Program-level details
Rice undergraduate admissions sets a TOEFL iBT minimum of 100 with subscores of 26 in Reading and Listening recommended. The George R. Brown School of Engineering accepts 90 for most graduate programs but expects 100+ for competitive applicants. The Jones Graduate School of Business requires 100 for the MBA. Rice does not offer institutional ESL conditional admission, so applicants below 90 should plan to retake the TOEFL before applying.
Translating this score to the 2026 1-6 band scale
From January 2026, ETS reports the TOEFL iBT on a 1.0-6.0 band scale (in 0.5 increments) rather than the legacy 0-120 scale. Rice University's undergraduate minimum of 100 corresponds to roughly band 5.0, which aligns with CEFR C1. The graduate minimum of 90 corresponds to band 4.5 (B2 high). For a more precise read on what these bands mean for your speaking, writing, listening, and reading, take a free TOEFLMock practice test — you'll see your score reported on both scales side-by-side.
Other accepted English tests
Rice University typically accepts: IELTS 7.0+ (undergrad), 7.0+ (graduate), Duolingo English Test 125+. Many universities accept the Duolingo English Test, and some accept Cambridge English Advanced (C1) or Proficiency (C2). Acceptance and minimum thresholds for alternative tests change frequently — verify against the current admissions page before relying on a specific alternative.
How to prepare for the Rice University TOEFL minimum
A target of 100 on the TOEFL iBT is a band 5.0 performance. Realistically, this means consistently scoring well across all four sections, since universities almost always set sub-section minimums (typically 22 in each of Reading, Listening, Speaking, and Writing for top-tier programs). The fastest way to spot which section is holding you back is to take a full-length practice test under timed conditions and compare your section bands. From there, focused section practice is more productive than another full-length attempt.
- Take a free full-length TOEFL practice test to see your starting band
- Reading practice — 16 free 2026-format reading tests
- Listening practice — 16 free 2026-format listening tests with the new task types
- Writing practice — 16 free Build-a-Sentence + Email + Academic Discussion tests
- Speaking practice — 16 free Listen-and-Repeat + video Interview tests
Common questions
What is the minimum TOEFL score for Rice University? ▾
Rice University requires a minimum TOEFL iBT score of 100 for undergraduate admission and 90 for most graduate programs. Rice undergraduate admissions sets a TOEFL iBT minimum of 100 with subscores of 26 in Reading and Listening recommended. The George R. Brown School of Engineering accepts 90 for most graduate programs but expects 100+ for competitive applicants. The Jones Graduate School of Business requires 100 for the MBA. Rice does not offer institutional ESL conditional admission, so applicants below 90 should plan to retake the TOEFL before applying.
What if my TOEFL score is below the Rice University minimum? ▾
If you score below the Rice University minimum, options include retaking the TOEFL after focused practice, taking an alternative accepted test (IELTS 7.0+ (undergrad), 7.0+ (graduate), Duolingo English Test 125+), or applying to a pre-sessional English program offered by the university.
Does Rice University accept the Duolingo English Test? ▾
Many universities now accept the Duolingo English Test as an alternative to TOEFL. Whether Rice University accepts it depends on the program and the year — verify against the official admissions page linked above.
How do I send my TOEFL scores to Rice University? ▾
Official TOEFL scores are sent directly from ETS to the university you specify. You can list up to four institutions to receive your scores at no extra cost when you register for the test. Additional score reports cost a fee per institution.
Verify before applying
University admission requirements change. Always confirm the current TOEFL minimum on the official Rice University admissions page before applying. The figures on this page were last verified 2026-05-26 and reflect publicly stated institutional minimums; specific programs may set higher thresholds, and some courses (medicine, law, education) frequently do.