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How Many Should You Apply To?
How Many Can You Apply To?
Personal Factors To Consider
Expert Tips & Insights
When To Apply to Fewer Colleges
Choosing the Right Colleges
Managing Expectations
Deciding how many colleges to apply to is an important step in the application process. Many experts recommend applying to 8 to 12 schools with differing levels of selectivity, but general guidelines offer only a starting point. To maximize your chances of acceptance and avoid unnecessary stress, it's best to take into account your applicant profile, your individual goals and interests, and the application strategies that will impact how many schools to apply to. Fortunately, we have Crimson Education strategist Brice Lee on deck for insight. Brice explains exactly how to determine the ideal number of schools to apply to and shares many of the strategies he uses to help Crimson students boost their chances for admission by 7x compared to other applicants.
When you’re building a list of colleges to apply to, one important step is deciding how many schools you should apply to — and there is no one-size-fits-all answer. It’s important to weigh a variety of factors.
Casting a wider net may be well worth the time and money for some students, but for others applying to far fewer schools may make perfect sense.
For these reasons I’m going to walk you through how to decide how many schools to put on your list, based on different kinds of circumstances, strategies, and interests.
But before we jump in, let’s start with the bigger questions I get from most of my students and review some of the general tips and guidelines many experts agree on:
Well... I guess you can apply to as many colleges as you want, but there are limits, don't you think?
You certainly need to consider how much time and resources you have for the process.
And, it's important to remember that even though uniform applications are out there and can dramatically streamline the process, they also have significant limits and limiting factors!
Application | Limit |
---|---|
Common Application (US) | 20 universities |
Coalition Application (US) | No limit |
UCAS (UK) | 5 universities |
These schools — all popular with Crimson Education students — are among the colleges that do not accept the Common App:
MIT
Georgetown
University of California (all campuses)
University of Texas at Austin
Alongside these general guidelines, there are important personal and strategic factors you need to consider when deciding how many colleges to apply to.
These factors include:
Once I review with students factors like these, I may recommend one student apply to only 8 schools or less, but advise another student to apply to 12 or more, or as many as 16 to 20+ schools, it really can depend!
It’s critical to consider how competitive your applicant profile is overall when deciding how many schools to apply to, and for categorizing schools as safety, target, or reach schools — ensuring how you categorize each school on your list corresponds to your own applicant strengths and weaknesses, and making sure you’ve got a good number of schools in your target and safety ranges as a backup, in case your first-choice schools don’t work out.
International students tend to face more of an uphill climb at top US and UK schools, compared to domestic applicants. Therefore, I often encourage international students to apply to a larger number of schools to offset this geographical disadvantage.
Some majors are far more competitive than others during different periods of innovation or job demand. If you’re pursuing a more popular or “crowded” major, you'll probably want to put more schools on your college list and factor in an added degree of competition when you categorize your safety, target, and reach schools.
College | Overall Acceptance Rate | CS Major Acceptance Rate | Difference |
---|---|---|---|
University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign | 60% | 24% | –36% |
University of Texas at Austin | 30% | 9% | –21% |
University of Washington, Seattle | 40% | 9% | –31% |
University of California, Berkeley | 18% | 5% | –13% |
Carnegie Mellon | 17% | 7% | –10% |
If you're applying to study a more competitive major, you may want to cast a wider net and include more safety schools...
Examples of the most competitive majors include:
Computer science / Computer engineering
Business
Psychology
Biology
Medicine
Managing the workload of completing applications and weighing the monetary costs associated with application fees are also important considerations for most students. As you put together your list, you’ll want to think about some general cost-benefit factors for deciding how many schools you can realistically put on your list and which schools are truly worth keeping on your list (or not).
In addition to considering these many personal factors, think about how your application planning and strategies may influence how many colleges you should apply to.
Since many of your strategic choices overlap with personal and school factors, and possibly admissions dynamics and trends as well, getting one-on-one counseling from an experienced college admissions counselor can be helpful.
That said, I can offer you some insights tailored to different scenarios or circumstances. Hopefully those that resonate with your own circumstances will help you decide what's the right number of schools you yourself should apply to.
In addition to asking how many schools you should apply to, there's the more nuanced question: how many schools should I apply to early action?
