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National Merit Semifinalist Cutoffs Class of 2026

September 9, 2025

Reports say that Utah’s cutoff is no higher than 216. Reports from Mississippi now indicate that 213 is the cutoff. I am investigating confusion in New York, because of conflicting reports as to whether 222 has qualified.  It appears that the cutoff is 222 or 223, but we should consider it as unconfirmed. Iowa just got narrowed down to 214 or 215. A South Carolinian qualified with 216. A Redditor posted that their principal confirmed Ohio’s cutoff as 219.

AL <= 215 (unconfirmed report of 214)
AR <= 220
AZ <= 218
CA = 224
CT <= 224
DC = 226
GA <= 223
FL = 219
HI >= 219
IA 214 or 215
ID <= 216
IL = 222
IN <= 220
KS <= 218
KY <= 214
LA <= 216
MA 225 or 226
MD = 226
ME <= 216
MI <= 220
MO <= 217
MS = 213
NC <= 220
ND <= 217
NH >= 219
NJ = 225
NY Likely 222 or 223, but conflicting reports
OH = 219
OK = 212
OR >= 219 and <= 222
PA >= 221 and <= 224
SC <= 216
TN = 219 (awaiting second confirmation)
TX = 222
UT <= 216
VA = 224

September 8, 2025

California is confirmed at 224. This time for real. Virginia is now confirmed at 224. We have the first report from Idaho, and New York’s range has been narrowed. Kansas is no higher than 218. South Carolina looks to be no higher than 217. Pennsylvania’s cutoff is 224 or lower. A student in Kentucky qualified with a 214. That would mean an increase of AT MOST 1 point, and would be well under Kentucky’s record high. That’s a bit of good news for students in other states. I received an emailed report from a parent in Michigan, whose student qualified at 221, and she pointed out a Reddit qualifier at 220. A student on Reddit did not qualify with a 218 in New Hampshire, and the same was true of a student with a 220 in PA. A Redditor has posted that a 221 did not qualify in Illinois, which would pin the cutoff at 222.

September 6, 2025

I don’t expect to receive much new information over the weekend. One of the outstanding mysteries is whether or not the Studying Abroad and DC cutoffs have moved to 226, which would also indicate that one of the 50 states has moved to 226. I remain guarded about the reports, but this has been a year where unbelievable things have been true. The latest report is of a Maryland student missing out on Semifinalist at 225.

September 5, 2025

I’ve received word from a New Jersey school that its 224 students did not qualify, while its 225 student did. This would be the biggest news of the cycle, and indicates that College Board broke the scale this year. This may also be why we are seeing added levels of secrecy. NMSC seems to be sending less information to schools this year, so getting final confirmation from each state is more difficult. Crowdsourcing is more important than ever, so please help others by sharing the news that you receive from your school, especially if your score is in the critical zone. Compass will not release your email address, and you are welcome to use a pseudonym. Compass compiles information received directly, information received via this website, and information received via other sources such as Reddit.

If there is bigger news than NJ at 225, it would be word that U.S. Students Studying Abroad could be 226! USSSA is a selection unit that cannot have a cutoff higher than the highest state cutoff. The same is true for DC. If USSSA is 226, then some state also reached 226. Needless to say, this is the mystery I am trying to solve. If there are DC or USSSA students getting news at 225, please reach out.

September 4, 2025: Texas at 222.

Both Compass and Reddit have received reports of California students at 222 not qualifying as Semifinalists. A student on Reddit noted that they did not qualify in IL with a 220. Oklahoma students have qualified at 212 and 213, and we believe the cutoff is 212. A North Carolina student with 220 reported qualifying. We have also had reports of the Texas cutoff moving to 222. This would be a record high, so I am trying to nail it down.

September 2, 2025: Letters arriving at schools. Florida at 219.

National Merit mails Semifinalist notifications directly to high schools and homeschoolers, and those packets have begun to arrive. As we hear from students, we will update this page with the latest information from across the country.

Florida’s Semifinalist cutoff is confirmed at 219, a 2-point increase.

