Early Decision vs. Early Action: What DC-Area Families Need to Know

Every fall, families across Washington, DC, Northern Virginia, and Maryland face one of the most consequential decisions in the college application process: should my student apply Early Decision, Early Action, or Regular Decision?

The choice matters more than most families realize. Used strategically, early application programs can meaningfully improve your student's odds of admission. Used carelessly, they can close off better options or create real financial risk.

What Is Early Decision?

Early Decision (ED) is a binding commitment. Your student applies by an early deadline — typically November 1 or November 15 — and agrees in advance to attend that school if accepted. If you receive an offer, you withdraw all other applications and enroll.

The upside: acceptance rates at most schools are significantly higher during the ED round than during Regular Decision. At many competitive universities, ED acceptance rates can be 1.5 to 2 times higher than RD rates.

The downside: you're committing before you've seen your financial aid package. If the school doesn't meet your need — or the merit aid offer falls short — you can withdraw under demonstrated financial hardship, but the process is uncomfortable and not always straightforward.

ED is best for students who:

  • Have a clear first-choice school and genuinely would attend regardless of where else they were admitted
  • Have done extensive research (visited, spoken with students and faculty) and feel confident in their choice
  • Come from families whose finances are strong enough to attend regardless of aid, or who are confident the school meets their demonstrated need

What Is Early Action?

Early Action (EA) is non-binding. Your student applies early, hears back early, and keeps their options open. You can accept or decline by the universal May 1 deadline.

Regular Early Action allows students to apply EA to multiple schools simultaneously. Restrictive Early Action (REA) — also called Single-Choice Early Action — prohibits applying ED or EA to other private universities in the same cycle. Harvard, Yale, Princeton, Stanford, and Georgetown use REA. Students can still apply to public schools with regular EA.

EA is best for students who:

  • Are ready with a strong application by November
  • Want the psychological benefit of hearing early
  • Have multiple schools they'd genuinely be happy to attend and want to compare offers

The Strategic Question: Which Should Your Student Use?

Here are the key questions families in Washington, DC, Northern Virginia, and Maryland should work through:

Is there a genuine first-choice school? Not a school your student thinks sounds impressive — one they've visited, researched deeply, and would genuinely choose over every other option. If yes, and if the family can manage the financial commitment, ED is worth serious consideration.

What does your financial situation look like? If your family qualifies for significant need-based aid, ED is higher risk unless you're confident the school meets 100% of demonstrated need. If you're a strong merit scholarship candidate, you need to compare offers — which means not binding yourself in ED.

Is the application actually ready by November? A strong application submitted in November beats a weaker one submitted earlier. If your student's essays, recommendations, and activities list aren't genuinely strong by the early deadline, waiting for RD is often the smarter play.

A Decision Matrix for Washington, DC Area Families

SituationRecommended Approach
Strong first choice, confident financesEarly Decision
Strong first choice, need-based aid concernsConsult with counselor before deciding
Top choice is Harvard, Yale, Princeton, StanfordRestrictive Early Action
No clear first choice, want to compare offersEarly Action at 1–2 schools + RD elsewhere
Application not ready by NovemberRegular Decision
Strong merit scholarship candidateEarly Action or RD (keep options open)

The Bottom Line

Early application programs are a real strategic tool — not just a way to get the stress over with sooner. Used thoughtfully, they can make a meaningful difference in where your student lands.

The critical mistake families make is applying ED without doing the financial analysis first, or applying just because it's a "dream school" based on name recognition rather than genuine fit.

If you're unsure which approach is right for your student's specific situation — their profile, your finances, and your priorities — that's exactly the kind of individualized analysis INSIGHTS is built to provide.

Ready to build your student's application strategy? Contact Dr. Bass at INSIGHTS to discuss your family's options.

Dr. Jay Bass is the founder of INSIGHTS College Planning & Advising in Falls Church, Virginia. He has 25+ years of experience helping students throughout Washington, DC, Northern Virginia, and Maryland gain admission to their top-choice colleges.


