For people that don't know what we are talking about:
https://www.aamc.org/data/facts/app...mcat-gpa-grid-by-selected-race-ethnicity.html
Depends on who you are. The application process is expensive. There is no line.
I would also caution you that statistics can be very misleading and the AAMC tables are no different. These are population statistics. They are NOT about individuals and they certainly do not confer any real relevant knowledge to applicants. At best, they give a ballpark about how competitive your academics are compared to the rest of the field. But, that is it and trying to read more into it is harmful. For example, if you have a 3.7/31, people with your stats last year go into medical school 64.7% of the time, but within that group there is tremendous variation. It isn't like all 3,885 applicants had a 64.7% chance of getting in and some got lucky and some didn't. There is some luck involved with medical school admissions, but when you have a chance to see it from the admissions committee side, you realize that it is relatively minimal. The whole, "chance" part goes out the window pretty fast when you apply to multiple schools and multiple people read your application. You realize that assuming people apply broadly and smart, there are a lot of people with 'average' or 'slightly below average' stats that get in 90%+ of the time and there are likewise people that get in <10% of the time. If you took a stack of 3.7/31 applications, after reading maybe 100 of them, you could divide them into three piles, the pretty sure they will get in somewhere, the maybe they will get lucky and the pretty sure they won't get in anywhere. That middle category is actually quite small. Could you do it perfectly? Absolutely not. But, reasonably high fidelity? Sure.