Class of 2030 Early Decision and Early Action Notification Dates

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AtomicMind Staff

November 25, 2025

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If you’re applying Early Decision or Early Action this year, you’re probably refreshing your email, tracking Reddit threads, and wondering the same thing as thousands of other applicants: When will ED/EA decisions actually come out? 

This guide pulls together predicted ED/EA admissions decision dates for the US colleges and universities that are most popular amongst AtomicMind’s students. When a school officially confirms the ED or EA notification date and time, we’ll bold it so you know it’s fully verified. Until then, use these predictions to manage expectations, plan your week, and avoid getting blindsided by a surprise portal update.

Let’s get into it. Here are the expected ED/EA release dates for the Class of 2030 Early Decision and Early Action admissions cycle.

What Are the Predicted Class of 2030 ED/EA Decision Release Dates?

Note: The dates below are predicted based on recent years; when a date (and especially a time) is confirmed, we will bold it.

College / University Early Action / Early Decision Notification Date
American UniversityED I: December 13th, time TBD
EA: By January 31st
ED II: By February 15th
Amherst CollegeED: December 12th at 6:21pm EST
Babson CollegeED I: December 13, time TBD
EA: By January 15th
ED II: By Mid-February
Barnard CollegeED: December 13, time TBD
Boston CollegeED I: December 2nd
ED II: By February 15th
Boston UniversityED I: December 12th, time TBD
ED II: Mid-February
Brandeis UniversityED I: December 15, time TBD
EA: February 1, time TBD
ED II: February 15th, time TBD
Brown UniversityED: December 15th at 3pm EST
Bucknell UniversityED I: December 4th, 7:30pm EST
ED II: Mid-February
California Institute of TechnologyREA: December 11th at 6:24pm EST
Carnegie Mellon UniversityED I: December 13th, time TBD
Case Western Reserve UniversityED I: December 6th, time TBD
EA: ~December 20th
ED II: ~February 7th
Claremont McKenna CollegeED I: December 13th, time TBD
ED II: By February 15th
Colby CollegeED I: December 13th, time TBD
ED II: On or Before February 15th
Colgate UniversityED I: December 12th, at 7:13pm EST
ED II: Mid-February
Columbia UniversityED: December 16th at 7pm EST
Cornell UniversityED: December 18th at 7pm EST
Dartmouth CollegeED: December 12th ~3pm EST
Duke UniversityED: December 15th at 7pm EST
Emory UniversityED I: December 10th at 6pm EST
ED II: By February 15th
Fordham UniversityED I: December 20th, time TBD
EA: December 20th
ED II: February 15th
George Washington UniversityED I: December 15th
ED II: By Late February
Georgetown UniversityEA: December 15th, time TBD
Georgia Institute of TechnologyEA I (in-state): December 5th at 7pm EST
EA II: (out-of-state) Late January
Hamilton CollegeED I: December 19th ~8pm EST
ED II: By February 15th
Harvard UniversitySCEA: December 18th at 7pm EST
Harvey Mudd CollegeED I: December 15th ~6pm PST
ED II: February 15th, time TBD
Haverford CollegeED I: December 15th ~6pm EST
ED II: February 1st, time TBD
Johns Hopkins UniversityED I: December 12th at 3pm EST
ED II: February 1st, time TBD
RD: March 18th at 3pm EST
Loyola Marymount UniversityED I: November 25th at 9pm EST
EA: December 13, time TBD
ED II: Mid-February
Middlebury CollegeED I: December 6th at 8am EST
ED II: Mid-February
Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyEA: December 16th at 6:28pm EST
New York UniversityED I: December 11th at 4pm EST
ED II: February 15th
Northeastern UniversityED I: December 10th at 7pm EST
EA: By February 15th
ED II: By March 1st
Northwestern UniversityED: December 16th, time TBD
Pepperdine UniversityED: December 19th, time TBD
EA: By February 15th
Pomona CollegeED I: December 11th at 6pm ET
ED II: By February 15th
Princeton UniversitySCEA: December 11th ~7pm EST
Purdue UniversityEA: January 15th, time TBD
Rice UniversityED I: December 12th, time TBD
ED II: Mid-February
Stanford UniversityREA: December 12th ~4pm PST
Tufts UniversityED I: December 12th at 7pm EST
ED II: Early February
Tulane UniversityED I: November 26th at 5pm EST
EA: By January 10th
ED II: By February 15th
University of ChicagoED I: December 20th, time TBD
EA: December 20th, time TBD
ED II: Mid-February
University of Illinois at Urbana-ChampaignEA: January 30th at 5pm CST
RD: March 6 at 5pm CST
University of MarylandEA: February 1st, time TBD
University of Massachusetts AmherstEA: January 16, time TBD
University of MiamiED I: December 12th, time TBD
EA: Late January
ED II: Late February
University of MichiganED: December 24th, time TBD
EA: January 23, time TBD
University of North Carolina at Chapel HillEA: (in-state) December 19th, time TBD
EA: (out-of-state) By February 10
University of Notre DameREA: December 16th at 6:42pm EST
University of PennsylvaniaED: December 18th at 7pm EST
University of RichmondED I: December 12th at 7pm EST
EA: January 23rd at 7pm EST
ED II: February 13th at 7pm EST
University of RochesterED I: December 16th, time TBD
ED II: Early February
University of Southern CaliforniaEA: January 17th, time TBD
University of Texas at AustinEA: January 15th, time TBD
University of VirginiaED I: December 12th ~5pm EST
EA: By February 15th
University of WisconsinEA: On or Before January 31st
Vanderbilt UniversityED I: December 17th, time TBD
ED II: Mid-February
Villanova UniversityED I: November 21st at 4:30pm EST
EA: By January 20th
ED II: By February 15th
Wake Forest UniversityED I: Rolling
EA: By January 15th
ED II: By February 15th
Washington University in St. LouisED I: December 11th, time TBD
ED II: February 13th, time TBD
Wellesley CollegeED I: December 8th
ED II: Mid-February
Yale UniversityREA: December 17th at 5pm EST
What Should You Expect on ED/EA Decision Day?

