Early decision


Early decision or early acceptance is a common policy used in college admissions in the United States for admitting freshmen to undergraduate programs. It is used to indicate to the university or college that the candidate considers that institution to be his or her top choice.
Some colleges offer early admission plans known as Early Decision or Early Action, and some offer both. Others accept applications in a relatively long window known as rolling admission. ED differs from EA in that it constitutes a binding commitment to enroll; that is, if offered admission under an ED program, and the financial aid offered by the school is acceptable, the candidate must withdraw all other applications to other institutions and enroll at that institution. Early action is not binding, so a student admitted to a school early action could choose not to enroll in that school. Furthermore, ED programs require applicants to file only one ED application, while, depending on the institution, EA programs may be restrictive or non-restrictive and allow candidates to apply to more than one institution.
In the case of certain colleges with established competitor institutions, such as schools in the Ivy League, some college counselors speculate that ED can serve to mitigate the problem of students failing to matriculate to a particular school in favor of a 'superior' one. For example, one college might only admit a candidate deemed qualified for another, 'superior' college under ED, for in regular decision, should that student be admitted to the 'superior' competitor, that student would be unlikely to attend the college that originally offered the ED admission.

Significance

Schools which offer an ED admission plan look to benefit from a near certainty that the admitted applicant will attend. As a result, the admission yield is increased by admitting more students at the ED stage. The timing of the ED process also helps admissions offices spread the work of sifting through applications throughout more of the school year. A number of schools which had EA plans have recently added ED plans to EA, or have switched to ED and jettisoned EA.
Many schools offering ED regularly fill over 50% of their class through ED admits. The implication is that there will be fewer places available to the Regular Decision applicant pool. Universities with half of their class filled by ED admits include Penn, Duke, Northwestern, Vanderbilt, WUSTL, Tufts and NYU. Many liberal arts colleges also fill around half their class during the ED process.
In recent years, there has been a marked trend in the number of ED applicants, and in the proportion of the class being admitted via the ED process. As of 2019–20, almost every highly selective college admits more students through ED than it did a decade ago, but among them, there has been a remarkable shift in the admission strategy of a few schools resulting in as much as 60% of the class being selected from the ED pool compared to 30–35% only a few years ago.

Early decision Admissions, Admit Rates and Trends 2012-2020

Admit rates for the ED pool are generally much higher than the overall admit rate for a college and even higher still than the admit rate for the Regular Decision pool. Most institutions include data on the number of ED applicants and ED admits in their annual Common Data Set, and trends for an individual institution can be readily complied. At the most competitive schools, the number of ED applicants has increased at a more rapid pace than Regular Decision applicants. Although the ED admit rate has declined at these schools in recent years, the absolute number of ED admits has managed to increase while the absolute number of Regular Decision admits has fallen rapidly and all the admit rates have also fallen.
Freshman
Year
ED Apps
ED Admits
ED Admit
Rate
Total
Enrollment
Enrollment
filled by
ED Admits
Total Apps
Total Admits
Overall Admit
Rate
RD Apps
RD Admits
RD Admit
Rate
/
2012-1338,84011,47129.5%32,34935.5%441,41491,03420.6%402,57479,56319.8%
2013-1441,66811,96528.7%32,24537.1%460,12589,20019.4%418,45777,23518.5%
2014-1544,53512,88728.9%33,32538.7%489,51890,15318.4%444,98377,26617.4%
2015-1648,10413,28127.6%33,15040.1%507,08289,64417.7%458,97876,36316.6%
2016-1751,46614,00327.2%33,54641.7%527,95688,37616.7%476,49074,37315.6%
2017-1855,12814,80026.8%33,70243.9%545,98584,27115.4%490,85769,47114.2%
2018-1962,59816,32826.1%33,84348.2%596,08077,61513.0%533,48261,28711.5%
2019-20 71,88216,94023.6%32,79251.7%623,29471,81811.5%551,41254,87810.0%

A few schools have seen ED applicants more than double in the 2012-2019 period, including Rice, Emory, NYU, and Boston University. The number of ED admits has also doubled at NYU and Boston University over this period, and although the increase of ED admits at other schools has been less dramatic, that increase has nonetheless reduced the number of RD admits meaningfully because half the class or more is now being filled by ED admits. At WUSTL and NYU, about 60% of the class is now taken up at the ED stage.
A similar trend exists across the most competitive liberal arts colleges in Early Decision application and admission numbers, with over 50% of the class being filled at these schools from ED admits compared to only about 44% in 2012-13. Notably, the absolute number of ED admits has increased, even though the number of RD admits, the RD admit rate, the ED admit rate and the overall admit rate have all gone down.
Freshman
Year
ED Apps
ED Admits
ED Admit
Rate
Total
Enrollment
Enrollment
filled by
ED Admits
Total Apps
Total Admits
Overall Admit
Rate
RD Apps
RD Admits
RD Admit
Rate
/
2012-1313,0184,98838.3%11,27544.2%137,86429,51721.4%124,84624,52919.6%
2013-1413,9085,17537.2%11,29945.8%141,24628,82020.4%127,33823,64518.6%
2014-1514,2145,11736.0%11,38744.9%143,62529,34620.4%129,41124,22918.7%
2015-1615,2335,35535.2%11,49346.6%153,96429,85319.4%138,73124,49817.7%
2016-1715,1005,62237.2%11,46749.0%157,98829,18818.5%142,88823,56616.5%
2017-1816,2475,85036.0%11,54050.7%166,96729,16817.5%150,72023,31815.5%
2018-1917,4965,97234.1%11,80850.6%184,06629,58516.1%166,57023,61314.2%
2019-20 18,1056,04433.4%11,69351.7%195,74028,60714.6%177,63522,56312.7%

Features

Typically, a candidate who has applied early decision can receive one of three outcomes in December. He or she may be admitted, in which case they are bound to attend the school which admitted them; rejected, in which case they will not be able to attend the school; or deferred, in which case they will be reconsidered for admission with the second round of early decision applications or with the regular decision pool and notified later with their final decision. Generally when an applicant is deferred he or she is released from their binding early decision agreement.

Advantages of early decision

Admission rates for "early" applicants tend to be higher than the overall admission rates for the institution; this is particularly true of the most selective colleges. This is usually attributed to three factors: first, candidates who apply "early" can only present colleges with their transcripts until the end of junior year of high school and therefore must be particularly strong applicants with very persuasive transcripts; second, candidates who apply "early" have dedicated themselves to an institution and are more likely to match the institution's admission standards; third, student athletes sometimes apply "early" to their top choice school to demonstrate their commitment to a college varsity coach who, in turn, can push their applications in the admissions process. Some advisors suggest that early decision is the best choice for students who have clearly settled on one particular college.

Disadvantages of early decision

surrounds early decision. Critics of the program think that binding an applicant, typically seventeen or eighteen years old, to a single institution is unnecessarily restrictive. Furthermore, candidates for financial aid are, if admitted under early decision, unable to compare financial aid offers from different colleges. It was in answer to these criticisms that, starting in 2004, Yale and Stanford switched from early decision to single-choice early action. Harvard, Princeton, and the University of Virginia announced in the Fall of 2006 that they would no longer offer Early Action or Early Decision programs, which they claim favor the affluent, and moved to a single deadline instead. The University of Florida followed suit the following year. However, the University of Virginia, followed by both Harvard and Princeton reinstated their single-choice, early action program to promote diversity and provide opportunities for students looking for such an option in 2011.