Niche gives LAHS an A+ overall, ranking it #5 Best Public High School in the San Francisco Bay Area, while U.S. News gives it a 97.84/100 overall score.
From a family perspective, those numbers scream: We picked the right school.
From an admissions officer’s perspective, they raise a different question:
In a place where so many students have high GPAs, APs, and strong scores, what makes this student meaningfully different from the rest of Los Altos High School?
That’s why high school rankings are only the starting point. What matters most is how you make the most of what LAHS offers and how clearly that story comes through in your application.
Let’s start with the conventional rankings first:
Niche grants Los Altos high marks across the board:
U.S. News does the same:
These rankings tell colleges that Los Altos is a highly resourced, high-performing Bay Area public school.
But admissions officers aren’t sorting you by “Best Public High Schools in California.” They actually sort your application in line with other Los Altos students.
That’s where the school profile comes in.
When you apply to college and send in your transcript, your counselor also sends a document called the LAHS School Profile through the Common App.
AOs use it to answer questions like:
Los Altos’s school profile also shows a ton of other helpful information.
LAHS reports multiple GPAs on the transcript:
There is no formal class rank, but the profile includes a grade distribution table for the Class of 2025:
For an AO, that signals that there is a large cluster at the very top of the class and that a 3.76 - 4.0 unweighted GPA is common, not rare.
The school profile also breaks down information about LAHS’s courses.
Rigor expectations here are high. That doesn’t mean every student should max out, but it does mean that for top-20-type schools, you’re being measured against that AP-rich baseline.
For an AO reading your application, all of this says that you had access to a wide, interesting range of opportunities. When they read your application, they’re asking: Where did you go deep? Where did you show impact? How did you make the most of the opportunities available to you?
In college admissions, your file is usually read in a “school group”: all the applicants from Los Altos High in that cycle, sorted by some combination of GPA and rigor.
In that group, an AO will:
When you apply, your job is to make your AO’s job easy by giving them a clear story they can advocate for you among your school group.
The UC system is on most Bay Area college lists. One resource worth looking at is the UC database that lays out high school admissions outcomes. You can search by high school and see admissions statistics by campus.
This data is useful for planning your strategy. For example, of the 246 applications from LAHS who applied to Berkeley, 36 were admitted, which is roughly a 15% admit rate from Los Altos to Berkeley. That’s slightly above Cal’s overall admit rate of about 12%, which tells us that Berkeley AOs may be more willing to go deeper into the LAHS school group than they would be at other schools.
On the GPA side, the UC “average GPA by high school” dashboard shows GPA for Los Altos, including average applicant GPA, admitted GPA, and enrolled GPA:
In other words, the students who do get into schools like Cal or UCLA are sitting at the very top of an already high-achieving school. Even schools like Davis and Irvine now enroll freshman classes where a huge majority had 4.0+ weighted GPAs, and Berkeley/UCLA are reaches even for valedictorians.
A high GPA at LAHS helps, but is nowhere near a guarantee for a UC admit, especially for Berkeley, UCLA, and impacted majors like CS, engineering, and business.
Los Altos tends to serve students best if they:
Because of this admissions context, students can’t expect the school’s prestige alone to “carry” them into top colleges.
At a school like Los Altos, the question to ask yourself is:
“What is my angle in this applicant pool, and how does my angle make me a good fit for the schools I’m interested in?”
To get at this question, start with your coursework and extracurriculars.
Going to Los Altos High School is not, by itself, a hook. AOs already know LAHS is strong.
Your strengths come down to thoughtful course planning, a focused and high-impact extracurricular resume, essays that tell a compelling story, and a balanced college list that reflects the current reality of UC and T20 admissions.
If you’d like help figuring out how your Los Altos profile will actually read to an AO, we do this every day with Bay Area families.