This fall, the University of Iowa welcomes the second-largest first-year cohort in university history.

Published: Sept. 11, 2025

First-year University of Iowa student Kate Lillie is from the southwest Iowa town of Corning. She wants to be a nurse, so coming to a state school with one of the nation’s top nursing programs was a no-brainer. Although the UI campus is big, she says it feels small when she’s in class.

Lillie is part of Iowa’s 2025 incoming class — at 5,561, it is the second largest in university history. It is also one of the highest-achieving, with an average high school grade-point average of 3.86, besting last year’s mark of 3.83.

Matieis Mayes of Cedar Rapids, Iowa, is eager to work in a campus research lab and start making an impact in the field of health care. He is interested in regenerative medicine and came to Iowa to study biochemistry and molecular biology and human physiology.

University of Iowa student Kate Lillie

Kate Lillie

University of Iowa student Matieis Mayes

Matieis Mayes

Sophie Firek of Algonquin, Illinois, is excited to be on a campus where she can pursue her passions in both the arts and the sciences. Although she is an exercise science major who plans to go to med school and become a surgeon, she also is a cellist and is part of the UI School of Music’s chamber residency program.

When aspiring Hollywood screenwriter Cole Ritter of Long Beach, California, was looking at writing programs, Iowa was always at the top of the list. After attending an event hosted by the Iowa Young Writers’ Studio and meeting members of the UI writing faculty, he knew Iowa was the place for him.

University of Iowa student Sophie Firek

Sophie Firek

University of Iowa student Cole Ritter

Cole Ritter

Benie Toko, a mechanical engineering major from Davenport, Iowa, and Togo, says she has met “helpful Hawkeyes” everywhere she has traveled and knew she wanted to be part of the Hawkeye family — and she also has joined the Air Force ROTC family. Meanwhile, María José Blanco Arias, an international studies major from Bogotá, Colombia, is excited to be at Iowa and learn about who she is away from home.

University of Iowa student Benie Toko

Benie Toko

University of Iowa student María José Blanco Arias

María José Blanco Arias

Sarah Hansen, vice president for student life, says she is excited to see these newest Hawkeyes make their mark: “I have been thrilled to see how engaged our new Hawkeyes are. We will do everything we can to help them succeed.”

Growing up in nearby Coralville, Iowa, finance major Butali Butali says he was comfortable with the University of Iowa campus but also knew he would be exposed to new ideas, activities, and people.

“The school prioritizes making students feel welcome, excited, and open to embarking on new adventures,” he says. “I am excited to try out different clubs and intramurals and especially to meet new people.”

Butali is among 2,879 students in the incoming first-year class who are Iowa residents. The class represents 93 of Iowa’s 99 counties, 47 U.S. states and territories, and 37 countries. They come from a total of 1,182 high schools, with the farthest one in the U.S. located in Kenai, Alaska. 

About 23% of incoming students (1,260) are from rural areas, some 19% of the class (1,074) identify as first-generation students, and more than half (3,289) arrived on campus with college credit.

University of Iowa student Butali Butali

Butali Butali

“The University of Iowa had a record-setting admissions cycle for the fall of 2025, receiving more than 31,000 first-year student applications for the first time ever. Interest in attending the University of Iowa has never been greater, and this group of students represents talented students from Iowa, across the nation, and around the world,” says Brent Gage, associate vice president for enrollment management. “We are excited to welcome one of the largest first-year classes that we have ever had as they join the Hawkeye community this fall.”

In a speech delivered Aug. 22 during Kickoff at Kinnick, Lexi Vazquez, a marketing major from Marshalltown, Iowa, reminded her fellow first-year peers that they enrolled at Iowa for more than a degree.

“The Hawkeye experience is about something deeper. It’s about finding yourself in the unexpected ways,” she said. “Maybe it’ll happen in a lecture hall when a professor says something that shifts your perspective. Maybe it’ll happen during a late-night conversation with your new roommate. Maybe it’ll even happen trotting up the hill midwinter. So, let’s make a promise tonight … let’s lean into the unknown and honor our growth, lead with heart, and create a legacy we’ll be proud of. We have so much ahead of us, and this is just the beginning.”

 

This information represents a snapshot of enrollment information from early in the fall 2025 semester and may change with time.

The 2025 incoming class

5,561

first-year students

2,879

are Iowa residents

3.86

average high school GPA

19 %

identify as first-generation students

1,260

come from rural areas

iowa map with certain counties shaded gold

93

Iowa counties represented

u.s. map with certain states shaded gold

47

U.S. states and territories represented

world map with certain countries shaded gold

37

countries represented, including the U.S.

new students wave to the patients at the Stead Family Children's Hospital during Kickoff at Kinnick 2025

Overall enrollment, fall 2025

31,563

enrolled students

23,407

undergraduate students

6,269

graduate students

1,887

professional students

1,033

undergraduate transfer students

1,418

new graduate and professional students

42 %

male students

56 %

female students

1,335

postgraduate scholars (medical residents and postdoctoral students)

Great stories happen at Iowa

a stylized shot of students outside Hancher Auditorium, with one student outlined in gold lines in the foreground

Students front and center of new gameday commercial — and behind it, too

University of Iowa team taps into the skills of students to serve as consultants, create mixed media animation, and provide the voice-over for this year's spot, “Iowa Feels Like Home.”
two University of Iowa undergraduate students are helping to carefully clean and preserve the skull and other bones of a mastodon

Undergrads play key role in preserving mastodon bones

Unprecedented find provides a unique opportunity for University of Iowa students to participate in the preservation of a piece of prehistory.
a university of iowa student prepares a subject for a study in the Psychological and Brain Sciences Building

Introducing first-generation students to research

First-gen students might come to college unaware of the pathways to research. The University of Iowa offers them support, from educational and networking services to hands-on workshops that deal with brain research.