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Rolling Admissions

Rolling admissions is an admissions process in which universities review and make decisions on applications as they arrive, rather than waiting until a set date to review all applications simultaneously. Offers are issued on a rolling (continuous) basis throughout the application cycle, typically from autumn through spring. Once a university has filled its available seats, it may stop accepting applications or transition to a waitlist.

Rolling admissions is common at US state universities, public flagship institutions, and many Canadian universities. It differs from regular decision cycles in which all applicants are reviewed together by a set deadline, and decisions are released simultaneously (typically in March or April). The rolling model creates an implicit advantage for early applicants: as slots fill, the institution becomes more selective, and later applicants face a higher bar for admission.

Key facts

AttributeDetail
Application windowTypically opens September 1 and closes when class is full (late March to May, or earlier)
Decision timelineApplications reviewed within 2–6 weeks of submission; offers issued continuously
Advantage to early applicantsYes; applying early increases chances because more seats are available and admissions standards may be slightly lower
Common atUS state universities (California, Texas, Ohio, Michigan state systems); Canadian universities (many provincial universities)
Competitive advantageEarly application yields higher acceptance rate; waiting until March significantly reduces chances at popular programmes
Test score timingTest scores (SAT/ACT) must be received before your application is reviewed; some schools wait for scores even if you submit the application early
DepositsOnce offered and accepted, you typically have 30–60 days to submit a deposit to hold your place
YieldUniversities manage their acceptance rate to hit target yield; rolling admissions allows them to adjust selectivity as they see applicant demand
WithdrawalYou can withdraw your acceptance after submitting a deposit, but deposits are typically non-refundable

How it works

  1. Apply early — Submit your complete application (essays, test scores, transcripts, recommendation letters) as soon as possible after applications open (early September typical).
  2. Application reviewed — University reviews your application within 2–6 weeks of receipt; they are not waiting for the deadline.
  3. Decision issued — You receive an acceptance, waitlist, or rejection decision via email or portal.
  4. Respond promptly — Once offered, you typically have 30–60 days to submit a deposit (usually CAD $500–$1,000 or USD $300–$500) to confirm your intent to enrol.
  5. Deposit holds place — Your deposit secures your place in the admitted class; if you decide to attend a different school, your deposit is typically non-refundable.
  6. Manage multiple acceptances — If you are accepted to multiple schools, you can hold deposits at a few while waiting for other decisions; ultimately, you must commit to one university by May 1 (in the US) or June 1 (in Canada).
  7. Class fills — Once the university has received and accepted enough students to fill their target class (approximately May 1 in the US), they may stop accepting applications, transition all remaining applicants to waitlist, or close applications.

What reviewers look for

Rolling admissions use the same criteria as regular decision, but the application is evaluated on an expedited timeline:

Because spots are filling as decisions are made, each application is evaluated relatively quickly (2–6 weeks); reviews may be less extensive than regular decision. However, the academic bar may actually be lower early in the cycle when more spaces are available, making early application strategically advantageous.

Common mistakes

Typical timeline

TimelineAction
AugustApplications open; prepare final essays and ensure test scores are registered for November/December testing
September 1 onwardsSubmit applications immediately upon opening; do not wait. Early submission is your strongest advantage.
September–OctoberUniversities begin reviewing applications; decisions released (2–6 weeks after receipt typical); early acceptances arrive
October–NovemberReceive deposit deadline (typically 30–60 days from offer); deposit to confirm place; continue applying to other rolling admissions schools if needed
November–DecemberApply to additional rolling admissions schools if not yet accepted to top choice; continue hearing from schools; pay deposits strategically
December–FebruaryFinal deposits due for some schools; university announces if class is full and stops accepting applications
March–MayLate applications still possible if school has spaces; increasingly unlikely at this point; selectivity increases as class fills
May 1US national deadline to commit to one school; deposits at other schools are forfeited (financial loss); Canadian equivalent June 1

Sub-variants or sibling concepts

Primary sources

Last updated: 2026-04-17.


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