Colleges Where Applying Early Decision Helps
If you really, really know which college you have to attend, the "early decision" application route could be your best chance at getting in. With early decision, you can take advantage of the higher acceptance rates that many colleges offer to students who apply early. The catch is, if you do get in, you're obligated to enroll there. But that shouldn't be a problem, because it's your first-choice school, right? Early decision applications generally are due in mid-November, and by the end of the year, students are notified whether they've been accepted, deferred to the regular admission pool, or rejected.
The following list shows which colleges have the highest acceptance rates for their early-decision application pool, based on our most recent data. To keep these numbers in perspective, be sure to review the column for how many students applied early: For example, 15 of the 16 students who applied early to Prescott College were admitted. But even at Syracuse University, where more than 800 students applied early decision, that group's acceptance rate was nearly 25 percentage points higher than the overall number.
If you don't see the college you're looking for on this list, check our list of schools that use the "early action" option.
| Institution Name | Early Decision Deadline | Early Decision Acceptance Rate | Early Decision # of Applicants | Overall Acceptance Rate | Overall # of Applicants |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alfred University (NY) | 12/1 | 84.6 | 52 | 76.1 | 2557 |
| Allegheny College (PA) | 11/15 | 70.9 | 86 | 60.6 | 4243 |
| American Jewish University (CA) | 12/31 | 100.0 | 4 | 100.0 | 58 |
| American University (DC) | 11/15 | 75.1 | 397 | 52.9 | 15413 |
| Barnard College (NY) | 11/15 | 47.7 | 392 | 28.5 | 4274 |
| Bates College (ME) | 11/15 | 45.5 | 549 | 29.2 | 5098 |
| Bennington College (VT) | 11/15 | 60.0 | 75 | 61.6 | 1056 |
| Bentley University (MA) | 11/1 | 54.0 | 187 | 37.6 | 7238 |
| Bloomsburg University of Pennsylvania | 11/15 | 100.0 | 151 | 58.6 | 10840 |
| Bowdoin College (ME) | 11/15 | 30.0 | 690 | 18.6 | 6033 |
| Brandeis University (MA) | 11/15 | 53.1 | 458 | 32.4 | 7724 |
| Brown University (RI) | 11/1 | 22.6 | 2453 | 13.7 | 20633 |
| Bryant University (RI) | 11/15 | 58.6 | 239 | 45.1 | 6253 |
| Bryn Mawr College (PA) | 11/15 | 53.1 | 130 | 48.8 | 2150 |
| Bucknell University (PA) | 11/15 | 65.3 | 567 | 29.9 | 8024 |
| California Polytechnic State University--San Luis Obispo | 10/31 | 25.2 | 3450 | 33.5 | 33352 |
| Carleton College (MN) | 11/15 | 55.2 | 375 | 27.5 | 4956 |
| Carnegie Mellon University (PA) | 11/1 | 29.1 | 855 | 37.9 | 13527 |
| Champlain College (VT) | 11/15 | 74.9 | 331 | 73.5 | 2979 |
| Claremont McKenna College (CA) | 11/15 | 27.8 | 316 | 19.2 | 4178 |
| Clark University (MA) | 11/15 | 73.3 | 90 | 56.4 | 5299 |
| Clarkson University (NY) | 12/1 | 93.8 | 113 | 78.7 | 3204 |
| Colby College (ME) | 11/15 | 46.8 | 455 | 30.9 | 4835 |
| Colgate University (NY) | 11/15 | 51.0 | 741 | 23.9 | 9416 |
| College of New Jersey | 11/15 | 57.3 | 450 | 42.4 | 9692 |
| College of the Atlantic (ME) | 12/1 | 79.5 | 39 | 69.1 | 314 |
| College of the Holy Cross (MA) | 12/15 | 55.7 | 522 | 33.8 | 7227 |
| College of William and Mary (VA) | 11/1 | 53.9 | 900 | 34.1 | 11636 |
| College of Wooster (OH) | 12/1 | 87.4 | 87 | 61.7 | 4504 |
| Colorado College | 11/15 | 41.1 | 414 | 26.0 | 5338 |
| Columbia University (NY) | 11/1 | 23.8 | 2509 | 10.0 | 22584 |
| Connecticut College | 11/15 | 64.8 | 301 | 36.6 | 4716 |
| Cooper Union (NY) | 12/1 | 16.0 | 449 | 9.3 | 3055 |
