Applying to college can be stressful, especially when you are also trying to manage your AP® homework, extracurricular activities, and after school job at the same time. Because of this, it is becoming increasingly popular for students to begin preparing their college applications during the summer before their senior year. This way, they have more time to focus on their studies and finish strong during the school year.
When you have your applications completed early in the fall semester, you might as well submit them early as well, right? Not so fast! There are a couple of types of early admission programsto choose from, and each kind has a different set of rules attached. But don’t worry; we are here to tell you all about them.
This article will tell you everything you need to know about early action admission. If you are interested in learning about early decision, you should click here instead.
What is Early Action?
Early action admissions programs allow students to submit their applications for review well before the regular decision deadline. If you are interested in applying to a school via early action, you will need to ensure that your application is ready to go by the end of October. Although deadlines vary from school to school, the earliest you will need to submit your application is November 1st, while the second wave of deadlines has usually passed by November 15th.
After you submit your application, you will hear back from your school of choice within 6-8 weeks. Schools have been known to release early action admissions decisions as early as New Year’s Day, while others have waited until the middle of February to notify their students. Either way, you will still have less time to wait, as the notification date for most regular admissions applicants is not until April 1st.
When you receive your acceptance, you do not have to respond right away. This is because early action is not a binding agreement. We will touch on this more later, but it basically means that you have until May 1st (known as National College Decision Day) to accept or reject your offer of admission.
If your early action application is rejected, it can be disappointing, but you do not need to worry. This is because you should have applied to multiple schools early action, and even a few during the regular admissions cycle. You will need to do this to avoid “putting all your eggs in one basket,” as they say. Regular admission deadlines begin at the end of December and continue through early February. It is very likely that you will not hear back from your early action school before other applications are due. To avoid being left without options, make sure you apply to multiple schools.
The final option that you can receive when you apply early action is deference. This means that your application has not been evaluated and has instead been pushed through to be reviewed in the general admissions pool. If this happens to you, it is time to demonstrate your level of interest in the school. If you have not scheduled an interview, you should do so. It might also be worth it to call the admissions office and ask if you should send any supplementary materials to strengthen your candidacy.
Is Early Action Binding?
This most important thing to remember about applying early action is that it is not a binding agreement. You can use it to apply to a school or two, apply to a few more via regular decision, and turn down the early action offers if you get a better deal later on.
The ability to say no is what makes early action an extremely popular option, especially for students who need to be able to compare financial aid packages before committing to a particular school.
There is a still one caveat: sometimes schools only offer what are known as Single Choice Early Action programs, known as SCEA for short. This means that if you apply to their early action program, you are not allowed to apply for any others. The only schools that currently hold this policy are Harvard, Princeton, Stanford, and Yale.
Why Apply Early?
The benefits of early action are plentiful. Like we mentioned, applying early can relieve a lot of stress. This is because you won’t have to worry about applying to college while you are also trying to focus on successfully completing your senior year, but this is only if you plan well. It is nearly impossible to cobble together a convincing college application in a week or two – so you can’t procrastinate on your early action application!
Applying early action also gives your more time to get ready for college! If you are admitted through an early action program and decide to accept your place, you can at least 2 more months than your regular decision classmates to design your dorm room, consider your major, apply for school-specific scholarships, and more.
You might have also heard that there is a higher acceptance rate among early action applicants. While this is typically true, it has less to do with the competitiveness of the application pool and more to do with the types of students that are applying. The reason that early action acceptance rates are higher is because the people who apply early action have done their research and know that a particular school is a good match for them.
Complete list of early action schools
All of us here at Albert.io are interested in making your life as easy as possible. That’s why we scoured the Internet to find out which schools accept early action applications, so you don’t have to. You will find them all listed by state below. Is your favorite school on the list?
