Colleges with rolling admissions evaluate applications as they are received versus waiting to evaluate all applications after a hard deadline. Universities will continue to evaluate applications until they’ve filled all the slots for their incoming class.

Rolling Admission Pros

You’re putting together your college list and notice that your dream school accepts applications on a “rolling basis.”  Here’s how rolling admission can be good for you:

1. It reduces college stress

The rolling admission process is quick. The earlier you apply, the sooner you get your answer, which could be as soon as 4-6 weeks after submitting your application. Many students can even begin senior year with a college acceptance in the bag!

2. It gives you a potential leg-up

The application process can be less competitive if you apply on the early side of the admission window. Colleges still have their whole incoming class to fill and won’t be comparing you to already accepted students. (You still need a strong GPA, great test scores, and stellar extracurriculars.

3. It allows you to be flexible

Rolling admission decisions aren’t binding like early action decisions. You’ll have up until the university’s deadline to decide whether you will attend.  Rolling admissions universities often have long admission windows, meaning you could still apply after other schools’ regular decision deadlines have passed.

We Will Guide you to Reap the Benefits of Rolling Admission

1. Do your research

As we help you with putting together your college list, pay attention to deadlines and requirements. Some schools will accept applications on a rolling basis throughout the year, but others will have a specific admission window.

2. Submit rolling applications first

Rolling admission colleges begin taking applications as early as July and continue as late as April. Your chances of admission will be much stronger early on when there are more spaces left to fill, so it’s a smart idea to submit your rolling applications before working on your regular decision apps. The results (acceptance, waitlist, or rejection) could change the rest of your admission strategy.

Depending on when you apply, you’ll be notified of a decision before many of your other deadlines.

3. Plan ahead for SAT/ACT prep

Most students end up taking the SAT or ACT more than once.  If you’re aiming to submit a rolling admission application in early fall, it’s a good idea to take the test for the first time in October of your junior year (which gives you the option to take the test again in the spring, if needed).

If you’re accepted, this leeway allows you to plan things such as financial aid, housing, classes… and that Yale tattoo… earlier. It also allows you to weigh other options, such as whether you should apply to other schools. If you aren’t accepted, it gives you time to apply to other colleges as well.

4. Take care with your application

Your competitive advantage will be erased by a slapdash application. Give the same time and attention to your rolling decision applications as you would with your regular decision applications.

5. Don’t forget about financial aid!

As with your regular decision applications, it’s important to be on top of your financial aid applications and scholarship search. We recommend filling out the financial aid application  as soon as possible after October 1. If you’re applying to college later in the rolling admission window, you run the risk that school aid funds and scholarship will have been awarded to those students who were accepted before you. Research each school’s procedures for applying for aid, and have these docs ready to go.