For those who have been with us from the beginning (and what the heck, newcomers too!!), feel free to take a big breath of relief. We’ve done it! Over the last month, we’ve been breaking down the Common App essay prompt by prompt, which means we’re ready to bring it all together for the big finale: a comprehensive guide to writing the Common App essay.
Of course, with seven prompts to choose from, you’ll need to take a unique approach to the option you choose, but ultimately the end product must meet the same set of criteria: your personal essay needs to tell a captivating story.
This probably isn’t news to you, but if it is, let’s quickly cover the basics! The Common App essay is the foundation of your college application materials, and it’s the most important component — it gives you a bit of control in how you frame yourself and goes beyond the numbers. Yes, your activities, grades, and test scores matter, but the personal statement is where you get to distinguish yourself as a human being. It shows you’re more than a resume, and it allows you to introduce yourself as you’d like to be perceived. That means a lot, especially because this is the only essay that goes to every school you apply to through the Common App platform.
We don’t say that to make you sweat — but it’s worth establishing the stakes so you know that this piece of your application deserves your full attention. It’s not a formality. In fact, it could be the deciding factor that shows you’d be a fantastic addition to any student body when you’re being considered alongside applicants with similar grades. In other words, this is the space to show what makes you the only you there is.
The Common App Prompt:
The essay demonstrates your ability to write clearly and concisely on a selected topic and helps you distinguish yourself in your own voice. What do you want the readers of your application to know about you apart from courses, grades, and test scores? Choose the option that best helps you answer that question and write an essay of no more than 650 words, using the prompt to inspire and structure your response. Remember: 650 words is your limit, not your goal. Use the full range if you need it, but don't feel obligated to do so. (The application won't accept a response shorter than 250 words.)
First things first: please take note of their emphasis on using “your own voice,” and their advice that the prompt “inspire and structure your response.” We’re doubling down on this because you need to hear it: they want this essay to have personality!
If your instinct is to cram all of your accolades into 650 words, hold your frickin’ horses. We’re so serious. Your greatest achievements will already appear on your transcript or on your activities section, and you can’t get your unique character across if you’re using this as a place to flaunt your wins. Not only does that waste space because it’s repeating information the admissions officers can find elsewhere, but, frankly, it’s not that interesting! It sounds a bit robotic and calculated, actually, like you’ve used your one opportunity to personalize yourself by hiding who you actually are so that you can impress your reader.
And please, don’t think that we’re judging you. We know how important your college application is, and it makes sense that you might feel pressure to depict yourself as a flawless star student. But here’s the truth: this is a deeply human process. The admissions officers evaluating applications are a lot like us, actually. They’re usually in their late ‘20s, and in peak application season they’re reading hundreds of essays a day. They’re tired and stressed and, by the end of work, probably looking forward to whatever new Trader Joe’s frozen dinner they’ve picked up to eat while they veg out to Survivor or Love Island (we’ll let you pick your poison in this hypothetical scenario).
The point is this: they’re not going to be emotionally moved by the list of reasons your school had to invent something beyond the “honor roll” commendation with which to award you, and they’re not going to remember your profile and advocate for you if you sound like you’re brownnosing a teacher. Obviously, we won’t lie to you and say that a great Common App essay is going to get you in the door of really competitive institutions if the grades and scores aren’t there, because that’s not true. The grades and scores are the bare minimum; you need an authentic, interesting personal statement to round you out as a real person, too.
One last note here: we believe this essay should, on some level, be fun for you to write, also. We hope it allows you to showcase something you really love about yourself and take pleasure in exploring the things that bring you joy. We mention this to counter the expectation some students feel to write about their traumas. If you want to do that, because you’re inspired by a topic and think it would make the best essay, you completely can. But we’re here to reassure you that you don’t have to write about the worst thing that has ever happened to you to prove your strength and worth to colleges, especially if it triggers or upsets you to do so. If hardships affected your high school experience in ways that colleges should know to fairly consider your application, you can write about them in the additional information section. But consider this your permission not to write about anything else — a whimsical or unconventional topic, even — in your personal statement. This is your space, and you can be exactly who you want to be in it!
2026-2027 Common App Essay Prompts
We’ve given you the general lay of the land for the Common App essay overall, but now we’ll do an overview of the prompts themselves with our personal rating and a link to our posts that detail strategies for writing each one.
PROMPT #1: Some students have a background, identity, interest, or talent that is so meaningful they believe their application would be incomplete without it. If this sounds like you, then please share your story.