Alabama |
Auburn University |
Birmingham-Southern College |
Oakwood University |
Arkansas |
Arkansas Tech University |
Harding University |
Hendrix College |
Lyon College |
University of Arkansas |
California |
Azusa Pacific University |
Biola University |
California Baptist University |
California Institute of Technology |
California Lutheran University |
California State University Sacramento |
California State University San Bernardino |
Chapman University |
Concordia University Irvine |
Loyola Marymount University |
Master’s College |
Menlo College |
Mills College |
Notre Dame de Namur University |
Point Loma Nazarene University |
Saint Mary’s College of California |
Santa Clara University |
Soka University of America |
Stanford University |
University of Redlands |
University of San Francisco |
University of the Pacific |
Vanguard University of Southern California |
Westmont College |
Whittier College |
Colorado |
Colorado College |
Colorado State University |
Fort Lewis College |
University of Colorado Boulder |
University of Denver |
Connecticut |
Fairfield University |
United States Coast Guard Academy |
University of New Haven |
Yale University |
Washington, DC |
Catholic University of America |
Georgetown University |
Howard University |
Trinity Washington University |
Florida |
Eckerd College |
Palm Beach Atlantic University |
University of Miami |
University of Tampa |
Webber International University |
Georgia |
Agnes Scott College |
Emmanuel College |
Georgia College and State University |
Georgia Institute of Technology |
Georgia State University |
LaGrange College |
Mercer University |
Morehouse College |
Oglethorpe University |
Spelman College |
University of Georgia |
Wesleyan College |
Iowa |
Coe College |
Cornell College |
Wartburg College |
Idaho |
College of Idaho |
Northwest Nazarene University |
Illinois |
DePaul University |
Illinois College |
Illinois Institute of Technology |
Illinois Wesleyan University |
Knox College |
Lake Forest College |
School of the Art Institute of Chicago |
University of Chicago |
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign |
Wheaton College |
Indiana |
Butler University |
DePauw University |
Earlham College |
Grace College |
Hanover College |
Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology |
Taylor University |
University of Evansville |
University of Notre Dame |
Wabash College |
Kentucky |
Bellarmine University |
Centre College |
Georgetown College |
Transylvania University |
Louisiana |
Centenary College of Louisiana |
Southern University at New Orleans |
Tulane University |
Xavier University of Louisiana |
Massachusetts |
Assumption College |
Babson College |
Bay Path College |
Becker College |
Bentley University |
Berklee College of Music |
Boston College |
Bridgewater State University |
Clark University |
Curry College |
Emerson College |
Framingham State University |
Gordon College |
Hampshire College |
Harvard College |
Hellenic College |
Lasell College |
Lesley University |
Massachusetts College of Art and Design |
Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts |
Massachusetts College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences |
Massachusetts Institute of Technology |
Massachusetts Maritime Academy |
Merrimack College |
Montserrat College of Art |
Northeastern University |
Regis College |
Salem State University |
Simmons College |
Stonehill College |
Suffolk University |
University of Massachusetts Amherst |
University of Massachusetts Dartmouth |
University of Massachusetts Lowell |
Wheaton College |
Wheelock College |
Worcester Polytechnic Institute |
Maryland |
Goucher College |
Hood College |
Loyola University Maryland |
McDaniel College |
Mount St. Mary’s University |
Notre Dame of Maryland University |
Salisbury University |
St. John’s College |
United States Naval Academy |
University of Maryland |
University of Maryland Baltimore County |
Washington College |
Maine |
St. Joseph’s College of Maine |
Thomas College |
Unity College |
University of Maine |
University of Maine at Farmington |
University of Maine at Machias |
University of New England |
Michigan |
Albion College |
Central Michigan University |
Hillsdale College |
Kalamazoo College |
Michigan State University |
University of Michigan |
Minnesota |
Bemidji State University |
College of Saint Benedict |
GustavusAdolphus College |
Hamline University |
Minneapolis College of Art and Design |
Saint John’s University |
Mississippi |
Millsaps College |
Montana |
Rocky Mountain College |
North Carolina |
Bennett College |
Elon University |
Fayetteville State University |
Greensboro College |
Guilford College |
High Point University |
Lees-McRae College |
Lenoir-Rhyne University |
North Carolina State University |
University of North Carolina at Asheville |
