Duke University is a private research university of roughly 6,417 undergraduates in Durham, North Carolina, and it punches absurdly above its weight for a school that size. What makes Duke genuinely unusual is the combination: elite academics that rival any Ivy, a Division I athletics culture that turns the entire campus into a community on game nights, a sprawling 8,600-acre Gothic campus that feels more like a small kingdom than a college, and a student body that refuses to choose between being serious scholars and fully engaged in life outside the classroom. Duke is for the student-athlete (or any student) who wants intensity in everything — the classroom, the court, the social scene, the career trajectory — and who thrives when surrounded by peers who operate the same way.
Location & Setting
Durham is a mid-sized Southern city that has undergone a dramatic transformation over the past two decades. It's no longer just a tobacco town — it's the cultural and culinary anchor of North Carolina's Research Triangle, with a food scene that regularly earns national attention (think farm-to-table spots, taco trucks, and James Beard–recognized restaurants along Ninth Street and downtown). The campus itself sits slightly west of downtown, and while it's technically urban, once you're on West Campus walking under the canopy of old-growth trees toward the Duke Chapel, it feels like its own world. Durham gives you enough city to explore — concert venues, Durham Bulls baseball, breweries — without the expense or congestion of a major metro. Raleigh and Chapel Hill are each about 20-30 minutes away, and the North Carolina coast is a few hours east. The Research Triangle Park, one of the country's largest research and tech hubs, sits between the three universities and shapes the professional ecosystem.
Where Students Live & How They Get Around
Duke is decisively residential. All first-years live on East Campus, a self-contained Georgian-style campus about 1.5 miles from the main West Campus. This isn't a quirk — it's a deliberate community-building move, and most Duke students look back on East Campus as a formative social experience. Sophomores, juniors, and seniors live on West Campus or in campus-adjacent apartments and houses, with many upperclassmen choosing to stay in the residential system. About 85% of undergraduates live on campus. A free bus connects East and West Campuses, and most students walk or bike within each campus. You don't need a car — most students don't bring one until junior or senior year, if at all. The climate is classic Piedmont North Carolina: warm and humid from May through September, mild winters with occasional ice storms, and a gorgeous spring that makes the whole campus bloom. Students spend a lot of time outdoors on the main quad and in the Duke Forest, a nearly 7,000-acre research forest adjacent to campus.
Campus Culture & Community
Duke's social life is layered. Greek life exists and is visible — roughly 30-40% of eligible students join fraternities or sororities — but it doesn't dominate the way it might at a large state school. The Selective Living Groups (SLGs), which are Duke's unique version of theme housing, offer an alternative social structure. Students also rally around their residential communities, club activities, and campus-wide events. But the single most unifying force on campus is basketball. Tenting in Krzyzewskiville — sleeping in tents outside Cameron Indoor Stadium for weeks to secure seats for the UNC game — is not a gimmick. Students actually do it, and it becomes a bonding ritual that crosses every social line on campus. Cameron Indoor on game night is legitimately electric, and school spirit at Duke is not performative; it's deeply felt. The Cameron Crazies are arguably the most famous student section in American sports. Beyond basketball, Last Day of Classes (LDOC) is a major campus-wide celebration, and events like the annual Duke-UNC rivalry in every sport create a shared identity. The culture is intense but not cutthroat — students are driven, but there's a genuine warmth and willingness to share notes, form study groups, and support each other.
Mission & Values
Duke was founded by Methodists and Quakers, and while the university retains a nominal connection to the United Methodist Church, daily life is thoroughly secular. You won't encounter required theology courses or religious restrictions. Duke Chapel hosts interfaith programming and remains a campus landmark, but attending services is entirely optional. The institution's real animating ethos is a commitment to "knowledge in service to society" — Duke invests heavily in civic engagement, public policy, and global health initiatives, and students genuinely engage with Durham through DukeEngage (a fully funded summer service immersion program) and other community partnerships. There's an expectation that you'll use your education for something beyond personal advancement, and many students take that seriously.
Student Body
Duke draws nationally and internationally — fewer than 10% of students typically come from North Carolina, and the student body represents all 50 states and over 80 countries. The vibe skews ambitious and social: these are people who were valedictorians, varsity captains, and nonprofit founders in high school, and they bring that same energy to campus. Politically, Duke leans moderate-to-liberal, though there's meaningful ideological diversity and active debate. The preppy Southern aesthetic is real but not universal — you'll find it coexisting with athletes, artists, policy wonks, and engineers. About half of undergraduates identify as students of color. The financial aid program is need-blind for U.S. applicants and meets 100% of demonstrated need, which creates genuine socioeconomic diversity, though the school's wealth and culture can still feel elite.
