To understand Tufts, start with one point: it is one of the few universities in the United States where Engineering and Liberal Arts are truly treated as equal pillars. Other universities often lean either humanities-oriented, like Brown, or technical, like GT. Tufts genuinely treats 50% engineering + 50% arts and sciences as part of its institutional soul.
1. Basic Information
Item | Details |
|---|---|
Founded | 1852 |
Location | Medford / Somerville, Massachusetts, 5 miles northwest of Boston |
Campus | Approximately 150 acres |
Undergraduates | ~6,800 |
Graduate students | ~6,000 |
Student-faculty ratio | 1:9 |
Motto | Pax et Lux, Peace and Light |
2. World Rankings
Ranking | Position |
|---|---|
US News National Universities 2025 | #37 |
QS World 2025 | #237 |
THE World 2025 | #161 |
Fletcher School, International Relations graduate study | Top 5 globally |
International Relations, undergraduate | Top 10 |
Engineering, undergraduate | Top 35 |
Biomedical Engineering |
Tufts is globally outstanding in International Relations, Biomedical Engineering, Veterinary Medicine, Civic Engagement, and Child Study. The Fletcher School is one of the world’s leading graduate schools for international relations, often placed alongside Princeton SPIA, Johns Hopkins SAIS, and Harvard Kennedy as one of the “big four” in IR.
3. Admissions Data, Class of 2028
Metric | Figure |
|---|---|
Applicants | ~34,800 |
Admitted students | ~3,500 |
Overall acceptance rate | Around 10% |
ED1 / ED2 acceptance rate | ~26% / ~17% |
RD acceptance rate | ~7% |
Yield Rate | ~48% |
Tufts uses a three-track admissions structure: ED1 + ED2 + RD. ED is the most important strategic lever for applicants. Tufts’ overall 10% acceptance rate is comparable to the overall rates at Cornell and UCLA. Do not be misled by the “Top 37” ranking number; in practice, the competition feels closer to a Top 25 private university.
SAT/ACT Middle Range
Test | 25th percentile | Median | 75th percentile |
|---|---|---|---|
SAT | 1450 | 1510 | 1550 |
ACT | 33 | 34 | 35 |
Tufts is Test-Optional, so scores are not required. However, applicants to IR, Engineering, and Computer Science are advised to submit strong scores.
International Students
- International students make up about 13%
- Representing 70+ countries
- Around 350 students from China
- Around 5-10 students from Taiwan are admitted each year
4. Tuition and Financial Aid
2024-2025 Cost of Attendance
Item | Amount |
|---|---|
Tuition | USD $70,000 |
Housing | USD $11,500 |
Food | USD $9,000 |
Personal + Misc | USD $5,500 |
Total | USD $96,000+ |
Need-Based Aid
- Need-Blind for U.S. citizens and permanent residents
- Need-Aware for international students: financial need affects admissions chances for international applicants
- Meets 100% Demonstrated Need, including international students: once admitted, Tufts guarantees that full demonstrated need will be met, but international students must declare aid need during the admissions process
- Average aid: USD $55,000/year
- About 38% of students receive Need-Based Aid
- No Merit Aid
Tufts’ aid policy is extremely generous for U.S. students but more conservative for international applicants. Taiwanese families who need substantial aid should apply for aid during the ED stage, but must understand that it can affect the admission rate. Families should evaluate Tufts primarily as a self-funded or partial-aid option.
5. Academic Structure / Signature Programs
Main Undergraduate Schools
- School of Arts and Sciences (A&S): the largest school, including IR, Econ, CS, Bio, and English
- School of Engineering (SOE): CS, ECE, ME, Biomedical, Civil, and Chemical
- School of the Museum of Fine Arts (SMFA): a fine arts BFA program run in partnership with Boston’s Museum of Fine Arts
Signature Programs
- International Relations (IR): an undergraduate BA connected with the Fletcher graduate ecosystem. This is one of the most mature undergraduate IR programs in the United States, and two overseas semesters within two years is common
- Engineering with Liberal Arts: Tufts engineering students are required to take humanities and social science courses, which is the fundamental difference between Tufts and engineering schools at GT or CMU
- 5-Year BS/MS in Engineering: integrated undergraduate + master’s pathway in engineering
- BFA + BA Combined Degree: a five-year program leading to both a fine arts BFA and a liberal arts BA
- PreMed Advising: Tufts PreMed medical school placement is among the Top 10 nationally
- Tisch Scholars Program: a civic engagement honors program, ranked #1 nationally
- Eliot-Pearson Department of Child Study and Human Development: one of the few dedicated child development departments in the United States
- Tufts Summer Scholars Program: paid summer research for undergraduates
General Education Structure
Tufts uses Foundations requirements: writing, HASS, meaning humanities, arts, and social sciences, natural sciences, World Civilizations, foreign language, and other areas. Engineering students have more substantial general education requirements than at GT or MIT, which is central to Tufts’ “engineering + liberal arts” identity.