| Cornell College (IA) | 11/1 | 41.9 | 105 | 43.6 | 2916 |
| Cornell University (NY) | 11/1 | 37.0 | 3094 | 20.7 | 33073 |
| Curry College (MA) | 12/1 | 38.2 | 136 | 67.3 | 3944 |
| Dartmouth College (NH) | 11/1 | 27.9 | 1428 | 13.5 | 16538 |
| Davidson College (NC) | 11/15 | 40.4 | 549 | 25.7 | 4412 |
| Denison University (OH) | 12/1 | 78.4 | 153 | 38.2 | 5305 |
| DePauw University (IN) | 11/1 | 82.0 | 50 | 64.6 | 4064 |
| Dickinson College (PA) | 11/15 | 83.6 | 348 | 44.2 | 5282 |
| Duke University (NC) | 11/1 | 38.3 | 1239 | 22.4 | 18774 |
| Duquesne University (PA) | 11/1 | 71.8 | 294 | 75.6 | 5715 |
| Earlham College (IN) | 12/1 | 97.6 | 41 | 75.4 | 1825 |
| Elmira College (NY) | 11/15 | 90.0 | 50 | 74.4 | 2090 |
| Elon University (NC) | 11/1 | 75.4 | 422 | 42.3 | 9434 |
| Flagler College (FL) | 12/1 | 72.9 | 573 | 45.0 | 2368 |
| Florida Southern College | 12/1 | 98.7 | 78 | 67.3 | 2110 |
| Franklin and Marshall College (PA) | 11/15 | 70.4 | 582 | 35.9 | 5632 |
| Furman University (SC) | 11/15 | 66.4 | 639 | 57.3 | 4414 |
| George Washington University (DC) | 11/10 | 66.8 | 1159 | 37.4 | 19430 |
| Gordon College (MA) | 11/15 | 97.8 | 45 | 71.1 | 1570 |
| Grinnell College (IA) | 11/15 | 68.5 | 200 | 43.0 | 3217 |
| Hamilton College (NY) | 11/15 | 36.4 | 612 | 28.1 | 5073 |
| Hampshire College (MA) | 11/15 | 71.4 | 98 | 53.1 | 2842 |
| Hartwick College (NY) | 11/15 | 84.8 | 112 | 83.0 | 2532 |
| Harvey Mudd College (CA) | 11/15 | 34.0 | 103 | 31.1 | 2532 |
| Hillsdale College (MI) | 11/15 | 80.0 | 100 | 64.3 | 1502 |
| Hobart and William Smith Colleges (NY) | 11/15 | 68.3 | 265 | 53.7 | 4298 |
| Howard University (DC) | 11/1 | 71.2 | 1745 | 48.5 | 9750 |
| Juniata College (PA) | 12/1 | 87.0 | 92 | 69.2 | 2349 |
| Kalamazoo College (MI) | 11/10 | 77.3 | 22 | 70.3 | 2059 |
| Kenyon College (OH) | 11/15 | 55.0 | 340 | 31.3 | 4509 |
| Lafayette College (PA) | 2/15 | 56.2 | 436 | 37.2 | 6357 |
| Lawrence University (WI) | 11/15 | 94.6 | 37 | 58.8 | 2618 |
| Le Moyne College (NY) | 12/1 | 71.4 | 56 | 61.2 | 4212 |
| Lehigh University (PA) | 11/15 | 57.8 | 939 | 27.9 | 12941 |
| Lynchburg College (VA) | 11/15 | 52.2 | 205 | 67.9 | 4501 |
| Macalester College (MN) | 11/15 | 46.8 | 252 | 41.1 | 5041 |
| Marist College (NY) | 11/15 | 77.0 | 161 | 37.5 | 9198 |
| Meredith College (NC) | 10/15 | 53.8 | 143 | 69.4 | 1557 |
| Miami University--Oxford (OH) | 11/1 | 75.6 | 636 | 80.4 | 15009 |
| Moravian College (PA) | 2/1 | 77.3 | 176 | 69.7 | 2098 |
| Nazareth College (NY) | 11/15 | 91.1 | 45 | 74.5 | 2181 |
| Northwestern University (IL) | 11/1 | 39.7 | 1395 | 26.2 | 25013 |
| Ohio Wesleyan University | 12/1 | 31.1 | 61 | 64.3 | 4238 |
| Pomona College (CA) | 11/15 | 21.7 | 598 | 15.6 | 6293 |
| Presbyterian College (SC) | 11/1 | 78.6 | 56 | 68.6 | 1403 |
| Prescott College (AZ) | 12/1 | 93.8 | 16 | 76.7 | 365 |
| Purchase College--SUNY | 11/1 | 29.4 | 34 | 24.2 | 8905 |
| Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (NY) | 11/1 | 49.8 | 1288 | 44.1 | 11249 |
| Rhodes College (TN) | 11/1 | 47.9 | 140 | 49.9 | 3747 |
| Rice University (TX) | 11/1 | 34.0 | 674 | 23.0 | 9813 |
| Rider University (NJ) | 11/15 | 29.4 | 51 | 74.0 | 6829 |
| Rollins College (FL) | 11/15 | 61.5 | 156 | 53.2 | 3485 |
| Russell Sage College (NY) | 12/1 | 90.0 | 10 | 74.3 | 378 |
| Sacred Heart University (CT) | 12/1 | 84.5 | 193 | 65.1 | 7568 |
| Scripps College (CA) | 11/1 | 48.1 | 81 | 43.4 | 1931 |
| Sewanee--University of the South (TN) | 11/15 | 54.1 | 185 | 64.0 | 2488 |
| Skidmore College (NY) | 11/15 | 59.4 | 497 | 29.8 | 7316 |
