The university offers more than 100 distinct bachelor, 100 masters, and 80 doctoral and professional degree programs across 175 academic departments, 29 degree-granting schools, and colleges, 16 of which offer graduate programs of study. It is accredited by the
Commission on Higher Education of the
Middle States Association of Colleges and Schools (1921), and in 1989, became a member of the
Association of American Universities, an organization of the 62 leading research universities in North America.
Rutgers–New Brunswick is
classified among "R1: Doctoral Universities – Very high research activity".
Rutgers–Newark and
Rutgers–Camden are classified by the same organization as "R2: Doctoral Universities – High research activity".
Admissions Undergraduate U.S. News & World Report considers the New Brunswick campus of Rutgers University to be a "more selective" school in terms of the rigor of its admissions processes. For the Class of 2025 (enrolling fall 2021), the New Brunswick campus received 43,161 applications and accepted 29,419 (68.2%). Of the 45% of the incoming freshman class who submitted
SAT scores; the middle 50 percent Composite scores were 1240-1470.
Financial aid As a state university, Rutgers charges two separate rates for tuition and fees depending on an enrolled student's residency. The
Office of Institutional Research and Academic Planning estimates that costs in-state students of attending Rutgers would amount to $25,566 for an undergraduate living on-campus and $30,069 for a graduate student. For an out-of-state student, the costs rise to $38,228 and $39,069 respectively. In the 2010–2011 academic year, undergraduate students at Rutgers, through a combination of federal (53.5%), state (23.6%), university (18.1%), and private (4.8%) scholarships, loans, and grants, received $492,260,845 of
financial aid. 81.4% of all undergraduates, or 34,473 students, received some form of financial aid. During the same period, graduate students, through a combination of federal (61.9%), state (1.8%), university (34.5%), and private (1.9%) scholarships, loans, and grants received $182,384,256 of financial aid. 81.5% of all graduate students, or 11,852 students received some form of financial aid. In 2007, the university's Office for Enrollment Management launched the Rutgers Future Scholars Program as an initiative to help 7th graders from low-income families achieve academic success and be the first in their families to go to college. The program targets students from the school systems of Rutgers's hometowns, New Brunswick/Piscataway, Newark, and Camden. Once admitted, the students receive mentoring and college prep courses each summer leading up to the year of their college applications. If admitted to the university, they are given a full tuition scholarship for four years of undergraduate study. The program has been very successful and currently admits as many as 200 new 7th graders each year with most of the original 200 now attending the university as undergraduates.
Academic support Rutgers University have a variety of resources to help students succeed academically. Rutgers offers academic counselling to help students plan a study schedule, plan a schedule for the semester, decide their major, and complete their major requirements in time. The Learning Centers at Rutgers provide Peer Tutoring and Study Groups where students can work with or receive help from others who are taking or have taken the same courses. Certain courses provide extra tutoring like the Computer Science program offer tutoring from RUCATS(Rutgers Computing Academic Tutoring for Students). Students can use resources such as the Penji app to find available academic support. Rutgers offers these academic support resources motioned above for free to its students.
Rankings In the 2025
U.S. News & World Report rankings of universities in the United States, the New Brunswick campus of Rutgers is tied for 41st among national universities overall and ranked tied for 15th among public universities.
U.S. News & World Report ranked the Camden campus 127th among national universities, and 18th in top performers for social mobility. The same ranking placed Rutgers-New Brunswick in the top 25 among all U.S. universities for the following graduate school programs:
Library Science (7th),
English (15th),
Fine Arts (23rd),
History (21st) with the subspecialties of
Women's History and
African-American History both ranked 1st,
Social Work (17th), and
Mathematics (22nd).
U.S. News ranked Rutgers-Camden 58th for graduate nursing programs, and 83rd among graduate public policy programs, and 49th for top public universities. Rutgers University-New Brunswick has consistently ranked 2nd for
Philosophy according the
QS World University Rankings and the
Philosophy Gourmet Report. QS ranks Rutgers 42nd nationally. The Center for World University Rankings (CWUR) ranks Rutgers-New Brunswick 29th nationally and 50th globally as of 2020–2021. QS Top Universities ranked Rutgers-New Brunswick 264 in the world in 2022.
