Breaking Down UTokyo's 2026 General Selection Announcement
The University of Tokyo (UTokyo), often regarded as Japan's most prestigious university and a global leader in research and education, has officially announced the results for its 2026 General Selection entrance exams. On March 10, 2026, at around noon JST, the university published the list of successful examinees on its website, revealing 2,990 qualifiers out of 8,329 applicants for the first semester schedule (前期日程). This represents a pass rate of approximately 35.9%, maintaining UTokyo's reputation for intense competition.
General Selection, known as Ippan Senbatsu in Japanese (一般選抜), is the traditional and most popular pathway for undergraduate admission to UTokyo. It combines the national University Entrance Common Test (Daigaku Nyūgaku Kyōtsū Tesuto, or Common Test) as the first stage with UTokyo's own second-stage exams, which include subjects like mathematics, sciences, English, and Japanese. This year marks the second full implementation since the introduction of the 'Information' subject in the Common Test, expanding the first-stage full score to 1,000 points.
Qualified students will proceed to enrollment procedures, joining peers from school recommendation selections (93 qualifiers announced in February) and other routes. Overall, UTokyo's undergraduate intake is around 3,100, underscoring the stakes for these top performers.
Key Statistics: Applicants, Qualifiers, and Pass Trends
Compared to last year, applicant numbers dipped slightly from 8,421 to 8,329—a decrease of about 1.1%—yet qualifiers dropped from 2,997 to 2,990, keeping the pass rate stable. This continuity reflects steady demand despite broader demographic challenges like Japan's declining birthrate impacting higher education enrollments nationwide.
UTokyo divides admissions into six 'science classes' (kairui, 科類): Liberal Arts I, II, III (文科一類、二類、三類) leading to law, economics, literature, etc., and Science I, II, III (理科一類、二類、三類) for engineering, medicine, sciences. Exact per-class qualifier numbers are not yet fully detailed, but historical patterns suggest balanced distribution aligned with capacities of 10 per class roughly.
- Total applicants: 8,329
- Total qualifiers: 2,990
- Pass rate: ~35.9%
- Foreign nationals among qualifiers: 67 (up 15 from last year)
Tokyo-origin students comprise 36.9% of qualifiers, with Kanto (ex-Tokyo) at 25.1% and Kinki at 13.2%, showing regional diversity.
Female Ratio Reaches 20.3%: Progress Toward Diversity
A standout figure is the female qualifier ratio at 20.3% (606 women out of 2,990), a modest 0.3 percentage point increase from 20.0% in 2025. Including school recommendation selections, the overall freshman female ratio hits 21.4%—the second-highest on record. Applicant females were 23.0%, indicating slightly higher competition for women.
Breakdown by science class highlights disparities: Liberal Arts III (literature-related) leads at 36.6%, Liberal Arts I at 27.3%, while Science I (engineering-heavy) lags at 9.4%. Science II and III fare better at 24.2% and 21.2%. These patterns mirror national trends where STEM fields see lower female participation, despite UTokyo's efforts like targeted quotas in recommendations.
Over a decade, UTokyo's female ratio has hovered around 20%, slower than national averages (46% overall undergrads). Initiatives like female-only slots in recommendations (42/93 in 2026) aim to boost this, reflecting Japan's push for gender equity in elite education.
Present Students Dominate at 76%: Rising Trend Among Fresh High School Graduates
Present students (gen'eki-sei, 現役生)—those graduating high school this spring—make up 76.0% of qualifiers, up 1.5 points from 74.5% last year. This continues a multi-year upward trend, from 72% a decade ago, driven by reforms reducing 'ronin' (repeaters) culture through better high school prep and Common Test emphasis.
Repeaters and others fill the rest, but the shift signals improved efficiency in Japan's exam system. Top prep schools like Kaisei boast high present rates (e.g., 72% of their 197 qualifiers).
Qualified Minimum Scores: Signs of Increased Difficulty
All science classes saw lower minimum scores (second-stage, 550 full points), suggesting tougher exams. Notable drops: Science I by 17.6 points? Wait, precise: Science I 303.39 (down 9.76 from prev), Science II ~305 (first time exceeding Science I in 12 years), Liberal Arts III 316.32 (lowest, down 5.61).
| Science Class | Min Score (2026) | Change from 2025 |
|---|---|---|
| Liberal Arts I | ~325.0 | Down 11.3 |
| Liberal Arts II | ~330.5 | Down |
| Liberal Arts III | 316.32 | Down 5.61 |
| Science I | 303.39 | Down 9.76 |
| Science II | ~305.0 | Down 8.2 |
| Science III | ~346.1 | Down |
Highest across: 453.60 (Science III). No scoring changes, per admissions chief.Official scores PDF
Top High Schools: Kaisei Leads with 197 Qualifiers
Preliminary rankings (as of March 10 evening) spotlight elite prep schools. Kaisei High (Tokyo) tops with 197 (142 present), followed by Nada (Hyogo) 95, Seiko Gakuin (Kanagawa) 92, Shibuya Makuhari (Chiba) 82, Mabu (Tokyo) 77. These schools dominate due to rigorous juku (cram school) integration and focus on UTokyo exams.
- Kaisei High School: 197 qualifiers
- Nada High School: 95
- Seiko Gakuin: 92
- Shibuya Kyoiku Gakuen Makuhari: 82
- Mabuchi (Mazu?): 77
Final tallies expected soon; past years confirm these leaders.University Communications rankings
Exam Process and Challenges Faced by Applicants
The General Selection unfolds in stages: First, Common Test (early Feb, 1,000 points post-2025 'Info' addition). Cutoffs were high (e.g., Liberal III 781/1000). Second stage (Feb 25-27): written (440 points) + interview for Science III. Total converted to 550 for ranking.
Candidates prepare via yobiko (cram schools) like Toshin, emphasizing past papers. 2026's difficulty led to lower mins, possibly due to 'Info' novelty or curve adjustments. First-stage warnings reduced smoothly.
Student Reactions and Social Media Buzz
As announcements hit, social media lit up with joy and relief. Qualifiers shared screenshots, while others eyed backups. Trends focused on score drops and female milestone. Prep school Toshin boasted 42/93 recommendation successes, fueling hype.
Common sentiments: gratitude to mentors, nerves over enrollment fees (due soon).
Broader Context in Japanese Higher Education
UTokyo's results mirror national trends: stable national uni apps (235k for first schedule), rising present ratios, persistent gender gaps in elites. Reforms like NEP-inspired diversity and AO (admissions office) entries diversify intake. UTokyo leads with global rankings (top Asia), drawing intl students (MEXT scholarships up).
For Japan-focused careers, check university jobs in Japan or higher ed positions.
Career Prospects for UTokyo Graduates
Qualifiers enter elite networks: alumni in gov't (PMs), tech (Sony), finance. Avg starting salary ~¥500k/month, employability near 100%. Fields: medicine (Science III), law (Liberal I), AI/eng (Science I/II). Post-grad paths abound.
Explore academic CV tips or professor jobs for long-term planning.
Photo by Jackie Alexander on Unsplash
Advice for Future Applicants and Outlook
Aiming for 2027? Balance Common Test breadth with UTokyo depth; leverage 'Info' early. Diversity efforts may raise female/ intl quotas. UTokyo eyes Viksit-like reforms? Monitor MEXT.
Link to admissions tools. In conclusion, these 2,990 join Japan's future leaders. Check Rate My Professor, higher ed jobs, career advice, university jobs, post a job for next steps.UTokyo admissions