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill |
University of North Carolina at Charlotte |
University of North Carolina at Wilmington |
Western Carolina University |
William Peace University |
North Dakota |
Sanford College of Nursing |
New Hampshire |
Colby-Sawyer College |
Saint Anselm College |
Southern New Hampshire University |
University of New Hampshire |
New Jersey |
Bloomfield College |
Caldwell University |
Georgian Court University |
Monmouth University |
Princeton University |
Ramapo College of New Jersey |
Rider University |
Saint Peter’s University |
Seton Hall University |
William Paterson University |
New Mexico |
St. John’s College |
Nevada |
Sierra Nevada College |
New York |
Adelphi University |
Bard College |
Binghamton University |
College of Mount St. Vincent |
College of St. Rose |
Columbia University, School of General Studies |
Concordia College New York |
Dowling College |
Fordham University |
Hofstra University |
Houghton College |
Iona College |
Ithaca College |
Le Moyne College |
LIM College |
Marist College |
Miami University |
Molloy College |
Monroe College |
Nazareth College |
New York Institute of Technology< |
Pace University |
Pratt Institute |
Purchase College (State University of New York at Purchase) |
Siena College |
State University of New York at New Paltz |
State University of New York College at Cortland |
State University of New York College at Oneonta |
State University of New York Institute of Technology |
The King’s College |
University at Albany |
Wells College |
Ohio |
Case Western Reserve University |
Cleveland Institute of Art |
Cleveland State University |
College of Wooster |
Columbus College of Art and Design |
John Carroll University |
Ohio Wesleyan University |
University of Akron |
University of Dayton |
Wittenberg University |
Oklahoma |
University of Tulsa |
Oregon |
Eastern Oregon University |
George Fox University |
Lewis & Clark College |
Linfield College |
Oregon State University |
University of Oregon |
Willamette University |
Pennsylvania |
Bloomsburg University of Pennsylvania |
Dickinson College |
Duquesne University |
Juniata College |
La Salle University |
Saint Joseph’s University |
Shippensburg University of Pennsylvania |
Susquehanna University |
University of Scranton |
Ursinus College |
Villanova University |
Washington & Jefferson College |
Rhode Island |
Bryant University |
Roger Williams University |
Salve Regina University |
University of Rhode Island |
South Carolina |
College of Charleston |
Erskine College |
Furman University |
Presbyterian College |
University of South Carolina |
Wofford College |
Tennessee |
Bryan College |
LeMoyne-Owen College |
Rhodes College |
Sewanee: University of the South |
Union University |
Texas |
Abilene Christian University |
Austin College |
Baylor University |
Hardin-Simmons University |
Southern Methodist University |
Southwestern University |
Tarleton State University |
Texas Christian University |
Trinity University |
University of Dallas |
University of St. Thomas |
Virginia |
Christendom College |
Christopher Newport University |
Emory & Henry College |
Hampden-Sydney College |
Hampton University |
Hollins University |
James Madison University |
Longwood University |
Old Dominion University |
Patrick Henry College |
Radford University |
Randolph College |
Randolph-Macon College |
University of Mary Washington |
University of Virginia |
University of Virginia’s College at Wise |
Vermont |
Bennington College |
Johnson State College |
Marlboro College |
Saint Michael’s College |
Sterling College |
University of Vermont |
Washington |
Gonzaga University |
Northwest University |
Seattle Pacific University |
Seattle University |
Whitworth University |
Wisconsin |
Carthage College |
Lawrence University |
West Virginia |
Shepherd University |
Ohio Valley University |
A Quick Review
Here are a few quick things to keep in mind if you are considering applying early action:
- Early action applications are typically due in early November.
- Early action applications are not binding.
- You should still apply to a few schools via regular decision.
- You don’t have to send in your reply until May 1st.
There you go! Now you are an early action expert.
Are you ready for your exams?
Looking for practice questions?
Check out our other articles on College Admissions.
You can also find thousands of practice questions on Albert.io. Albert.io lets you customize your learning experience to target practice where you need the most help. We’ll give you challenging practice questions to help you achieve mastery of the AP, SAT®, ACT®, and other major exams.
Start practicing here.
Are you a teacher or administrator interested in boosting student outcomes?
Learn more about our school licenses here.