U.S. News & World Reports ranking placed Rutgers-New Brunswick 130th in Best Global Universities, 15th in public universities in the US (2025), 47th in Agricultural Sciences, 45th in Arts and Humanities (tie), 61st in Mathematics, 66th in Cell Biology, 63rd in Economics and Business, 99th in Computer Science, 37th in Pharmacology and Toxicology, and 23rd in Food Science and Technology. The RBS Master of Quantitative Finance (M.Q.F.) program, and the Master of Mathematical Finance (M.S.M.F) program in the department of mathematics, are ranked 7th in the United States. Under the New Jersey Medical and Health Sciences Education Restructuring Act of 2012, the
University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey was dissolved. Most of its schools, including
Robert Wood Johnson Medical School,
New Jersey Medical School, and
New Jersey Dental School, were merged into the new Rutgers Biomedical and Health Sciences, formed in 2013.
Libraries on the New Brunswick College Avenue Campus, which was the home of the Agricultural Experiment Station, Biology, and Chemistry faculty, now houses the university's Department of Economics. is the main library at Rutgers University–New Brunswick. The Rutgers University Libraries (RUL) system consists of twenty-six libraries, centers and reading rooms located on the university's four campuses. Housing a collection that includes 4,383,848 volumes (print and electronic), 4,605,896 microforms, and an array of electronic indexes and abstracts, full-text electronic journals, and research guides, Rutgers University Libraries ranks among the nation's top research libraries. The
American Library Association ranks the Rutgers University Library system as the 44th-largest library in the United States in terms of volumes held. The
Archibald S. Alexander Library in
New Brunswick, known to many students as "Club Alex", is the oldest and the largest library of the university, and houses an extensive
humanities and
social science collection. It also supports the work of faculty and staff at four professional schools: the Edward J. Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy, the Graduate School of Education, the Graduate School of Social Work, and the School of Communication and Information. Alexander Library is also a
Federal Depository Library, maintaining a large collection of government documents, which contains United States, New Jersey, foreign, and international government publications. It was officially established as the Library of Science and Medicine in July 1964 although the beginning of the development of a library for science started in 1962. The current character of LSM is a university science library also serving a medical school. On the New Brunswick-Piscataway campus, in addition to Alexander Library, many individual disciplines have their libraries, including art history, Chemistry, mathematics, music and physics. Special Collections and University Archives houses the Sinclair New Jersey Collection, manuscript collection, and rare book collection, as well as the university archives. Although located in the Alexander Library building,
special collections and University Archives comprises a distinct unit unto itself. Also located within the Alexander Library is the East Asian Library, which holds a sizable collection of Chinese, Japanese, and Korean monographs and periodicals. There are nine major libraries at the Rutgers-New Brunswick location: the Alexander Library, Art Library, Carr Library, Chang Library, Douglass Library, Library of Science and Medicine, Math and Physics Library, School of Management and Labor Relations Library, and Special Collections & University Archives Library. Both the Newark and Camden campuses have law libraries. In 2021, Alexander Library completed its Digital Learning Commons addition, expanding the library's footprint by over 16,000 sq ft into a multimedia center for the College Ave campus.
Museums and collections Rutgers oversees several museums and collections that are open to the public. •
Jane Voorhees Zimmerli Art Museum, on the College Avenue Campus maintains a collection of over 60,000 works of art, focusing on Russian and
Soviet art, French 19th-century art and
American 19th- and 20th-century art with a concentration on early 20th-century and contemporary prints. •
Rutgers University Geology Museum in Geology Hall features exhibits on
geology and
anthropology, with an emphasis on the natural history of New Jersey. The largest exhibits include a
dinosaur trackway from
Towaco, New Jersey; a
mastodon from
Salem County; and a
Ptolemaic era
Egyptian
mummy. •
Rutgers Gardens, which features of horticultural, display, and
botanical gardens, as well as
arboretums. • Stedman Art Gallery on the Camden campus is a collection of local, national, and international artwork and exhibits as part of the Rutgers Camden Center for the Arts. • Edison Papers is a collection of roughly 5 million documents related to Thomas Alva Edison. Nearly 175,000 of these documents are digitized and available to be viewed through their website. Rutgers' facilities across the four campuses include a golf course,
botanical gardens, working agricultural, horse, dairy, and
sustainable farms, a creamery, an
ecological preserve with multiple use trails, television and radio studios, theaters, museums, athletic facilities, helipads and a
makerspace. The
New Jersey Museum of Agriculture, established in 1984 in a facility in
North Brunswick, closed in 2011. ==Research==