Academics
Duke is organized into Trinity College of Arts & Sciences and the Pratt School of Engineering, and the academic experience is rigorous by any measure. The student-to-faculty ratio is 6:1, and the median class size in many departments hovers around 15-20 students. Distinctive strengths include public policy (the Sanford School is one of the best undergraduate policy programs in the country), biomedical engineering (consistently ranked top-3 nationally), global health, political science, economics, computer science, and environmental science. The humanities are genuinely strong — English, history, philosophy, and literature departments attract serious scholars, and the Duke in the Arts initiative has expanded creative opportunities significantly. Pre-med is a well-trodden path here, supported by proximity to the Duke University Medical Center, one of the nation's top academic hospitals. Study abroad participation is high, with roughly 50% of students going abroad at some point, and DukeEngage sends about 400 students annually on funded civic engagement projects worldwide. Bass Connections, an interdisciplinary research initiative, pairs undergraduates with faculty across departments on real-world problems — it's one of the more distinctive features of the academic experience. Faculty are research-active (Duke spent over $1.2 billion on research in a recent year), but undergraduate teaching is taken seriously, and professors are broadly accessible. The academic culture is demanding but collaborative — students push each other without the zero-sum competitiveness you might encounter at some peer institutions.
Athletics & Campus Sports Culture
Athletics are central to Duke's identity, not peripheral. Duke fields 27 varsity sports in Division I as a charter member of the ACC. Men's basketball under the legacy of Coach K (and now Jon Scheyer) is the program everyone knows — five national championships and a tradition that permeates the entire university. But Duke is genuinely competitive across many sports: women's golf, lacrosse (men's and women's, with multiple national titles), soccer, fencing, and field hockey are consistently strong. Student-athletes are integrated into the general student body — they live in the same dorms, take the same classes, and are not sequestered into a separate athletic bubble. The expectation is that you're a student first. Duke's academic support for athletes is robust, but the school does not water down academic expectations. For a prospective student-athlete, this means you'll be challenged intellectually in ways that some competing programs won't demand, but you'll also be surrounded by teammates and classmates who respect the dual commitment. The facilities are excellent — Cameron Indoor, the new Duke Athletics Performance Center, and sport-specific venues are all top-tier.
What Else Should You Know
Duke's endowment ($11.9 billion) means the university can invest in financial aid, facilities, and programming at a level few schools can match. That said, Durham's relationship with Duke has historically been complicated — there's real town-gown tension rooted in economic inequality, and students who engage thoughtfully with the city beyond campus tend to have a richer experience. The rivalry with UNC-Chapel Hill, just eight miles away, is one of the fiercest in all of college sports and extends well beyond basketball into academics and campus identity. One practical note: summer in Durham is genuinely hot and humid — if you're training through the summer, prepare accordingly. Finally, Duke's alumni network is tight and powerful, particularly in finance, tech, medicine, law, and policy. The school's size means people know each other, and that intimacy pays dividends long after graduation.

