Colleges Accepting a 29 ACT Score

These colleges admit students with an ACT score of 29. Browse the list and then click to see your full chances of admission.

A 29 ACT is a strong score that can make you competitive at many colleges—and it may help you qualify for merit scholarships. Use this page to explore schools where admitted students often have ACT scores around 29, then click a college to see your personal admission chances and scholarship options.

Quick note: No single test score guarantees admission. Colleges also review your GPA, course rigor, activities, essays, and recommendations.

Need the basics first? Read our ACT overview.

 

What a 29 ACT score means

The ACT is a standardized college admissions test scored from 1 to 36 across English, Math, Reading, and Science. Some students also take the optional Writing section.

A 29 ACT is typically considered a high score and can be competitive at a wide range of colleges, depending on your overall application.

Is a 29 ACT score good?

Yes. A 29 ACT is generally a strong score that can:

  • Put you in a competitive range at many public and private universities
  • Improve your chances for merit-based scholarships at schools that award aid for academics
  • Strengthen your application when paired with solid grades and course rigor

Best way to judge “good”: compare your score to a school’s middle 50% ACT range (the 25th–75th percentile for enrolled or admitted students). If 29 is in or above that range, you’re usually in a strong position.

What colleges can you get into with a 29 ACT?

With a 29 ACT, you may be competitive at most colleges and universities. The list below shows schools where students with scores around 29 have been admitted in recent years.

How to use this list (fast):

  1. Click a school to compare your score to its typical ACT range
  2. Sort your list into Likely, Match, and Reach based on your full profile
  3. Compare net cost (not just sticker price) and look closely at merit aid

Should you retake the ACT with a 29?

A 29 is strong, so there’s often no urgent reason to retake. But it can be worth it in certain cases.

Retake might be worth it if:

  • Your top-choice schools have mid-range scores above 29, and you’re near the lower end
  • You’re targeting competitive merit awards where a small score increase can matter
  • One section score is noticeably lower, and you can realistically raise it with focused prep

Skip the retake and focus elsewhere if:

  • Prepping would hurt your grades, activities, or application quality
  • Your target schools already see 29 as a strong fit
  • Your biggest opportunities are improving essays, course rigor, or strengthening your activities list

Tip: Junior year is usually the easiest time to retake the exam. If you’re a senior with fall deadlines, your time may be better spent finishing applications strongly.

29 ACT to SAT equivalent

A 29 ACT is roughly equivalent to 1330–1350 on the SAT.

If you’re deciding whether to switch tests, try a timed practice SAT first. Then choose the format where you can score higher with the least stress, and put the rest of your energy into grades, essays, and scholarships.

Scholarships for a 29 ACT score

A 29 ACT can help you qualify for merit scholarships from colleges and also make you a stronger candidate for outside scholarships.

Next steps to find money:

  • Start with schools that publish merit award guidelines
  • Apply for scholarships based on location, background, interests, activities, and intended major
  • Keep a simple tracker for deadlines, requirements, and recommendation needs
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