Colleges in Ohio that accept a 33 ACT score.

17 four-year colleges in Ohio are within reach of a 33. 5 of them admit a 33 squarely inside their published range. The least expensive is University of Toledo at $17,249 a year after aid. Each card shows whether a 33 is a reach, in range, or a strong fit, and what that school actually costs. All figures from the U.S. Department of Education.

Compare nearby scores
31323435All Ohio colleges
17 colleges

University of Toledo

Toledo, OH · Public
Strong fit
$17,249/yr
average net price after aid
Admitted ACT
23–29
Admit rate
92%
Undergrads
9,770

Ohio State University-Main Campus

Columbus, OH · Public
Strong fit
$17,339/yr
average net price after aid
Admitted ACT
28–32
Admit rate
61%
Undergrads
45,638

The College of Wooster

Wooster, OH · Private
In range
$23,458/yr
average net price after aid
Admitted ACT
27–33
Admit rate
60%
Undergrads
1,730

Franciscan University of Steubenville

Steubenville, OH · Private
Strong fit
$23,589/yr
average net price after aid
Admitted ACT
22–29
Admit rate
58%
Undergrads
2,901

Cedarville University

Cedarville, OH · Private
Strong fit
$24,468/yr
average net price after aid
Admitted ACT
22–29
Admit rate
65%
Undergrads
4,024

Ohio Northern University

Ada, OH · Private
Strong fit
$24,478/yr
average net price after aid
Admitted ACT
24–29
Admit rate
74%
Undergrads
2,489

University of Cincinnati-Main Campus

Cincinnati, OH · Public
Strong fit
$25,648/yr
average net price after aid
Admitted ACT
24–29
Admit rate
85%
Undergrads
29,882

Baldwin Wallace University

Berea, OH · Private
Strong fit
$27,603/yr
average net price after aid
Admitted ACT
22–29
Admit rate
76%
Undergrads
2,842

Miami University-Oxford

Oxford, OH · Public
Strong fit
$28,384/yr
average net price after aid
Admitted ACT
25–30
Admit rate
75%
Undergrads
16,656

John Carroll University

University Heights, OH · Private
Strong fit
$28,746/yr
average net price after aid
Admitted ACT
25–32
Admit rate
81%
Undergrads
2,274

Cleveland Institute of Art

Cleveland, OH · Private
Strong fit
$29,208/yr
average net price after aid
Admitted ACT
23–29
Admit rate
61%
Undergrads
539

University of Dayton

Dayton, OH · Private
Strong fit
$29,533/yr
average net price after aid
Admitted ACT
25–31
Admit rate
65%
Undergrads
7,682

Xavier University

Cincinnati, OH · Private
Strong fit
$32,997/yr
average net price after aid
Admitted ACT
22–29
Admit rate
86%
Undergrads
4,207

Kenyon College

Gambier, OH · Private
In range
$38,512/yr
average net price after aid
Admitted ACT
31–33
Admit rate
31%
Undergrads
1,732

Oberlin College

Oberlin, OH · Private
In range
$38,645/yr
average net price after aid
Admitted ACT
31–34
Admit rate
34%
Undergrads
2,887

Denison University

Granville, OH · Private
In range
$40,007/yr
average net price after aid
Admitted ACT
30–33
Admit rate
17%
Undergrads
2,380

Case Western Reserve University

Cleveland, OH · Private
In range
$41,190/yr
average net price after aid
Admitted ACT
32–34
Admit rate
37%
Undergrads
6,437

A few ACT points would change this list, and the aid behind it.

Find where their points are hiding →

Schools shown have a published admitted ACT range within four points of a 33. Net price is total cost of attendance (tuition, fees, housing, books) minus grant and scholarship aid, for students receiving federal aid. Admitted ACT range is the 25th to 75th percentile of admitted students. Source: U.S. Department of Education College Scorecard.

Common questions

What colleges in Ohio accept a 33 ACT score?

17 four-year colleges in Ohio are within reach of a 33 ACT score, 5 of which admit a 33 squarely within their published 25th to 75th percentile range. The lowest average net price among them is $17,249 a year at University of Toledo. Figures come from U.S. Department of Education College Scorecard data.

Is a 33 a good ACT score for Ohio colleges?

A 33 places a student inside the admitted range at 5 four-year colleges in Ohio. Whether it is a good score depends on the target school: a score above a school's 75th percentile is typically where merit scholarship consideration begins, and crossing that threshold can reduce what a family pays by thousands of dollars a year.