| Smith College (MA) | 11/15 | 63.7 | 256 | 47.7 | 3771 |
| Southwestern University (TX) | 11/1 | 87.5 | 64 | 65.4 | 1923 |
| St. Anselm College (NH) | 11/15 | 75.9 | 79 | 69.9 | 3835 |
| St. John Fisher College (NY) | 12/1 | 62.6 | 155 | 62.4 | 3231 |
| St. Mary's College (IN) | 11/15 | 90.4 | 115 | 79.6 | 1422 |
| St. Mary's College of Maryland | 11/1 | 43.2 | 373 | 51.8 | 2723 |
| St. Olaf College (MN) | 11/15 | 92.7 | 151 | 58.9 | 3964 |
| Stetson University (FL) | 11/1 | 91.2 | 34 | 53.9 | 4110 |
| Stevens Institute of Technology (NJ) | 11/15 | 69.7 | 399 | 51.8 | 2889 |
| Stonehill College (MA) | 11/1 | 65.7 | 67 | 45.0 | 6838 |
| SUNY Institute of Technology--Utica/Rome | 11/1 | 60.0 | 35 | 38.7 | 1731 |
| SUNY--Fredonia | 11/1 | 62.1 | 66 | 51.8 | 6489 |
| SUNY--Oswego | 11/15 | 53.3 | 150 | 47.0 | 9965 |
| SUNY--Plattsburgh | 11/15 | 51.7 | 89 | 49.4 | 6909 |
| Susquehanna University (PA) | 11/15 | 82.7 | 173 | 72.6 | 2777 |
| Swarthmore College (PA) | 11/15 | 33.8 | 480 | 15.7 | 6121 |
| Sweet Briar College (VA) | 12/1 | 96.9 | 64 | 82.7 | 629 |
| Syracuse University (NY) | 11/15 | 77.4 | 826 | 52.5 | 22079 |
| Tabor College (KS) | 12/31 | 100.0 | 98 | 93.6 | 405 |
| The Citadel (SC) | 10/26 | 72.2 | 126 | 75.2 | 2024 |
| Trinity College (CT) | 11/15 | 69.3 | 417 | 41.7 | 5136 |
| Trinity University (TX) | 11/1 | 72.0 | 50 | 58.2 | 3754 |
| Union College (NY) | 11/15 | 77.1 | 327 | 39.2 | 5271 |
| University at Buffalo--SUNY | 11/1 | 70.5 | 555 | 51.9 | 19784 |
| University of Miami (FL) | 11/1 | 22.2 | 1210 | 38.6 | 21773 |
| University of Puget Sound (WA) | 11/15 | 90.2 | 132 | 65.3 | 5580 |
| University of Rochester (NY) | 11/1 | 46.7 | 583 | 42.7 | 11633 |
| Ursinus College (PA) | 1/15 | 61.9 | 197 | 54.7 | 6192 |
| Vanderbilt University (TN) | 11/1 | 36.2 | 1468 | 25.3 | 16944 |
| Vassar College (NY) | 11/15 | 38.3 | 582 | 25.0 | 7361 |
| Virginia Military Institute | 11/15 | 60.8 | 283 | 53.6 | 1600 |
| Virginia Tech | 11/1 | 54.7 | 2288 | 65.4 | 20615 |
| Wabash College (IN) | 11/15 | 74.6 | 63 | 49.1 | 1365 |
| Wagner College (NY) | 1/1 | 63.3 | 90 | 60.8 | 3012 |
| Wake Forest University (NC) | 11/15 | 50.7 | 671 | 38.4 | 9050 |
| Washington and Jefferson College (PA) | 12/1 | 50.0 | 8 | 38.3 | 6826 |
| Washington and Lee University (VA) | 11/15 | 44.4 | 428 | 16.8 | 6386 |
| Washington College (MD) | 11/1 | 92.6 | 68 | 69.0 | 3413 |
| Wellesley College (MA) | 11/1 | 51.4 | 208 | 36.0 | 4001 |
| Wells College (NY) | 12/15 | 63.2 | 19 | 63.8 | 1117 |
| Wesleyan University (CT) | 11/15 | 45.5 | 650 | 27.2 | 8250 |
| Western Carolina University (NC) | 11/15 | 65.6 | 1687 | 51.1 | 7331 |
| Wheaton College (MA) | 11/15 | 85.6 | 195 | 38.8 | 3832 |
| Whitman College (WA) | 11/15 | 74.5 | 145 | 45.8 | 3096 |
| Williams College (MA) | 11/10 | 37.4 | 605 | 17.0 | 7552 |
| Wittenberg University (OH) | 11/15 | 60.8 | 51 | 68.8 | 3344 |
| Wofford College (SC) | 11/15 | 64.1 | 587 | 58.9 | 2278 |
Reader Comments
The ED acceptance rates are not what they seem
I have nothing against ED pograms,and in fact one of my kids was admitted to his college this way. However, don't take those acceptance rates at face value. Most recruited athletes are heavily encouraged to apply ED, and legacy applicants also get more of a boost when they apply ED, so when you see that higher acceptance rate, remember a lot of those students are going to be athletes and legacies. A more accurate picture of any ED advantage would be if the colleges would publish the acceptance rate for *un-hooked* applicants. It may well not look much different than the RD acceptance rates. In any case, the percentage will be far lower than what you see from these boilerplate numbers.
