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Chance Me: Is a 3.6 GPA and 512 MCAT Enough for MD?

FastGPACalc Editorial Team

The "Average" Excellent Student

You open Reddit's r/premed, type up your stats, and post a "Chance Me" thread.

Your profile:

  • Cumulative AMCAS GPA: 3.65
  • Science (BCPM) GPA: 3.58
  • MCAT: 512 (roughly 84th percentile)
  • Extracurriculars: 200 hours of hospital volunteering, 1 year of basic research, 50 hours of shadowing.
  • You are an objectively excellent student. But in the hyper-competitive world of Allopathic (MD) medical admissions, are you excellent enough?

    The Statistical Reality (The Grid)

    Every year, the AAMC (Association of American Medical Colleges) publishes a massive grid showing the acceptance rates of students based on their GPA and MCAT combinations.

    For a student with a 3.60-3.79 GPA and a 510-513 MCAT, the historical acceptance rate to at least one US MD school is approximately 45% to 50%.

    This means you are a literal coin flip.

    How to Tip the Coin Flip

    Because your stats are exactly on the median border for MD schools, your application will not be saved by your numbers. You must execute a flawless application strategy:

    1. Apply Early: Medical schools use rolling admissions. A 3.6/512 submitted on June 1st has a drastically higher chance of acceptance than a 3.9/520 submitted in September. 2. Target In-State Publics: State medical schools heavily favor in-state residents. If you live in Ohio, you must blanket apply to Ohio State, Cincinnati, Wright State, Toledo, and NEOMED. 3. Build a DO Backup List: You should absolutely apply to 20 mid-tier MD programs, but you must also apply to 5-10 Osteopathic (DO) medical schools. Your 3.6/512 makes you a highly elite candidate for top-tier DO programs. Securing a DO acceptance ensures you become a physician even if the MD coin flip lands on tails.

    Check Your Medical School Odds

    Stop asking strangers on Reddit. Use our data-driven calculator to find your exact admission probability.

    Calculate Med School Odds