Further Reading

How to Build a College List: The Balanced Approach That Actually Gets Students In

Building a college list is one of the most important — and most mishandled — parts of the application process. Get it right and your student applies with confidence, has real options in April, and lands somewhere they'll thrive. Get it wrong and you're either scrambling after disappointing results or committed to a school that was never truly the right fit.

After 25 years of guiding families in Washington, DC, Northern Virginia, and Maryland through this process, I've seen the same mistakes made again and again. Here's how to build a list that actually works.

The Core Framework: Safety, Match, Reach

Most families have heard of this framework. Fewer actually apply it correctly.

Reach schools are schools where your student's academic profile falls below the middle 50% of admitted students, but where they have a genuine reason to apply. The honest truth is that reach schools are a real long shot even for strong students. No one should count on a reach.

Match schools are where the real strategy lives. These are schools where your student's profile falls solidly within the admitted range. If your student is competitive, match schools should accept them. That's the whole point.

Safety schools are schools where your student's profile is clearly above the typical admit — and where the student would genuinely be happy to attend. A safety school you wouldn't actually go to isn't a safety. It's a wasted application.

How Many Schools Should Be on the List?

For most students: 8 to 12 schools, with the majority being matches. More than 12 and you're spreading your student too thin. Fewer than 8 and you're not giving yourself enough optionality.

What Makes a School a Good Match?

  • Academic fit — Does the school offer strong programs in your student's area of interest?
  • Size and setting — A student who thrives in small seminar-style classes will be miserable at a 50,000-student state flagship.
  • Campus culture — How students approach academics, extracurricular opportunities, the residential environment.
  • Geographic range — Having schools across different states gives you more optionality and can provide financial leverage.
  • Financial reality — A school that's technically affordable on paper but leaves your family stretched isn't a good match.

The DC Metro Area Landscape

For families in Washington, DC, Northern Virginia, and Maryland, a few things are worth noting:

University of Virginia is highly competitive for in-state Virginia applicants despite the in-state advantage. Families from Maryland and DC should treat UVA as a reach. Even Virginia residents with a 3.9 GPA and 1450 SAT are not guaranteed admission. UVA belongs on most strong students' lists — but as a match-to-reach, never a safety.

University of Maryland is the flagship public university for Maryland residents and a strong option across many disciplines. It's more accessible for Maryland families than UVA is for Virginia families, but selective programs (engineering, business, computer science) are increasingly competitive.

Virginia Tech is increasingly selective, particularly for engineering and business. Students need to know the major-specific admit rates.

William & Mary offers a strong academic environment with slightly more accessible admissions than UVA. It's undervalued by families across the DC metro area who overlook it in favor of bigger names.

Georgetown University is a highly selective private university in Washington, DC — and a genuine reach for even the strongest applicants. Its acceptance rate is well under 20%.

Out-of-state and private schools often provide more competitive merit aid for strong DC, Virginia, and Maryland students than in-state options do. Don't build a region-heavy list by default.

Common List-Building Mistakes

Ranking-chasing. US News rankings measure research output and peer perception — not how good the school is for your specific student.

Too many reaches. If more than half your list is schools where admission is genuinely uncertain, you've built a lottery ticket, not a strategy.

Applying everywhere. Submitting to 18 schools doesn't increase your odds at any of them — it dilutes the attention you give each application.

Ignoring financial safety. Every list needs at least one school where you know — with certainty — that you can pay for it and the student will be happy there.

The Bottom Line

The best college lists are built iteratively, starting in 10th or 11th grade, through research, campus visits, and honest self-assessment about goals and priorities.

Want help building a college list tailored to your student? Contact INSIGHTS to get started.

Dr. Jay Bass is the founder of INSIGHTS College Planning & Advising in Falls Church, Virginia. He has 25+ years of experience guiding families in Washington, DC, Northern Virginia, and Maryland through the college admissions process.


Further Reading

What Makes a Great College Essay? Advice from a 25-Year Admissions Insider

The college essay is the part of the application that families stress about most — and the part that's most commonly misunderstood.