Do your homework carefully - for the right school, this can help
I have a daughter who is a junior in college and went early decision. She was accepted to her first choice school and we all still really believe ED did enhance her selectivity. I also did significant verification with the school's Financial Aid Dept to verify they didn't take our home equity into their factoring of Expected Family Contribution.
There are a few new sites that have become more robust in the past year or two that I have learned of that contain data worth using if you are about to hit the ED box on the Common Application, etc.
One is CollegeData.com. Within the same, students input most all the info critical to their common ap data (including SAT II scores, AP scores, level of classes taken - or anticipated - throughout the 4 years, public / private, rank in class, weighted and non-weighted GPA, extra-curricular activities, years, leadership, awards and honors). While one still doesn't know the character traits, recommendations and essays, with hundreds and hundreds of students inputting their data as well as all schools applied to (and their responses), its not too difficult to find suitable matches to size up your application.
The other is http://www.go4ivy.com/services.asp. They charge a fee, but will tell seniors their chance of acceptance and sophomores and juniors where to focus and do more research. For about $15 per school, that's not a huge investment (if focusing on just a few).
Lies, Damned Lies, and Statistics
I've worked with elite high school students for several years, and while doing so have often been told that their counselors argue the advantages of early decision.
However, admissions officers say (and sometimes print on their website) that the standards do not vary between early and regular admission. This, of course, seems eminently sensible. Why would you want to admit an inferior candidate early rather than waiting for a better candidate in the regular admission period?
So, while the statistics offered by USNews may seem meaningful, like those which produce the seriously flawed college rankings, they are not.
It is virtually impossible to calculate the probability of success on early admission without knowing in the greatest possible detail about every individual student application. Because the pool of candidates in early admission is not identical to that in regular admission, without knowing the differences, statistics reveal nothing at all.
Early admission candidates are, for the most part, much more likely to be excellent matches for the college they have chosen. They have the scores, recommendations, and other evidence which is likely to get them admitted.
In the early admission period, the student has almost always made a very careful selection of a school that seems likely to offer admission. There is little reason to aim for a school that may be too selective, since that will almost certainly result in a deferred decision.
In the regular admission period, on the other hand, there is no reason not to apply for several schools which are desirable, but perhaps out of reach. After all, an application to the ten top schools might result in one acceptance.
This shotgun approach is normal in the regular period, and so can produce higher failure rates and/or multiple acceptances from less selective schools.
Knowing statistics, without knowing the underlying actions which produce them, leads to ignorant decision-making.
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