April 7, 2025: Commended cutoff at 210.
The Commended Student cutoff for the class of 2026 is confirmed at a Selection Index of 210. This was the exact level Compass projected in November based on PSAT results. This means that changes to our estimated ranges for Semifinalist cutoffs are minimal. The extreme edges — upper and lower — of our estimated ranges are a bit less probable, but the “Most Likely” scores are unchanged. The fact that Compass’s Commended cutoff estimate was correct, however, does not mean that the Semifinalist projections will prove just as accurate — there is always variability at the state level. Juniors scoring at or above 210 on the PSAT/NMSQT will be Commended Students or Semifinalists, but announcements are not made until September. Semifinalist cutoffs will not be revealed until late August or early September.

November 13: Updated with final wave of PSAT scores.
College Board released scores in three waves depending on when students took the PSAT. We have now received scores summaries for all three waves. It is possible that some late scores will still dribble in, but we are not expecting any changes. The results point to a strong upward trend in cutoffs for the class of 2026. You are welcome to jump to the table of estimates below, but we encourage students and families to read more about how we came to those estimates. For more information on the National Merit Program, in general, you may want to read Compass’s National Merit Scholarship Program Explained. If you want to browse almost two decades’ worth of cutoffs, you can find them in Compass’s National Merit Historical Cutoffs.

What is a Semifinalist Cutoff?
Each year almost 17,000 juniors are named Semifinalists in the National Merit Scholarship Program and continue on in the hopes of being one of the 15,000 Finalists and, eventually, one of the 7,500 scholarship recipients. The score needed to qualify as a Semifinalist varies by state and is known as the “cutoff.” Every student scoring at or above the Semifinalist cutoff qualifies. The cutoff is not based on a student’s overall PSAT score but on the Selection Index. The Selection Index is listed on a student’s PSAT score report. It can be calculated by doubling the ERW score, adding the Math score, and then dividing the sum by 10. For example, a 720 ERW / 730 M would have a Selection Index of (720 x 2 + 730)/10 = 217. For the class of 2025, cutoffs ranged from 208 to 223.

What is a Commended Student Cutoff?
If you performed well on the PSAT but do not qualify as a Semifinalist, you have the opportunity to be named as a Commended Student. Unlike the Semifinalist cutoffs, the Commended cutoff is set nationally. For last year’s class it was 208. Approximately 36,000 students are named Commended Students each year.

Why does Compass believe that we are likely to see cutoffs, as a whole, go up?
College Board releases very little data about score distribution. The number of top scorers is the most critical piece of information that we get this early in the process. While we do not know the number of students scoring at a particular Selection Index, we do know the number of students scoring in the 1400-1520 range, which roughly correlates to Selection Indexes of 210-228. The class of 2026 ranks 4th in the ten years since the PSAT scoring was overhauled, and this year sees the highest ever percentage of top scores. The number of Semifinalists and Commended students are capped, so cutoffs are likely to rise. But not all cutoffs. The numbers we have seen are at the national level and there is always churn at the state level. What we believe, however, is that more cutoffs will go up than down.

There is a good correlation between the 1400-1520 band of students and the Commended Student score. We believe that the Commended cutoff will come in between 209 and 211, with a 210 being most likely. Based on our historical archive of Semifinalist and Commended cutoffs, we believe that the average Semifinalist cutoff will go up this year.

Will I find out my status right away?
No. In fact, students don’t learn of Semifinalist status until September of senior year. Compass tracks data on current year performance and historical records to provides estimates and updates between PSAT score release and the Semifinalist announcements. Last year — the first year of the digital PSAT — saw a noticeable uptick in scores. Only one state — South Dakota — saw a lower cutoff versus the previous year’s. Was this a onetime quirk? Based on early results for the class of 2026, we do not believe that it was. The upward trend — whether due to the new test format, recovery from COVID-era learning loss, or other factors — appears to be continuing.

One mistake students make is thinking that the cutoff for one year will be the same in the next year. Cutoffs change every year, sometimes by as much as 5 or 6 points (granted, that’s unusual). Compass emphasizes an Estimated Range, which is likely to include the ultimate cutoff. Within that range, we do provide our Most Likely. That score represents our best estimate based on the known factors, but there are many unknown factors. Most of our PSAT performance data are for national results. So we can usually peg the Commended cutoff within a point or two. States, however, can move in different directions. More Alaskan students may test this year. Some strong Rhode Island prep schools may have decided to stop offering the PSAT. A COVID outbreak in Montana could mean more students using Alternate Entry and entering the competition using SAT scores. Below is a table that shows how many states in each of the last 17 years saw increases, decreases, or no change. There has never been a year where even half of all state cutoffs remain unchanged.