| High | Low | |
|---|---|---|
| January | 49° | 28° |
| April | 70° | 46° |
| July | 87° | 69° |
| October | 70° | 48° |
| Talent/Ability | Very Important |
| Demonstrated Interest | Considered |
| Course Rigor | Very Important |
| GPA | Very Important |
| Test Scores | Considered |
| Essay | Considered |
| Recommendations | Very Important |
| Extracurriculars | Very Important |
| Interview | Considered |
| Character | Very Important |
| Season | Record | GF/G | GA/G | GD | SO | OT | Last Game |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2025 | 13-8 | 2.4 | 1.2 | +25 | 7 | 3 | L 1-2 (OT) vs North Carolina (NCAA Elite 8 at UNC) |
| 2024 | 13-7 | 1.9 | 0.8 | +20 | 11 | 3 | L 0-3 vs North Carolina (NCAA Quarterfinals) |
| 2023 | 18-5 | 2.3 | 1.0 | +28 | 8 | 4 | L 1-2 vs Northwestern (NCAA Semifinals at UNC) |
| 2022 | 7-11 | 2.3 | 2.1 | +3 | 1 | 4 | L 0-1 vs Wake Forest (ACC Quarterfinals at Duke) |
| 2021 | 6-11 | 1.6 | 2.6 | -17 | 2 | 1 | L 1-5 vs Syracuse (ACC Quarterfinals at Syracuse) |
| 2020 * | 4-12 | 1.8 | 2.6 | -13 | 3 | 6 | L 2-3 (OT) vs Syracuse (ACC Tournament at UNC) |
| 2019 | 13-8 | 2.3 | 1.2 | +23 | 8 | 6 | L 2-3 vs Iowa (NCAA First round at UNC) |
| 2018 | 16-6 | 3.0 | 1.5 | +34 | 8 | 3 | L 0-1 (2 OT) vs Wake Forest (NCAA Quarterfinals) |
| 2017 | 17-4 | 2.9 | 1.4 | +32 | 7 | 4 | L 2-3 vs Maryland (NCAA Quarterfinals) |
| 2016 | 16-4 | 3.4 | 1.5 | +37 | 6 | 3 | L 2-3 (OT) vs Delaware (NCAA Quarterfinal at Duke) |
| 2015 | 14-7 | 2.4 | 1.5 | +19 | 4 | 7 | L 0-2 vs North Carolina (NCAA Semifinals at Michigan) |
| Name | Position | Contact | Bio |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pam Bustin | Head Coach | pb95@duke.edu | View Bio |
| Ralph Boersma | Head Coach | — | View Bio |
| Jess Jecko | Assistant Coach | — | View Bio |
| # | Name | Position | Year | Height | Hometown | High School |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2 | Madison Beach | M | So. | 5' 7'' | Northbrook, Ill. | Glenbrook North |
| 3 | Juliette Schulten | B | Fr. | 5' 7'' | Rotterdam, The Netherlands | Scarborough College |
| 4 | Reagan Ciabattoni | B | Sr. | 5' 9'' | Lewes, Del. | Cape Henlopen |
| 5 | Sydney Beare | M/F | Fr. | 5' 6'' | London, England | Mill Hill |
| 6 | Macy Szukics | B | Sr. | 5' 3'' | Malvern, Pa. | The Episcopal Academy |
| 7 | Kyle Massey | F | Jr. | 5' 4'' | Houston, Texas | The Kinkaid School |
| 8 | Juliette Gatsonides | M/F | Fr. | 5' 7'' | Aerdenhout, The Netherlands | Atheneum College Hageveld |
| 9 | Sofia Fidalgo Schioppa | M | Fr. | 5' 6'' | Westport, Conn. | Staples |
| 10 | Shae Wozniak | M/F | Fr. | 5' 6'' | Wayne, Pa. | Conestoga |
| 11 | Lily Soldan | F/M | Fr. | 5' 7'' | Ann Arbor, Mich. | Pioneer |
| 12 | Maggie Kondrath | F | Jr. | 5' 6'' | Downingtown, Pa. | The Hill School |
| 13 | Ashley Stockdale | F/M | So. | 5' 7'' | Darien, Conn. | Darien |
| 14 | Alaina McVeigh | F | Sr. | 5' 10'' | Lansdale, Pa. | Gwynedd Mercy Academy |
| 16 | Kate Donnellan | F | Fr. | 5' 3'' | Riverside, Conn. | Greenwich |
| 17 | Gracie Butler | F | So. | 5' 9'' | Oxshott, England | Wellington College |
| 18 | Julia Boehringer | M | So. | 5' 6'' | Munich, Germany | Gymnasium München-Nord Elite Schule des Sports |
| 21 | Paige Bitting | M | Sr. | 5' 5'' | Hummelstown, Pa. | Lower Dauphin |
| 22 | Stella Bumgarner | B | Fr. | 5' 7'' | Pasadena, Md. | Archbishop Spalding |
| 24 | Issy Carey | F | Gr. | 5' 5'' | Weybridge, England | St. George’s College |
| 27 | Sophia Miller | B | Jr. | 5' 11'' | Far Hills, N.J. | Kent Place School |
| 33 | Ava Cickavage | B | Gr. | 5' 8'' | Moorestown, N.J. | Moorestown |
| 34 | Brynn Crouse | M | Sr. | 5' 5'' | Dillsburg, Pa. | Northern York |
| 44 | Abigail Spear | G | Sr. | 5' 5'' | Virginia Beach, Va. | Frank W. Cox |
| 55 | Kaiya Chepow | G | So. | 5' 6'' | Downingtown, Pa. | Downingtown West |
| 88 | Brooke Borzymowski | G | Gr. | 5' 9'' | Fallston, Md. | Notre Dame Prep |