If you're applying to college from Palos Verdes High School, great academics are just a starting point. Over half the Class of 2026 has a weighted GPA above 4.0, and yet UC admission data shows even the strongest students get turned away.
Why? Because admissions officers evaluate you in the context of your school.
Palos Verdes High is a highly-regarded school in Southern California. Its block schedule, AP-heavy curriculum, and competitive student culture make it familiar to admissions officers. But simply attending a rigorous school like PVHS doesn’t guarantee admission. Selective colleges want to see how you used the opportunities your school gave you.
In this post, we’ll break down PV’s rankings, school profile, UC admissions data, and what it all means for your application strategy.
Palos Verdes High School consistently ranks among the top public high schools in California.
Niche, for example, names it:
U.S. News ranks it:
These rankings can be helpful if you’re deciding where to live and what high school to go to, but they’re not what admissions officers look at when reviewing your application.
For that, they use your school profile—a document your counselor sends along with your transcript that tells them what was available to you and how you performed in the PVHS context.
Palos Verdes’s school profile (2025) shows how rigorous the academic environment is. Here’s what stands out:
Admissions officers are looking at more than the raw numbers of your GPA. They’re also asking:
A 4.3 weighted GPA at PVHS can mean something different than a 4.3 at a less rigorous school. But at PV, even a 4.3 weighted GPA might not place you in the top third of the class. That’s the context colleges are using.
When admissions officers read applications, they typically sort them into school groups, or the group of all students from that high school who applied. Instead of comparing your application to every single application the college has received, then, admissions officers are reading your application in relation to other applications (present and past) from your school.
Here’s generally what happens:
Since colleges are deeply familiar with PVHS, they’ll know it’s well-resourced and popular with high-achieving applicants. They’ll expect to see:
The University of California releases admissions data for each high school they admit from. Don’t overlook this valuable source of information! Most colleges and universities don’t release admissions data this detailed.
To start, take a look at PVHS’s admissions data for UCLA:
155 PVHS students applied to UCLA, 16 were admitted, and 9 enrolled. That’s an admit rate of about 10.3%, which is about a percentage point higher than UCLA’s overall acceptance rate. This isn’t surprising, since Palos Verdes is so well-respected and admissions officers are generally willing to admit deeper into the class than they are at less competitive high schools.
The UC also releases weighted GPA data for each UC campus. Take a look at Palos Verdes’s data for 2024:
The average admitted student weighted GPAs are:
As you can see, even UC-Merced, the UC with the highest acceptance rate, has an average admitted student UC GPA of 3.93. Across the board, the UCs are admitting Palos Verdes students with strong weighted GPAs—meaning not only strong grades but also strong course rigor.
What This Tells Us:
PV offers real academic opportunity: deep AP offerings, dual enrollment, strong ECs. Your child will benefit from thoughtful strategy to stand out. Students interested in engineering, business, or pre-health tracks will find good prep here—but they need to start strong in 9th and 10th grade, and you should keep in mind that some pathways, like the Business Dual Enrollment pathway, may be seen as less rigorous to some selective schools if pursuing it means taking fewer AP courses.
Strong applications from PVHS craft a cohesive, high-impact narrative that shows how the student stood out in an academically challenging environment. Want to know how your student’s application might come across to an admissions officer? Book a free intro call with Sierra Admissions.