Students write essays about winning the big game, volunteering abroad, or overcoming adversity in ways that sound borrowed from a template. Parents push for polish until the essay sounds nothing like their 17-year-old. And everyone fixates on the wrong question: What should I write about?

The right question is: What do I want the admissions reader to understand about me that isn't anywhere else in this application?

After 25 years of helping students in Washington, DC, Northern Virginia, and Maryland through this process, here's what I've learned separates the essays that move readers from the ones that don't.

What Admissions Readers Are Actually Looking For

Admissions officers read thousands of essays. They are not looking for proof that you're impressive (your transcript does that), evidence of good writing (they expect that), or a story that made you realize the value of teamwork or leadership.

They're looking for a person. A specific, real, interesting person — someone they can picture contributing something distinct to their campus. The essay's job is to make the admissions reader feel like they know you a little. Not like they've read a college application.

The Most Common Mistakes

The résumé recap. Writing about an achievement and explaining why it was hard to achieve. This restates what's already in the application and adds nothing.

The epiphany essay. The student describes a challenge, hits bottom, then has a transformative realization that changed everything. These essays are structurally predictable and emotionally flat.

The everything essay. Trying to cover too much in 650 words. The result is superficial on everything and deep on nothing.

The parent voice. You can always tell. The vocabulary is elevated, the sentences are polished into smoothness, and the personality of the actual 17-year-old has been edited out entirely.

The topic that sounds unique but isn't. Mission trips, sports injuries, immigration stories, and deceased grandparents are not inherently bad topics — but they've been written about so many times that the bar is significantly higher.

What Actually Works

Specificity. The difference between a forgettable essay and a memorable one is almost always concrete, specific detail. Not "I love cooking" but the particular smell of your grandmother's kitchen on Sunday mornings. Specificity signals authenticity.

Voice. The best essays sound like someone talking — not performing. They have rhythm, personality, opinions. This is what gets edited out when parents over-polish: not the grammar errors, but the voice.

A narrow lens. The best essays zoom in on something small and let it open up into something larger. A 650-word essay that tries to cover a student's entire relationship with music will always be less compelling than one that's about the specific ritual of tuning a cello before a performance.

Intellectual honesty. The essays that move readers are usually the ones where the student says something true and slightly uncomfortable — genuinely honest about a real tension or unresolved question in their life.

The Process That Produces Good Essays

Start with brainstorming, not writing. Spend time answering questions that have nothing to do with college: What do you do when you're not trying to impress anyone? What would your closest friends say is distinctive about you? What's something you believe that most people around you don't?

Write a terrible first draft. The goal of the first draft is not to be good. It's to get something on paper that you can work with.

Read it out loud. If it doesn't sound like you talking, revise until it does. This is the most reliable test for whether an essay has voice.

Get feedback from the right people. A college counselor who has read thousands of essays is the right person to evaluate whether your essay is working. Your parent, who loves you, is not.

Revise toward clarity and honesty, not polish. The goal of revision is not to make the essay sound more impressive. It's to make it sound more true.

On Supplemental Essays

Many students spend 90% of their essay energy on the Common App personal statement and 10% on the supplements. This is backwards. Supplements — especially "Why This School?" essays — are often more carefully read because they're shorter and more specific. A weak one signals the student hasn't done their research.

The Bottom Line

A great college essay is not the one that tries to be great. It's the one that tries to be honest. The students I've worked with who write the best essays are usually the ones willing to stop performing for a moment and actually say something real.

Need guidance on your student's college essays? Contact INSIGHTS — essay coaching is one of the most impactful things we do.

Dr. Jay Bass is the founder of INSIGHTS College Planning & Advising in Falls Church, Virginia. He has 25+ years of experience helping students throughout Washington, DC, Northern Virginia, and Maryland with every aspect of the college application process.


Further Reading

SAT vs. ACT: Which Test Should Your Student Take?

One of the first questions families ask when high school testing season arrives is: SAT or ACT? For students in Washington, DC, Northern Virginia, and Maryland — where academic competition is intense and test prep resources are plentiful — this decision deserves more than a coin flip.