Obviously, applying early action or early decision raises the bar in terms of meeting application deadlines, so it’s important to be realistic about whether applying early is practical in your circumstances or not. That said, applying early to certain schools — often highly selective ones — can give you quite a boost, statistically, in terms of facing better acceptance rates. Therefore, research which schools on your list offer a significant acceptance rate advantage for early applicants and consider applying to as many of them as possible in the early round.
Another big benefit of early action is getting notified early of the decision. How does this impact how many schools you'll apply to? Well, if you’re admitted to one or more target or reach schools early, you no longer have to apply to any of your safety schools, and only to additional target or reach schools if you want to — depending on your remaining options and preferences.
When you have a strong interest in getting into schools that are very selective, even for top students, there's only so much you can do to make your application stand out. However, you can also try to boost your odds for success statistically as well by applying to a greater number of top schools — what I call the X Factor, because it’s an advantage I have calculated mathematically so to speak (yes, as a formula!).
While applying to more schools can improve your odds in quantifiable terms, you still need to factor in the work and costs of submitting so many applications. If you really want to pursue this strategy, it's likely to mean applying to more schools overall, as many as 16 to 20+ colleges when you include your safety, target, and reach schools, in order to increase your chances of admission to at least one of your reach or hard reach schools.
In the end, you may get into only one reach or hard reach school, but if you had only applied to three selective schools instead of ten or more, that one very selective school that accepted you may have never been on your list!
Pros | Cons |
---|---|
Statistically increase your odds of getting into at least one reach or hard reach school | You have to research more schools and it takes more time, energy, and money to submit applications |
More opportunities to get into more schools, giving you a chance to compare financial aid offers and other respective benefits of each school | Many more supplemental essays to write |
Geographically, you're likely to have more options to choose from | Even if the strategy does help get you into one of the many reach schools you applied to, if that reach school isn't one of your top choices, you may wonder if the extra work was worth it |
A foundational strategy for everyone’s list is to be sure to apply to least two, three, or even four safety schools — schools where your odds for getting accepted are 75% or higher — ensuring you have put an adequate safety net in place in case your applications to the more selective schools don’t get you in.
Remember that even a safety school might reject your application unexpectedly, so I generally advise students to apply to three safety schools minimum. And also remember — if you get accepted to any top-choice schools during the early action rounds, you may be notified early enough that you never have to bother applying to these safety schools during the regular decision round!
As you consider the advice I’ve shared, you can see that most students are going to want to create a college list with between 9 to 16 schools, total, and students who really want to boost their X-Factor are typically going to apply to 16 to 20+ schools, balanced across a range:
6–8 Reach Schools
4–6 Target Schools
2–4 Safety Schools
It most cases, if you really only need to apply to a smaller number of colleges, common sense will make this apparent.
Times when a student really does not need to apply to lots of colleges can include:
We’ve talked a lot about how many schools to apply to. But this assumes listing not just any colleges but ones you’ll be excited to attend — with, yes, even your safety schools having adequate academic rigor for your academic profile along with any other features important to you personally — such as geographic features, school size, or core values — features that make all of your listed schools a strong match for you.
Taking stock of your own profile, researching and categorizing schools, and finding and selecting the best schools before you’ll ever know the outcome can take an emotional toll… It’s a process that is going to take you down multiple rabbit holes too — introspecting on your own goals and interests, researching school profiles, coordinating college visits… Phew… It’s a lot. How will you keep your sanity!?
Here are some practical tips I share with Crimson students to help them manage their expectations as they decide how many schools to apply to:
As you decide which schools and how many to apply to, not all schools are equal when it comes to the time and energy needed to apply...
Which schools accept the common app vs. requiring a unique application?
How many supplemental essays are required by different schools you’re considering?
Do the essay prompts overlap with essay prompts you’re writing about for other schools you're planning to apply to?
You asked “how many colleges should I apply to?” You now know the answer will depend on your individual circumstances. But you should congratulate yourself — by taking the time to go through all the expert advice I’ve just shared, you’re leagues ahead of other students.
I’ve certainly covered lots of different scenarios too, with some nuanced tips and insights that go beyond the general information you find elsewhere online, so you can make decisions aligned with your individual circumstances, in the same way Crimson Education emphasizes a personalized approach to admissions counseling.
If you want to fine tune your list and your overall strategy further, consult with Crimson experts. Our counselors have some big advantages they can put to work for applicants, with expert colleagues around the world and lots of admissions experience and data to draw on. All of this helps us boost students’ chances for admissions by 7x compared to other applicants.
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