6. Campus Culture / Institutional Personality
Tufts’ personality can be summed up in one sentence: “Quirky, intellectual, slightly idealistic, and very into international everything.” Tufts students are known for being “intellectually quirky” and are more enthusiastic than students at many universities about international affairs, social movements, and civic engagement. Tufts has a left-leaning, progressive, socially active campus culture: more activist than Brown, but more practical than Oberlin.
The academic atmosphere is serious but not cutthroat. Students discuss issues, organize seminars, volunteer for election campaigns, and apply for Fulbright awards. Tufts is one of the U.S. universities with the highest number of Fulbright recipients. This is a campus culture of “wanting to change the world while keeping both feet on the ground.”
Greek Life / Student Organizations
- About 12% of students join a fraternity or sorority
- Greek Life does not dominate campus culture; Tisch College civic engagement groups, the IR Society, and Tufts Mountain Club are more mainstream
- Signature events: The Naked Quad Run, a pre-finals naked run across campus, now restricted by the university but not fully gone as a tradition; Halloween on Davis Square; Spring Fling
Sports Culture
- NESCAC, New England Small College Athletic Conference, Division III
- Strengths: men’s lacrosse, men’s rowing, women’s field hockey
- Not a Power 5 campus: sports are not Tufts’ center of gravity
- Williams and Amherst are common NESCAC rivals
- Jumbos is the school mascot, named after Jumbo, the famous 19th-century circus elephant
7. Location / Campus Environment
Urban Positioning
Tufts sits on the border of Medford and Somerville, 5 miles northwest of Boston. From Davis Square, students can take the Boston “T” Red Line to Harvard Square in about 20 minutes and Downtown Boston in about 30 minutes.
Distances:
- Boston Downtown: 5 miles, 30 minutes by subway
- Cambridge / Harvard / MIT: 20 minutes by subway
- MFA Boston: 20 minutes
- Logan Airport: 30 minutes by car
- Davis Square, Somerville: 10 minutes on foot; this is Tufts’ “campus extension”
Davis Square is the real campus for Tufts students. It is dense with independent bookstores, used record shops, art cinemas, cafes, and restaurants. The Boston Globe has repeatedly named it one of the hippest college towns in the United States.
Climate
- Winter: -5 to 5°C, frequent snow
- Summer: 18-28°C, humid
- Fall: New England’s most beautiful season
- Winters are long
Campus Landmarks
- Tisch Library: main library
- Goddard Chapel: 1882 Romanesque Revival chapel
- Memorial Steps: the main campus steps
- The Hill: the small hill that forms Tufts’ main campus
- Davis Square: off campus, but a spiritual extension of campus
- Cabot Intercultural Center: main building of the Fletcher School
- The Cannon: the student graffiti landmark, repainted constantly by students
- Jumbo Statue: bronze statue of Jumbo the elephant mascot
8. Research and Resources
Libraries
- Tisch Library, main library
- Hirsh Health Sciences Library
- Five libraries across the university, with a total collection of 2.5 million volumes
Notable Labs / Research Centers
- Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy: a global temple of IR research
- Tisch College of Civic Life: the nation’s leading civic education institution
- Cummings School of Veterinary Medicine: veterinary school, U.S. Top 5
- Friedman School of Nutrition Science and Policy: the only independent graduate school of nutrition in the United States
- Eliot-Pearson Department of Child Study: a national authority in child development research
- Tufts Center for the Study of Drug Development: research on drug development policy
- Institute for Global Leadership: global leadership training
Tufts is world-class in IR, nutrition, child development, veterinary medicine, pharmaceutical policy, and civic engagement. The Friedman School of Nutrition is the only independent graduate school of nutrition in the United States and provides academic grounding for USDA and WHO policy.
9. Notable Alumni
- Politics / Diplomacy: Pierre Omidyar, founder of eBay; Jamie Dimon, CEO of JPMorgan Chase and a Tufts double major in psychology and economics; John Sununu, former governor of New Hampshire; Hank Azaria, actor; Daniel Patrick Moynihan, Fletcher alumnus
- Tech Entrepreneurship: Pierre Omidyar, eBay; Eric Lefkofsky, Groupon; Reid Hoffman, who briefly taught at Tufts
- Finance / Business: Jamie Dimon, JPMorgan CEO; Bill Richardson; Ed Vredenburg
- Academia / Nobel-related circles: Christof Koch, neuroscientist
- Entertainment / Literature: Hank Azaria, legendary voice actor for The Simpsons, including Apu, Moe, and Comic Book Guy; Tracy Chapman, folk singer; Peter Gallagher; William Hurt, briefly attended
- Sports: a small number of professional athletes, as Tufts is Division III
- Diplomacy: Tufts has produced more U.S. ambassadors than any non-Ivy university. Fletcher is a talent pipeline for the State Department and diplomatic careers
Tufts’ alumni network has deep influence in diplomacy, IR, Silicon Valley entrepreneurship, and the arts.