The chart below divides the 50 states into those that saw increases (blue), those that remained unchanged (gray), and those that saw declines (red).

Historically, a change in cutoff is more likely than not. Over the decade from 2015 – 2024, Semifinalist cutoffs remained unchanged only about one-third of the time.

Distribution of year-over-year cutoff changes shows that there is a roughly normal distribution, with no change occurring 30% of the time.

We believe that a table of results from this class will skew to the right.

Small states have more volatile cutoffs than large states, but there can be surprises across the board. The PSAT had a significant overhaul in scoring in 2017. If we look at the minimum and maximum cutoffs during the 9-year period from then until the class of 2025, we see that the 13 largest states (about 100,000 or more high school graduates) average a 2.8-point differential. New Jersey has a 1-point differential, since its lowest cutoff is 222 and highest is 223. The smallest states (fewer than 30,000 graduates) have a 6.2 point differential. Alaska has been as low as 208 and as high as 217! The medium-sized states average a 5-point difference between minimum and maximum.

Here are Compass’s current estimates for Semifinalist cutoffs for the class of 2026:


State
Class of 2026
Estimated Range
Class of 2026
Most Likely
Class of 2025
(Actual)
Class of 2024
(Actual)
Class of 2023
(Actual)
# of 2025 Semifinalists
Alabama210 - 216214212210212267
Alaska210 - 21621421420921036
Arizona215 - 220218217216214401
Arkansas210 - 215213213210210134
California220 - 2232222212212202103
Colorado216 - 221218218216217272
Connecticut220 - 222221221221221177
Delaware218 - 22122021921921843
District of Columbia222 - 22422322322322347
Florida216 - 220218217216216972
Georgia217 - 221219218217218624
Hawaii215 - 22021821721721574
Idaho212 - 217214213211215102
Illinois218 - 222220220219219738
Indiana214 - 219217217216214304
Iowa211 - 217214212210212156
Kansas213 - 219216215214214142
Kentucky211 - 217214213211212202
Louisiana212 - 217215214214213238
Maine212 - 21721521421321553
Maryland221 - 224222222221222296
Massachusetts221 - 224223223222220294
Michigan216 - 220218218217218511
Minnesota216 - 220218217216216288
Mississippi210 - 215213212209210155
Missouri214 - 218216215214213276
Montana208 - 21321020920920745
Nebraska210 - 216213211210212118
Nevada211 - 218215214211210162
New Hampshire214 - 21921721721521355
New Jersey222 - 224223223223223474
New Mexico209 - 21521221120720894
New York219 - 2212202202202191089
North Carolina216 - 220218218217217518
North Dakota209 - 21321021020720928
Ohio215 - 219217217216216582
Oklahoma209 - 215212211208211214
Oregon215 - 220217216216216205
Pennsylvania217 - 221219219219218583
Rhode Island213 - 22021721721521650
South Carolina210 - 217215214209213234
South Dakota209 - 21421120820921241
Tennessee215 - 219218217217215319
Texas218 - 2212202192192191714
Utah210 - 216213211209211195
Vermont211 - 21721521521221333
Virginia220 - 223222222219221394
Washington220 - 223221222220220358
West Virginia209 - 21221020920720766
Wisconsin213 - 217215214213213289
Wyoming209 - 21321120920720724
​U.S. Territories209 - 21121020820720745
​​Studying Abroad222 - 224223223223223112
​​​Commended209 - 211210208207207

If you’d like to see even more historical data, you can find cutoffs going back to 2008 in Compass’s National Merit Historical Cutoffs.

Why does each state have its own Semifinalist cutoff if the program is NATIONAL Merit?
This is always a hot button question. NMSC allocates the approximately 17,000 Semifinalists among states based on the annual number of high school graduates. That way, students across the nation are represented. It also means that there are very different qualifying standards from state to state. A Massachusetts student with a 220 might miss out on being a Semifinalist. If she lived 10 miles away in New Hampshire, she would qualify.

