Metadata
Title
Advice on Choosing Where to Apply
Category
undergraduate
UUID
2d672701a8b649ffab1548c8ee595ec0
Source URL
https://admissions.yale.edu/advice-choosing-where-apply
Parent URL
https://admissions.yale.edu/estimate-your-cost
Crawl Time
2026-03-10T04:17:55+00:00
Rendered Raw Markdown

Advice on Choosing Where to Apply

Source: https://admissions.yale.edu/advice-choosing-where-apply Parent: https://admissions.yale.edu/estimate-your-cost

There are over 2000 four-year colleges in the United States, each with a unique constellation of resources, course offerings, and extracurricular programs. Schools differ in size, location, academic requirements, selectivity, etc. With so many choices, you will need time to explore what is out there and how the options match your interests and needs. Start your research early, and as you make a list of schools to consider, keep your mind open to ones about which you may not have heard much before. Students who focus only on a handful of the most selective or well-known colleges are missing out on the wonderful range of schools that exist and that might be a good fit for them.

It’s also a good idea to discuss with your parents or guardians what is important to you and what you hope to get out of college, so you will all be on the same page by the time you start working on the applications.

Your goal is to create a list of schools about which you are truly excited. By visiting schools, talking with current students, reading viewbooks, and digging into websites, you will figure out why you are excited about each school on your list. The more carefully and thoughtfully you’ve considered each possible college, the stronger your applications to those colleges will be.

There are many resources available to help you with your research. Each college has a website, and current students frequently publish material online about their experiences. If you are able to visit colleges before applying, travel smart. If you only visit a handful of extremely selective, medium-sized research universities, your trip may not reflect the true breadth of schools out there. Instead, you might want to visit a handful of different types of colleges and universities in your area to get a sense of how schools vary and what feels like a good fit. You might be well-served by visiting a small liberal arts college, a small university, and a large public university, for example. If you discover that you like the feel of small liberal arts college versus the larger schools, then you could begin to narrow your search and explore other small liberal arts colleges.

Here are some questions we recommend you try to answer while researching colleges:

Long-term Plans

Location/Setting

Size/Student Body

Cost

Selectivity