The short answer: take a practice test for both, compare your scores against each other's percentile equivalents, and let the data tell you where you have more upside. Here's how to think through it.

Are All Colleges Test-Optional Now?

Many schools moved to test-optional policies during the COVID-19 pandemic, and a significant number have made those policies permanent. However, the landscape is shifting again. MIT, Yale, Dartmouth, Harvard, and many other highly selective schools have returned to requiring test scores.

For families in the DC metro area targeting selective schools — UVA, University of Maryland, Virginia Tech, Georgetown, William & Mary, or competitive out-of-state universities — submitting strong scores is still advantageous even at test-optional schools. At test-optional schools, students who submit scores are typically admitted at higher rates than those who don't. The absence of a score is not neutral — it shifts more weight onto other parts of the application.

SAT vs. ACT: The Key Differences

Both tests are accepted at every major college and university in the United States. Neither has an inherent advantage in admissions. What matters is which test produces a stronger score for your specific student.

SAT: Administered by College Board. 2 sections (Reading & Writing combined; Math). Score: 400–1600. Now entirely digital (as of 2024). Heavier emphasis on algebra and data analysis. Moderate time pressure — most students finish.

ACT: Administered by ACT, Inc. 4 sections: English, Math, Reading, Science Reasoning. Score: 1–36. Covers more math content including trigonometry. Science section tests data interpretation and reasoning, not science knowledge. Higher time pressure than the SAT.

Who Tends to Do Better on Each Test?

Students who often score relatively better on the SAT: Strong readers who work methodically; students who perform well with more time per question; students whose math strength is in algebra and functions.

Students who often score relatively better on the ACT: Students who process information quickly; students strong across multiple subjects; students with strong math backgrounds who aren't intimidated by trigonometry; students who find the SAT's reading passages tedious.

The Right Process: Take Practice Tests First

The single most reliable way to decide is to take a full, timed practice test for each — under realistic conditions — and compare the results using a concordance table. College Board and ACT, Inc. publish score concordance tables that convert scores between the two tests.

  • Official SAT practice: Khan Academy (free, comprehensive)
  • Official ACT practice: ACT.org (free full-length tests available)
  • Both: Prep books from Princeton Review or Barron's include full-length practice tests

How DC Metro Area Students Should Think About This

Students in Fairfax County, Arlington, Loudoun, Montgomery County, Prince George's County, Washington, DC, and surrounding communities are competing in one of the most academically concentrated regions in the country. The average test score among applicants from DC area high schools is higher than the national average, which means score ranges that look competitive nationally may not be at the schools most families are targeting.

Approximate middle 50% SAT ranges for schools DC area families commonly target: UVA ≈ 1360–1530 | University of Maryland ≈ 1280–1450 | Virginia Tech (competitive programs) ≈ 1280–1480 | William & Mary ≈ 1330–1500 | Georgetown ≈ 1400–1560.

When to Start Testing

  • 10th grade: Take the PSAT 10 in the spring (baseline data and early prep experience)
  • Spring of 11th grade: First official SAT or ACT attempt
  • Fall of 11th grade or summer before 12th: Second attempt after focused prep
  • Fall of 12th grade (if needed): Final attempt before application deadlines

The Bottom Line

The SAT vs. ACT decision isn't about which test is "better." It's about which test is better for your student. Take both practice tests before committing to either, and let your actual performance guide the decision.

Questions about test strategy? Contact Dr. Bass to discuss your student's situation.

Dr. Jay Bass is the founder of INSIGHTS College Planning & Advising in Falls Church, Virginia. He has 25+ years of experience guiding students and families in Washington, DC, Northern Virginia, and Maryland through standardized testing strategy and the college admissions process.


Further Reading

Virginia Tech Admissions: What It Really Takes to Get In

Virginia Tech is one of the most popular college destinations for students across the Washington, DC metro area — and one of the most misunderstood in terms of admissions difficulty. Families from Northern Virginia often assume that in-state status provides a comfortable cushion. Families from Maryland and DC sometimes overlook Virginia Tech entirely, not realizing it could be a strong fit. Both groups benefit from understanding what admissions at Virginia Tech actually looks like.

