The prompts are available and it's time to get started on those applications! If you're wondering whether you should apply Early Action (EA) or Early Decision (ED), consider the difference between the two. The primary difference is that Early Decision is binding (in other words, you must attend if accepted) and Early Action is not. If a student applies ED, he or she cannot apply through any other "early" programs except public state schools. Application materials for ED or EA are typically due by either October 15th or November 1st, with decisions released in December. If you feel strongly about a particular school, it's a great way to complete one of your applications early and compete against a smaller applicant pool. And, if you're excited about your early school, and you receive an acceptance in December, you'll have an easy, and zen, senior year!
Here's a handy guide to the Early Action, Early Decision, and Regular Decision deadlines for the top 30 colleges.
College/University EA (restrictive *) ED RD
Boston College 11/1/18 1/1/19
Brown 11/1/18 1/1/19
CalTech 11/1/18 1/3/19
Carnegie Mellon 11/1/18 1/1/19
Cornell 11/1/18 1/2/19
Dartmouth 11/1/18 1/1/19
Duke University 11/1/18 1/2/19
Emory 11/1/18 (ED1) 1/1/19
1/1/19 (ED2)
Georgetown 11/1/18 1/10/19
Harvard 11/1/18 * 1/1/19
Johns Hopkins 11/1//18 1/2/19
MIT 11/1/18 1/1/19
Northwestern 11/1/18 1/1/19
NYU 11/1/18 (ED1) 1/1/19
1/1/19 (ED2)
Princeton 11/1/18 * 1/1/19
Rice 11/1/18 1/1/19
Stanford 11/1/18 * 1/2/19
(with art portfolio) 10/15/18 * ` 12/1/18
Tufts 11/1/18 (ED1) 1/1/19
1/1/19 (ED2)
UCLA 11/30/18
UNC Chapel Hill 10/15/18 1/15/19
University of California Berkeley 11/30/18
University of Chicago 11/1/18 11/1/18 (ED1) 1/2/19
1/2/19 (ED2)
University of Michigan 11/1/18 2/1/19
Notre Dame 11/1/18 * 1/1/19
University of Pennsylvania 11/1/18 1/5/19
USC 1/15/19
UVA 11/1/18 1/1/19
Vanderbilt 11/1/18 (ED1) 1/1/19
1/1/19 (ED2)
Wake Forest 11/15/18 (ED1) 1/1/19
1/1/19 (ED2)
Washington University in Saint Louis 11/1/18 (ED1) 1/2/19
1/2/19 (ED2)
Yale 11/1/18 * 1/2/19