Tuesday, March 3, 2020
When Do College Acceptance Letters Arrive for Regular Decision For Early Decision or Early Action
When Do College Acceptance Letters Arrive for Regular Decision For Early Decision or Early Action  SAT / ACT Prep Online Guides and Tips  Applying to college is a confusing and stressful process, but waiting to hear back from the colleges you applied to can be just as anxiety-inducing. When do college acceptance letters arrive?  In this guide, we explain when to expect to receive your college decision notifications. We also give you a chart of estimated college acceptance dates for 2019 and offer helpful tips on what to do as you wait for your college acceptance letters.      When Do College Acceptance Letters Arrive, Generally?  First off, when do college acceptance letters arrive, broadly speaking?  While the answer to this question really depends on what colleges youââ¬â¢re applying to, in general most decisions come out in the springtime, that is, in either March or early April.  The latest you might hear back from a college will be the first week of April. This is because most schools require decisions from applicants on where they want to attend by May 1.  Some colleges work together to release their decisions at the same time. The Ivy League, which is composed of eight highly prestigious colleges, releases its decisions on "Ivy Day," a specific day at the end of March (note that the exact date changes each year).  But what if you applied to a college early action or early decision? In these cases, since applications are due earlier (usually in November), you can expect an earlier decision notification as well- usually around December.  Some schools offer secondary early decision plans called Early Decision II for which applications are due a little bit later, usually in January. For these plans, decisions should come out around February.  Here is a chart showing the general trends of when college acceptance letters come out:          Application Deadline      Estimated Decision Notification Date          November (Early Action/Early Decision I)      Mid- or late December          January (Early Decision II)      February          December, January, or February (Regular Decision)      March or early April            These days, most college acceptance letters will arrive as either an email or application status update on a collegeââ¬â¢s own application portal. Afterward, youââ¬â¢ll usually receive a hard copy of your acceptance letter in the mail and further updates via email or mail.    An Aside: What If Youââ¬â¢re Waitlisted?  Sometimes, instead of getting a college acceptance letter or rejection, youââ¬â¢ll get a letter stating that youââ¬â¢ve been waitlisted. This means that the college is still considering you for admission depending on how many admitted applicants choose to enroll.  As a result, youââ¬â¢ll need to decide (typically by May 1) whether you want to stay on the waitlist to see if you get off it, or take yourself off the waitlist, thereby eliminating your chances of getting in.  If you decide to stay on the waitlist, you wonââ¬â¢t get a college decision notification until possibly as late as August, right before the school year starts. When you hear back ultimately depends on the school and how quickly it's able to fill up its new freshman class.        College Acceptance Dates 2019  We have a general understanding of when college acceptance letters arrive. But when do college decisions come out in 2019? And how do these decision dates differ depending on the college?  To answer these two questions, we put together an extensive list of popular schools and their reported or estimated college acceptance dates for 2019.  All dates below represent the last day by which you should receive an admissions decision notification (unless otherwise noted); thus, itââ¬â¢s possible you could receive a decision earlier.  All schools are listed alphabetically.          School      Early Action/Early Decision      Regular Decision          Amherst      ED: Mid-December 2018      April 1-7, 2019          Boston College      EA: December 20, 2018  Spring Freshmen: December 15, 2018      April 1, 2019          Boston University      ED: December 15, 2018  ED 2: February 15, 2019      Late March to early April 2019          Brown      ED: Mid-December 2018      March 28, 2019*          Caltech      EA: Mid-December 2018      Mid-March 2019          Carnegie Mellon      ED: December 15, 2018  Early Admission (juniors only): April 15, 2019      April 15, 2019          Columbia      ED: December 15, 2018      March 28, 2019*          Cornell      ED: Mid-December 2018      March 28, 2019*          Dartmouth      ED: Mid-December 2018      March 28, 2019*          Duke      ED: December 15, 2018      April 1, 2019          Emory      ED I: December 15, 2018  ED II: February 15, 2019  Scholar Programs: March 1, 2019      April 1, 2019          Georgetown      EA: December 15, 2018      April 1, 2019          Harvard      EA: Mid-December 2018      March 28, 2019*          Harvey Mudd      ED I: December 15, 2018  ED II: February 15, 2019      April 1, 2019          Johns Hopkins      ED: December 15, 2018      April 1, 2019          MIT      EA: December 15, 2018      Mid-March 2019          Northwestern      ED: Mid-December 2018      Late March 2019          Notre Dame      EA: Mid-December 2018      Late March 2019          NYU      ED I: December 15, 2018  ED II: February 15, 2019      April 1, 2019          Penn      ED: Mid-December 2018      March 28, 2019*          Pomona      ED I: December 15, 2018  ED II: February 15, 2019      April 1, 2019          Princeton      EA: Mid-December 2018      March 28, 2019*          Rice      ED: Mid-December 2018      April 1, 2019          Stanford      EA: December 7, 2018      April 1, 2019          SUNY System      ED: December 15, 2018  EA: January 1, 2019      Rolling          Tufts      ED I: Mid-December 2018  ED II: Mid-February 2019      April 1, 2019          UC System      -       Mar 1-31, 2019          UChicago      EA: Mid-December 2018  ED I: Mid-December 2018  ED II: Mid-February 2019      Late March 2019          UMass Amherst      EA: Starting mid-December 2018  Spring Applicants: Starting mid-December 2018      Starting early March 2019          UNC Chapel Hill      EA: End of January 2019      End of March 2019          University of Florida      -       Mid-February 2019          University of Illinois      EA: December 14, 2018      March 1, 2019          University of Michigan      EA: December 24, 2018      Early April 2019          University of Rochester      ED: December 15, 2018      April 1, 2019          University of Washington      -       March 1-15, 2019          USC      Merit Scholarship Applicants: February 1, 2019      April 1, 2019          UT Austin      Priority: February 1, 2019      March 1, 2019          UVA      EA: End of January 2019      End of March 2019          Vanderbilt      ED I: Mid-December 2018  ED II: Mid-February 2019      Late March 2019          Vassar      ED I: Mid-December 2018  ED II: February 1, 2019      Late March 2019          Wake Forest      ED: Rolling (as early as December 1, 2018)  ED II: February 15, 2019      April 1, 2019          William  Mary      ED I: Early December 2018  ED II: Early February 2019      April 1, 2019          WUSTL      ED: December 15, 2018  ED II: February 15, 2019      April 1, 2019          Yale      EA: Mid-December 2018      March 28, 2019*          *Estimated Ivy Day 2019 based on the patterns of previous years. Ivy Day is always at the end of March. See our guide to Ivy Day for more info about how we came up with this date.       