The Landscape: Virginia Tech Is More Selective Than It Used to Be

Virginia Tech has grown significantly more selective over the past decade. The university-wide acceptance rate for recent applicants has been in the 55–65% range. But that headline number is misleading, because acceptance rates vary dramatically by college:

Engineering (College of Engineering): Among the most competitive programs at Virginia Tech. Students applying to computer science, electrical engineering, or computer engineering face particularly high competition — from both in-state and out-of-state applicants.

Business (Pamplin College of Business): More selective than the overall admit rate suggests, particularly for accounting and finance.

Architecture + Urban Studies: Selective, with portfolio considerations for some programs.

Liberal Arts & Human Sciences, Agriculture & Life Sciences, Natural Resources: Generally more accessible, with acceptance rates closer to or above the overall university average.

Academic Profile: What Competitive Applicants Look Like

GPA: 3.8+ (weighted), with strong performance in math and science courses. A 4.0+ weighted GPA is common among admitted engineering applicants.

Course rigor: AP Calculus (BC preferred for engineering), AP Physics or Chemistry, a rigorous course load throughout high school.

Test scores: The middle 50% SAT range at Virginia Tech is approximately 1280–1480 overall. For engineering, competitive scores tend toward the upper end and above — 1400+ is a realistic target for students aiming for competitive engineering programs.

Math specifically: Virginia Tech's engineering programs look carefully at math performance. Strong SAT math scores (700+), strong grades in upper-level math courses, and demonstrated math engagement all matter.

What the Application Actually Looks Like

Essays: Virginia Tech's most important supplemental essay is typically about why the student has chosen their intended major. For engineering applicants, this should demonstrate genuine interest and understanding of the field — not a generic statement about wanting to "solve problems and make a difference."

Extracurriculars: Depth and relevance beat breadth. A student who has built a robot, led a coding club, or worked on a meaningful engineering project has a stronger case than a student with fifteen unrelated activities.

The In-State Advantage — And What It Means for Maryland and DC Families

Virginia Tech, as a Virginia public university, gives preference to Virginia residents. In-state students make up a significant majority of the admitted class. For students from Maryland, Washington, DC, and other states, Virginia Tech reviews applications in the out-of-state pool — which is more competitive.

This doesn't mean out-of-state students shouldn't apply. Virginia Tech actively recruits talented students from across the DC metro area and the country. But Maryland and DC families should understand that their student will need a profile that's competitive against a national applicant pool, not just local competition.

Program-Specific Advice for DC Metro Area Students

Computer Science: Among the most competitive programs at Virginia Tech nationally. Need a strong math background, demonstrated programming experience, and a specific, credible essay about your interest in the field.

Engineering (other concentrations): Mechanical, civil, industrial, and aerospace engineering programs are competitive but somewhat more accessible than CS. Same profile guidance applies.

Business (Pamplin): Leadership, real-world business exposure, and clear articulation of specific business interests are important differentiators.

Building a List with Virginia Tech on It

For Virginia residents in the DC metro area, Virginia Tech is typically a match-to-reach depending on the program. For Maryland and DC students, it trends more toward reach for selective programs.

Every list with Virginia Tech on it should also include at least two other schools in each tier — match and safety — that the student would genuinely attend.

The Bottom Line

Virginia Tech is an excellent university with outstanding programs, particularly in engineering, business, and several other fields. It's a common destination for students from across the Washington, DC, Northern Virginia, and Maryland region — and significantly more selective than many families realize, especially at the program level.

Applying to Virginia Tech? Contact INSIGHTS to discuss your student's profile and application strategy.

Dr. Jay Bass is the founder of INSIGHTS College Planning & Advising in Falls Church, Virginia. He has 25+ years of experience guiding families in Washington, DC, Northern Virginia, and Maryland through the college admissions process, including Virginia Tech, UVA, University of Maryland, and competitive universities nationwide.


Further Reading