NMSC sets a target number of Semifinalists for a state. For example, California sees about 2,000 Semifinalists every year, Michigan 500, and Wyoming 25. In each state, NMSC determines the Selection Index that comes closest to matching its target number of Semifinalists. If 1,900 California students score 222 and higher and 2,050 score 221 or higher, then the Semifinalist cutoff would be 221 (this assumes that the target is exactly 2,000). Because score levels can get crowded, it is easy for cutoffs to move up or down a point even when there is minimal change in testing behavior or performance.

No Semifinalist cutoff can be lower than the national Commended level. Cutoffs for the District of Columbia and for U.S. students studying abroad are set at the highest state cutoff (typically New Jersey). The cutoff for students in U.S. territories and possessions falls at the Commended level each year. Boarding schools are grouped by region. The cutoff for a given region is the highest state cutoff within the region.

Why does the number of top scorers vary from year to year?
While there are changes in the number of students taking the PSAT/NMSQT, there can also be small flaws in test scaling that play a role. Prior to the digital PSAT, a single test form was seen by a large percentage of test takers. Something amiss with that single form could impact selection cutoffs across the country. The digital PSAT is constructed differently. Students receive unique form codes drawn from a large pool of problems. Scaled scores are generated based on the characteristics of those problems. In theory, this should make scores more stable. College Board’s early studies have found an extremely high correlation between the paper-and-pencil test and digital test. Still, even with its adaptive nature, the uncertainty remains as to whether the much shorter test can reliably score students at the 700-760 end of the scale.

What if I missed the PSAT because of illness or other legitimate reason?
You may still be able to enter the scholarship program by applying for Alternate Entry using an SAT score. Find information about last year’s process in Compass’s explanation of National Merit alternate entry.

When are National Merit Semifinalists announced?
The Commended cutoff becomes unofficially known by the end of April. The lists of Semifinalists are not distributed to high schools until the end of August. NMSC sets a press embargo on Semifinalist announcement until mid-September, but schools are allowed to notify students before that date. NMSC does not send Commended Student letters to high schools until mid-September. Compass will keep students updated on developments as those dates approach.

Do state and national percentiles indicate whether I will be a National Merit Semifinalist?
No! Approximately 1% of test takers qualify as Semifinalists each year, so it is tempting to view a 99th percentile score as indicating a high enough score — especially now that College Board provides students with percentiles by state. There are any number of flaws that rule out using percentiles as a quick way of determining National Merit status.

  • Percentiles are based on section scores or total score, not Selection Index
  • Percentiles are rounded. There is a large difference, from a National Merit perspective, between the top 0.51% and the top 1.49%
  • Percentiles reveal the percentage of students at or below a certain score, but the “at” part is important when NMSC is determining cutoffs.
  • The number of Semifinalists is based on the number of high school graduates in a state, not the number of PSAT takers. Percentiles are based on PSAT takers. States have widely varying participation rates.
  • Most definitive of all: Percentiles do not reflect the current year’s scores! They are based on the prior 3 years’ performance. They are set even before the test is given. And if you are going to use prior history, why not use the completely accurate record of prior National Merit cutoffs rather than the highly suspect percentiles?

Entry requirements for National Merit versus qualifying for National Merit.
Your PSAT/NMSQT score report tells you whether you meet the eligibility requirements for the NMSP. In general, juniors taking the October PSAT are eligible. If you have an asterisk next to your Selection Index, it means that your answers to the entrance questions have made you ineligible. Your answers are conveniently noted on your score report. If you think there is an error, you will also find instructions on how to contact NMSC. Meeting the eligibility requirements simply means that your score will be considered. Approximately 1.4 million students enter the competition each year. Only about 53,000 students will be named as Commended Students, Semifinalists, Finalists, or Scholars. See National Merit Explained for more information.

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Art Sawyer

Art graduated magna cum laude from Harvard University, where he was the top-ranked liberal arts student in his class. Art pioneered the one-on-one approach to test prep in California in 1989 and co-founded Compass Education Group in 2004 in order to bring the best ideas and tutors into students' homes and computers. Although he has attained perfect scores on all flavors of the SAT and ACT, he is routinely beaten in backgammon.

4,896 Comments

  • Maria says:

    Any news on Arizona?

  • Ely says:

    Hi Art, any updates on score range for Oregon? thanks for all that you do keeping us all posted 🙂

  • Olivia says:

    Is a 2015 still safe for Arkansas? I am a bit worried with some other states going up quite a bit… Thank you!