There’s nothing inherently wrong with this prompt, but it’s pretty vague and the truth is that any topic “so meaningful” your application “would be incomplete without it” probably already appears in your activities or the additional information section, and it will likely also come up again in school-specific supplements. If you’ve got a great idea for a response to this prompt? Wonderful, go for it! Just make sure that it actually covers original material.
Our rating? ⭐⭐/5
Get the full download on Prompt #1 here.
PROMPT #2: The lessons we take from obstacles we encounter can be fundamental to later success. Recount a time when you faced a challenge, setback, or failure. How did it affect you, and what did you learn from the experience?
You know what? We think Prompt #2 is pretty great! It sets you up to tell a story, which is the form we recommend for your personal statement no matter which prompt you choose. It also gives you the chance to show vulnerability and growth — life isn’t perfect, and colleges aren’t looking for candidates who have never encountered a setback. They’re looking for someone who has encountered a problem and learned from it.
There are a few things you should avoid when writing a response to Prompt #2, though. First, avoid choosing a topic that is 1) predictable or 2) better suited to the additional information section. No matter how beautifully written your essay is, it’s hard to stand out if you choose to highlight a struggle shared by many other applicants (this is not to say that the grief of losing a grandparent or the self-acceptance journey of learning how to cope and thrive with a learning difference aren’t profound and valid; they are! But they are familiar, and this is a numbers game). Second, don’t spend too much of your essay focused on the negative or belaboring your shortcomings; the most important piece of this essay will be the personal growth arc.
Our rating? ⭐⭐⭐/5
Read all the advice we have to give on Prompt #2 here.
PROMPT #3: Reflect on a time when you questioned or challenged a belief or idea. What prompted your thinking? What was the outcome?
Let’s be so for real: this prompt is kind of a dud. Again, there are ways to do it well, which is why we’ve written an entire blog post about it. But there are plenty of ways to do it wrong, and that’s our main concern.
This prompt has a few weaknesses. It might lead you to write more philosophically or argumentatively than personally, and that is a poor use of the one spot you have to write a *personal* essay. It also might invite you to choose a topic that alienates your readers if they don’t share your opinion or, frankly, if you admit to once holding a view that’s pretty indefensible, even if you elaborate on how you changed your mind. If you’re set on this prompt, we highly recommend you choose to focus on an idea that is unexpected and playful in its debate format, that uniquely relates to you, or that doesn’t directly reference a hot-button political issue.
Our rating? ⭐/5
Swim at your own risk… but if you’re going swimming, check out our pointers here.
PROMPT #4: Reflect on something that someone has done for you that has made you happy or thankful in a surprising way. How has this gratitude affected or motivated you?
Yes! YES! Our kingdom for an overtly positive prompt! This is the newest prompt of the bunch, added in the midst of pandemic quarantines, and we think it’s a wonderful option. It primes you to tell a story and invites you to share an upbeat perspective.
One caveat: be careful when selecting your anecdote. You do want it to, on some level, be “surprising” — that doesn’t mean you need to have an unusual or dramatic plot, but it does mean that you’ll want to share your unique perspective. This essay should show the kind of person you are through your reaction to an act of kindness, so make sure you don’t spend all of your statement writing about the other person, and make sure you distinguish yourself and your values by illuminating the way you see the world.
Our rating? ⭐⭐⭐⭐/5
Read more about why we think this prompt is a winner.
PROMPT #5: Discuss an accomplishment, event, or realization that sparked a period of personal growth and a new understanding of yourself or others.
You can sum up our thoughts on this one with “meh.” Low-key, we kind of think it’s a trap! The word “accomplishment” is kryptonite to our ambitious young applicants, and this prompt invites you to talk about your academic or extracurricular track record. Odds are those are well represented already in your application, and rehashing your big debate championship win doesn’t show off a fascinating quality or reveal unexpected depth in your personality.
If you forge ahead with this one, remember to keep it small: think of an example that illuminates a surprising interest, a rare hobby, or a quirky discovery you’ve made. When you go “big,” you risk parroting trite life lessons, repeating yourself, or boasting.
Our rating? ⭐⭐/5
Check out our guide for writing Prompt #5 if it’s still speaking to you.
PROMPT #6: Describe a topic, idea, or concept you find so engaging that it makes you ilose all track of time. Why does it captivate you? What or who do you turn to when you want to learn more?