10. Tufts Trivia
- Tufts’ mascot Jumbo was a famous 19th-century circus elephant: In 1885, P. T. Barnum, the circus impresario, donated the mounted remains of his legendary elephant Jumbo to Tufts. Tufts has used Jumbo as its mascot for more than 100 years. In a 1975 campus fire, the original Jumbo specimen was destroyed, but students preserved Jumbo’s ashes in a peanut butter jar. That jar still sits today in the office of Tufts’ athletic director.
- Tufts students have a tradition called “Jumbo Hits”: before athletic events, students touch the tail of the Jumbo statue for good luck. It has become a superstition unique to Tufts.
- Tufts is a Top 10 university in the United States for Fulbright awards: every year, 20-30 students and alumni receive Fulbrights, a higher per-capita level than Harvard or Yale. This reflects Tufts’ strong international and academic character.
- Tufts Engineering students must take five humanities and social science courses: this is the core of “Engineering with Liberal Arts.” Tufts engineering students do not only write code; they also analyze international politics and write literary criticism. This would be almost impossible at GT, CMU, or MIT.
- The Naked Quad Run is a Tufts pre-finals tradition: starting in the 1990s, students would run naked across the main Quad at midnight on the night before finals to relieve stress. The university has repeatedly banned it, but students have continued the tradition through costumed or semi-nude versions. It is a living fossil of Tufts’ quirky personality.
11. Typical Admitted Student Profile
- GPA Unweighted ~3.9+
- SAT 1480+ or ACT 33+
- 8-12 AP courses, balanced between humanities and STEM
- Spike for IR: Model United Nations, debate, language ability, multilingualism, overseas experience
- Spike for Engineering: FIRST Robotics, research publications, interdisciplinary combinations such as Bio + CS
- Spike for PreMed: medical volunteering, lab research
- Essays should show intellectual curiosity + idealism + interdisciplinary thinking. Tufts cares about “how you think”
- Recommendation letters should tell stories of independent thinking + nonconformity + humanistic concern
Among Top 40 universities, Tufts is one of the schools that cares most about intellectual quirkiness + global mindset. Tufts’ famous supplemental essay prompts, “Why Tufts” and “What aspect of Tufts excites you?”, are designed to identify students who genuinely understand Tufts’ culture. Essays that are pure bragging tend to fail.
12. What Kind of Student Is Tufts Best For?
✓ A strong fit for:
- Students interested in IR / Diplomacy / Public Policy, because Tufts is IR Top 10 and Fletcher is globally elite
- Students who want a dual track of Engineering + Liberal Arts, not just coding, but philosophy too
- Students who like a quirky, idealistic, left-leaning progressive campus culture
- Students who want Boston with a smaller-school feel; Tufts has 6,800 undergraduates, making it more intimate than BU or Northeastern
- Students with strong passion for international affairs, languages, and cross-cultural work
- Families who can afford USD $96K/year, with partial aid as a possible option
✗ Not necessarily a fit for:
- Students who want an Ivy brand name or traditional American prep-school culture, since Tufts follows a quirkier path
- Students who want the purely technical engineering environment of GT or CMU, since Tufts engineering requires humanities courses
- Students who want Power 5 sports culture, since Tufts is Division III, not ACC
- Students concerned about weak Greek Life, since Greek Life is not mainstream at Tufts
- International students who need Need-Blind aid, since Tufts is Need-Aware for international applicants
- Students who want a downtown campus, since Tufts sits on a suburban hill
Conclusion
Among Top 40 universities, Tufts is one of the most intellectually distinctive and one of the most common first choices for students who narrowly miss the Ivy League. It is not a large comprehensive university like Cornell, not a purely liberal arts idealist school like Brown, and not a pure engineering powerhouse like GT. It is a small elite private university that is quirkier than the Ivy League, more research-oriented than a liberal arts college, and genuinely balanced between Engineering + Liberal Arts.
If you are a student who wants to pursue IR / Diplomacy and enter the State Department, loves quirky intellectual culture, wants engineering without being trapped by pure technocracy, and wants Boston with a close-knit small-school feel, Tufts is one of the most irreplaceable choices on the planet. Fletcher is a global temple for diplomatic talent, Engineering with Liberal Arts is a rare humanistic integration within engineering education, and Tisch College is the nation’s leading civic education institution.
The most concrete advice for Taiwanese families: Tufts is the “first choice after an Ivy rejection” for many Taiwanese families. Its academic strength, alumni network, Boston location, and international student support are all Top 25 caliber. If your direction is IR, Public Policy, Pre-Med, or Biomedical Engineering, Tufts plugs you into a top-tier pathway more directly than BU, Northeastern, or Tulane.
But the harshest truth for Taiwanese families: Tufts’ personality is “too specific.” Its students are “people who reject mediocrity, reject conformity, and want to become world-changing weirdos.” If you are the type of student who simply wants a famous school or just wants to graduate from an American university, Tufts’ quirky culture may make you feel out of place. Tufts is not for students seeking an Ivy substitute by name value; it is for students who genuinely want to become civic engineers, diplomats, and idealists. If your spike is Model United Nations + cross-cultural experience + intellectual curiosity, Tufts has no rival on earth. That is the clearest way for Taiwanese families to judge Tufts.