    • Art Sawyer says:

      Olivia,
      As you are probably seeing, it’s difficult to assess things as “safe” this year. A 220 in Arkansas is safe. I’d call a 215 “strong,” as it is at least at the state’s record high. Good luck!

  • Nisa says:

    Hi! Any news on the cutoff in Massachusetts? My daughter is at a 224 and wondering if she made it. She has not (yet) been notified by the school. Thanks!

  • Shiv says:

    Any news on Washington State

  • Betty says:

    Hi Art, what a crazy year! Thank you for answering all our questions. Could you please clarify your comment that NMSC seems to be sending out less information to schools. Did NMSC send out the cutoff index scores in previous years and have discontinued that practice this year?

  • George says:

    So based on your latest update, they’re not sending all schools the complete list of state cutoffs? Hopefully they still show up on the website on Wednesday…

    Does this mean that National Merit is also not sending schools the complete national list of names? Compiling that list is extremely important to me every year, and if it is no longer being sent to schools then there is no realistic chance we’ll be able to get every state.

  • Frank P. says:

    Mr. Sawyer,

    How sure are you that the TN cutoff is 219? My friend and I are both at 219 and are skibidi nervous.
    Thanks!

  • Tori says:

    Hi Art,
    Any thoughts on Nevada based on where cutoffs are trending so far? It’s a smaller state, so I understand it’s subject to more fluctuation.

  • Raj says:

    AZ is reporting 218 as cutoff based on the post on Reddit.

  • Anonymous says:

    Any info on Maryland yet? We’re sitting on a 222 and are very nervous!

  • George says:

    In addition to the 215 from Alabama reported here, there were recent Reddit reports of 222 in Illinois and 218 in Arizona qualifying. Earlier this week there were reports of 216 in Louisiana and 222 in New York on Reddit. It would be great if those could be added to your list!

  • Janet says:

    Hi Art,

    In previous comments you’ve stated that a 221 would likely make semifinalist in NY since NY has never hit 222, but that was before Texas was revealed to be 222. How are things looking now? 222 Texas is also the record for Texas and a multiple point jump. Thank you for your help.

    • Art Sawyer says:

      Janet,
      Based on what I just found out about NJ (and combined with the CA and Florida numbers), I think all bets are off. This year is not like the others. I’m shifting entirely into data gathering mode, because I don’t feel comfortable making predictions in such a topsy-turvy year. I hope we can figure out NY soon.

  • Danny R says:

    Hello Art,
    Is NJ at 225 ? Please let us know what you are hearing. My daughter is at 224.
    Thank You
    Jason

  • Sophie says:

    I believe the cutoff in Mass is a 225.

  • SD says:

    Not 100% sure about this but I am for the most part sure that I didn’t qualify with a 223 in CA

    • Art Sawyer says:

      SD,
      I am sorry to hear that, and I very much appreciate your sharing! Did you not receive a letter and your classmates did?

      • Newman says:

        Hello, Art:

        I am wondering if you have received more information about the cutoffs at CA. Based on SD, it seemed that SD is not qualified although SD’s had 223. Or was SD just assuming?

      • SD says:

        Hi Art,

        I believe it was something like that. The reason that I said that I wasn’t 100% confident is because a lot of people in my school are super gatekeep-y, and so I’ve only overheard bits and pieces of information, but nothing I could’ve actually confirmed. Sad to hear that CA has been confirmed at a 224 now though 🙁

        • Art Sawyer says:

          Yes, the gatekeep-y thing can be an issue, which is why I’m always a bit leery regarding friend reports. The 224 now comes from a trusted source. Thank you for the clarification.

  • BKA says:

    Do you have any information from Georgia, even if not confirmed? I have scoured Reddit and every other source imaginable but can’t find a peep. My daughter’s at 219, which would have been high enough for 7 of the last 10 years. Last year was 218. There has only been a +2 point jump once (between 2013 and 2014). Finger’s crossed, but not looking good with all the +2 and +3 for other states vs. last year. Thanks for your work.

    • Art Sawyer says:

      BKA,
      Nothing from Georgia. I’ve been erring on the side of passing things along and adding qualifications as needed. I don’t know what to think about this year. It’s impossible to predict numbers that are unprecedented. Best of luck to your daughter!

  • ECF says:

    Are the numbers pretty solid for the states you have reported ?