Enthusiasm is contagious, and this prompt is a great opportunity to write about what makes you tick! Remember, though, that you want your personal statement to be novel, so this is best suited for applicants who can shine some light on an unexpected obsession they might have.
The only topic that’s off-limits here is your future major. That’s too predictable, and it comes up too much in other places! However, this is totally a go for the aspiring microbiologist who spends her time outside of the lab at heavy metal concerts or the ice hockey captain who gets such a mood lift from his golden retriever that he gets into animal therapy training when he’s off the ice.
Our rating? ⭐⭐⭐⭐/5
Find all our tips for acing Prompt #6 here.
PROMPT #7: Share an essay on any topic of your choice. It can be one you've already written, one that responds to a different prompt, or one of your own design.
Prompt #7 is the one for us. We stan. If Prompt #7 has no defenders, we’re dead. Yes, that’s a strong endorsement, and here’s why: Prompt #7 gives you the freedom to write a truly one-of-a-kind essay on any topic of your choosing, which means you’re unlikely to blend in with the rest of the crowd.
It’s important to note, though, that this is not a Bingo “free space.” You can’t just submit an old paper or cobble some lyrical musings together and call it a day. You need to adhere to narrative structure, tell a story that humanizes you, and write an essay that was clearly ideated and executed specifically for the purpose of fulfilling the Common App’s personal statement requirement.
Our rating? ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐/5
There’s a reason we assign this prompt to all of our clients — find out why.
Writing the Common App Essay 2026-2027
Now let’s get into the trenches! You’ve got a good idea of each prompt’s vibe, and we strongly recommend that you read our blog posts in full for the prompts that stood out to you. Before choosing a topic, recenter yourself by defining your goal here. You want to turn in an essay that is unique and captivating; you want it to convey your personality and show who you are beyond a transcript; and you want to enrich your profile by accentuating a characteristic you can’t include elsewhere.
Return to the prompts that elicited a reaction from you and do some brainstorming. Freewrite if that helps you get the juices flowing without feeling pressure to edit as you go along or arrive somewhere. Make a list of memories or images that a certain prompt evokes for you that feel resonant. While of course the goal here is to write something singular and not pattern yourself after someone else’s essay, it also helps to see the topic and creative approaches other students have taken, and reading a few sample essays that have gained our clients acceptance to their top schools can help you see all the possibilities you’ve got at your fingertips, too.
Once you’ve got your essay topic (and we think that’s frequently the hardest part of the entire personal statement process!), you’ve ready to write. Getting started can be difficult, so you can return to the introduction when you’ve gotten through the body and conclusion if knowing where you end up makes it easier to see how you want your statement to begin. Regardless, we recommend getting into the thick of the action immediately. Have your teachers repeated the phrase in media res an infinite number of times over the last few years? Great! We’re saying it now too, because jumping “in the midst of things” piques interest and makes for a great hook. Ground your reader by setting the scene and including sensory details: an overheard line of dialogue, the weight of the humid air on your skin, the scents you recall or the unusually shaped clouds you remember seeing in the moment this particular story kicks off.
You want your reader to feel they stepped into this scene with you and they can’t wait to find out what happens next. Imagining yourself in their place, and delivering a story with a clear beginning, middle, and end that you would like to read yourself, will propel your writing as you complete a first draft. Just ensure that your conclusion satisfies the issue at stake, wraps up all loose ends, and leaves the reader satisfied and, ideally, feeling optimistic.
After drafting, you’ll need to go through various rounds of editing. The first should concentrate on big-picture edits: does the story make sense? Does the structure need to change? Do you need to add or remove a paragraph for clarity or pacing? Tackle those revisions first. Next, read for the little things: the presence and consistency of your voice, the precision of your word choice, the efficacy of imagery and figurative language, sentence-length variation, and any clunkiness or awkwardness in your prose you should iron out. Reading your essay aloud to yourself helps you identify the line-level changes you’ll want to make.
When you’ve taken your essay as far as it can go on your own, solicit feedback from one or two readers you trust — but definitely no more than this, or you’ll get a counterproductive amount of input and perhaps even contradictory comments! Make sure any external editors you choose know your writing style and can help you do your best work. At this stage, you’ve polished your personal statement to perfection, and you can upload it to the Common App. Congratulations!
Our counselors are experienced pros in the college application process, and helping students craft unique, unforgettable essays is their specialty. Contact us today for personalized guidance.