Early Decision and Early Action

Early decision (ED) and early action (EA) plans can be beneficial to students who have thought through their college options carefully and have a clear preference for one institution.

Counselors need to make sure that students understand the key distinction between the two plans:

Approximately 450 colleges have early decision or early action plans, and some have both. Some colleges offer a nonbinding option called single-choice early action, under which applicants may not apply ED or EA to any other college.

ED plans have come under fire as unfair to students from families with low incomes, since they do not have the opportunity to compare financial aid offers. This may give an unfair advantage to applicants from families who have more financial resources.

ED Applicants

EA Applicants

Apply Early

A student should apply early to an ED or EA plan if the student:

The Benefits of Applying Early

For a student who has a definite first-choice college, applying early has many benefits:

The Drawbacks of Applying Early

Applying Early and the Chance of Acceptance

Many students believe applying early means competing with fewer applicants and increasing their chances for acceptance. This is not always true. Colleges vary in the proportion of the class admitted early and in the percentage of early applicants they admit.

Higher admission rates for ED applicants may correlate to stronger profiles among candidates choosing ED. Students should ask the admission office whether their institution's admission standards differ between ED and regular applicants, and then assess whether applying early makes sense given their own profile.

The Ethics of Applying Early Decision

The Common Application and some colleges' application forms require the student applying under early decision, as well as the parent and counselor, to sign an ED agreement form spelling out the plan's conditions.

Make it clear in your school handbook and at college planning events that your policy for early-decision applications is to send the student's final transcript to one college only: anything else is unethical.

Keep in Mind

Print out and share the Early Decision and Early Action Calendar with students and parents to be sure they are aware of all the required steps for applying early.