    We have a student with a 118 for OR.

    Looks like that will no longer cut it…. Trying to decide if we need to make peace with it or if this is still grey enough to keep hope? ?

    • Art Sawyer says:

      The Oregon report comes from a student with a friend missing the cut at 218. Reports are usually accurate, although I place a bit less weight on friend reports (there is a higher chance of miscommunication). A few more days of hope couldn’t hurt!

      • Betty says:

        I saw your update about the OR cutoff being possibly 222. That would be 6 points over the 2025 cutoff of 216! Would that be the biggest jump of any state?

        • Art Sawyer says:

          Betty,
          We only know that a student with 222 definitely qualified, so the cutoff could be lower. Oregon is interesting. For a few years it looked like it had joined the top scoring states in the 220s. Then it fell back to 216.

  • VD says:

    How was Texas confirmed? My daughter has a 222 and has not heard anything yet. Does this just mean the school has not informed her yet?

    • Art Sawyer says:

      VD,
      So far, we have had word from a student and a school. My guess is that only a quarter of students have been notified at this point. Materials arrive at different times, and some schools will choose to wait until September 10th (or later!).

  • Justin says:

    VA is definitely =<224, got with 224

  • Joy says:

    Any updates for Utah. My so n has a 216 (which is the high end of the estimated range). School won’t inform students until next week.

  • KR says:

    Are the states in bold confirmed by a school? Specifically OK.

    Thank you!

  • Alan says:

    How are there conflicting reports for New York? Are both sources credible?

    • Art Sawyer says:

      Alan,
      I just got clarification on the 223 report. The counselor confirmed that the student qualified at 223, not that the cutoff WAS 223. Moving this back to <=222.

  • 😬 says:

    I am not sure of semifinalists but they will have to send boat load of commended certificates this year since there is wide gap .Disappointing but it’s an interesting year for sure.

    • Art Sawyer says:

      It must mean that the high scores are more stretched out over the right of the curve. The number of Commended Students and NMSFs are effectively constant. For some reason, high scoring students were better able to achieve 218-228 scores than in the past.

  • Riley C says:

    Art,

    Thank you for being the GOAT of NMS discussion. I’m from NC with a 220 so I’ll let you know when mine comes along. Wanted to ask, though, what are your thoughts on the sharp increases this year? What would you attribute it to? Obviously not everything’s in so this could be some sort of regional thing but it seems pretty crazy.

    Oh, and before I forget, what portion of students would you estimate have received confirmation? Since this year is more hush-hush than normal.

    Thanks!

    • Art Sawyer says:

      Riley,
      Ha! I’ll accept Commended Commentator.

      I’d point to three factors, from possible to probable:

      1) Diminished COVID-related learning loss. There may be some truth to this, but it certainly does not explain the scale of the change.
      2) Increasing comfort with the digital PSAT. The class of 2026 took this test as sophomores. They’ve prepped for the digital P/SAT. They’ve had more materials and tests available for the digital P/SAT.
      3) College Board did a poor job scaling the exam at the high end of the scale. This is an incredibly difficult task. In a limited number of problems — and a very limited number of problems difficult enough to challenge 215-228 students — you need to establish a consistent hierarchy from year-to-year. I’ve pointed out major gaffes in the past. These tend to be more visible on the PSAT than the SAT because test takers are so concentrated on specific forms/questions.

      I would also argue that 2 and 3 could be related. When College Board moved from the paper-based test to the digital test, it did a number of linking studies. It maintains that the scores are essentially interchangeable. But those studies were done in an environment where students had familiarity with the paper P/SAT and no familiarity with the digital exam. If it turns out that the digital exam provided a more coachable experience, then we’d see more high scores over time. “But wouldn’t this mean higher scores across the board?” You would think so. There is an argument that NM-level students are more likely to prepare for the PSAT and improve performance over time. If this theory is true, we’d see more high SAT scores, as well. College Board obscures that data by only reporting percentiles and only reporting them based on the three trailing class years.

      My guess is about 1/4 – 1/3. I’d estimate that half of schools wait until September 10th. And many schools are still waiting for the mail to arrive or to filter down to the counseling department. Unless you know that your school has distributed letters or you missed out based on confirmed cutoffs, you should not take non-notification as confirmation of non-qualification.

      Good luck, and thank you in advance for following up!

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