Can I get into Harvard with a 3.95-3.98 GPA (unweighted)?

Maybe, but we really should end this digression.

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Your one freshman B will make no difference to your chances. Before the pandemic, GPA contributed one third, or a maximum of 80 points, to the 240 point Academic Index used by all Ivy League schools. A weighted GPA of 4.3 or higher scores a perfect 80. An unweighted GPA of 4.0 also scores an 80, while an unweighted GPA of 3.91 to 3.99 scores 79. Harvard will use the GPA that your school reports on your transcript; if both weighted and unweighted GPA are reported, Harvard will use the unweighted GPA.

Overall course (a more specific criteria than school) rigor remains very important, and that information in context with teacher recommendations, will be evaluated subjectively.

In the end, as noted earlier in this thread, academic records like these will generally be marked with an academic rating of 2, where a rating of 1 requires extraordinary accomplishment at a national or international level. Very few applicants have academic ratings of 1, and such a rating is not necessary to be admitted. Most applicants who are admitted have a rating of 2; most who are rejected also have ratings of 2 or 3.

Beyond the first reader, it would be atypical for subsequent reviewers and committees to see or care about grades or GPAs. An applicant’s academic index and academic rating will be there in the file summary, but once the application makes it past the first reader, only academic performance that is extraordinary (national or world class) or comparatively weak for a target admission group (recruited varsity athletes/Harvard lineage/Dean’s Lists/1st Gen/full scholarship cases) are likely to be topics of committed discussion/consideration. The case will revolve around other qualities the candidate can bring to the class being put together.