Want to build the best possible college application?  We can help. PrepScholar Admissions is the world's best admissions consulting service. We combine world-class admissions counselors with our data-driven, proprietary admissions strategies. We've overseen thousands of students get into their top choice schools, from state colleges to the Ivy League.  We know what kinds of students colleges want to admit. We want to get you admitted to your dream schools.  Learn more about PrepScholar Admissions to maximize your chance of getting in.          Waiting for College Acceptance Letters? 3 Tips for What to Do  We've given you the general dates you can expect to receive your college admission decision. But what should you do in the meantime, after youââ¬â¢ve submitted all your applications and are waiting for decision notifications from colleges?  Here are three essential tips to keep in mind during this time.    #1: Focus on School  One of the most important steps you can take is to focus on school and keep up your grades.  Try your best not to let senioritis hit you, especially considering that most colleges will want to see your final transcripts before you get to campus- even after theyââ¬â¢ve admitted you.  If you have any big dip in your grades senior year, a college could rescind your acceptance and reject you instead. Do not take any chances at this time! Continue to work hard, study for all the tests you have, and finish your homework on time. Keep making school a priority.  Finally, continuing to do well in school is especially important if you plan to take any AP tests at the end of senior year. You want to keep up your studying so that you can earn a passing score on the tests youââ¬â¢re taking, hopefully earning you some college credit.    Resist senioritis- keep up with your studies.    #2: Apply for Financial Aid and Scholarships  If you know youââ¬â¢ll need some help with money in order to attend college, these months of waiting for decisions to come out are an ideal time to shift your focus from college applications to FAFSA and scholarships.  Applying for FAFSA makes you eligible to receive federal-, state-, and/or college-sponsored financial aid, including loans, grants, and work-study.  If youââ¬â¢re interested in winning free scholarship money, I'd advise you to do some research on any college scholarships you might be eligible for. These scholarships can be based on merit, such as your GPA and SAT/ACT scores, or financial need (or both).  For more tips on how to find and apply for scholarships, check out our financial aid blog posts as well as our most popular scholarship and aid guides:    Simple Guide: How to Apply for Financial Aid  How to Find Scholarships for College: Expert Guide  Top Scholarships for High School Seniors  The Easiest Scholarships to Apply For  Easy Scholarships to Win: How to Find and Apply  The Complete List of Community Service Scholarships  Amazing Full-Ride Scholarships You Can Win  Complete List: Weird Scholarships You Can Win  How to Get a Merit Scholarship: 6-Step Guide      #3: Keep Tabs on Your Email and Application Status  As you wait for college decisions to come out, itââ¬â¢s important that you routinely check your email (whichever email you put down for your college applications) and application status on the school's website.  Some schools will only announce their decisions online through their application portals, some will email their decisions directly, and others will mail their decisions before sending out emails (this is becoming less common, though).  Even if youââ¬â¢re not expecting to get a college decision anytime soon, try to keep tabs on your inbox and application status. This will help ensure youââ¬â¢re not missing any application materials and that the college isnââ¬â¢t trying to contact you about any last-minute problems with your application.    Conclusion: When Do College Acceptance Letters Arrive?  There are many answers to the question, "When do college decisions come out?" In general, most college decisions are released online by email or through an application portal in March or early April.  If you applied early action or early decision, you can expect to hear back about your application status in December (or around February if you applied Early Decision II).  The latest youââ¬â¢ll get a college acceptance letter is the first week of April, since most colleges require admitted applicants to submit their decisions about where they want to attend by May 1.  If you get waitlisted at a college and choose to stay on the list, you wonââ¬â¢t receive an official decision until possibly as late as August.  Once youââ¬â¢ve submitted your applications and are waiting to hear back from colleges, be sure to take these three steps:    Focus on school and continue to keep up your grades      Apply for financial aid and scholarships, including FAFSA      Keep tabs on your email and application status by routinely checking your inbox and the school's application status page    As a final tip, stay positive- you never know where you're gonna get in!    Whatââ¬â¢s Next?  What do college acceptance letters look like? Learn what a typical college acceptance letter says and how it looks with our in-depth guide.  Got rejected from your top-choice school? Or scared of getting a rejection letter? Read our guide to get tips on how you can get through a college rejection and what you can do to improve your chances of getting in.  The key to getting a college acceptance letter is having a great application. And the best way to ensure you have an impressive application is to know what looks good on it.      Want to improve your SAT score by 160 points or your ACT score by 4 points? We've written a guide for each test about the top 5 strategies you must be using to have a shot at improving your score. Download it for free now:           
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