Early Decision and Early Action releases follow a surprisingly consistent rhythm. Most selective colleges queue their systems to update portals in the late afternoon or early evening, giving students time to get home from school before checking. That’s why you’ll see so many predicted times clustered around 5:00–7:00pm local time. West Coast schools often skew slightly earlier in the day; tech-heavy schools like MIT tend to hold firm release traditions, even if they never formally announce them, such as announcing decisions at 3:14 pm (π) or 6:28 pm (2π or Tau time)

Because these patterns repeat year after year, they’re reliable enough to help you plan your week, but you should still expect a little unpredictability. Some schools send out a heads-up email a day in advance. Others drop the update with zero warning. A few (Cornell, Penn, Dartmouth, UVA) have been known to move a release by a day or two depending on internal review cycles. As soon as we hear, you’ll hear, so bookmark this page for the most up-to-date results!

Why Do ED/EA Notification Dates Matter for Your Strategy?

Early rounds set the tone for the rest of the cycle. Students admitted ED/EA lock in one major decision before winter break. Deferred students still have a strong path through the Regular Decision cycle, but need to move quickly and strategically. And for families juggling multiple applications, scholarships, auditions, or financial-aid timelines, knowing when early decisions hit makes planning dramatically smoother.

The bottom line: clarity reduces stress. Even predicted dates help students avoid the spiral of endless refreshing and rumor-chasing. And once schools start confirming, we’ll bold each line so you always have the most up-to-date information in one place.

How Can You Prepare As Your ED/EA Decision Date Approaches?

Once you get within 48–72 hours of the predicted date, here are smart ways to set yourself up for success:

  1. Check your portal early: Make sure you can log in. Reset passwords now…not ten minutes before decisions drop.
  2. Turn off social-media notifications: Decision day can get noisy fast. Reddit, Discord, and TikTok often start buzzing the moment one student posts that their portal changed.
  3. Plan where you’ll be at release time: This is one of the few things you can control. Pick a calm, private place to check your result. A bedroom or living room at home is ideal; not the hallway between classes.
What Happens if You Are Deferred or Denied in the Early Round?

Having polished Regular Decision materials ready is crucial in case you’re deferred or not admitted. Rushed applications rarely show your best work.

If you applied Early Action, consider which other schools you’d like to apply to, regardless of your Early Action results. Start these applications early so you can put your best effort into them.

Were you deferred? Be prepared to write and send a LOCI (letter of continued interest) in mid-January and refocus on Regular Decision strategy.

Were you denied? Tough moment, but you immediately gain clarity and can concentrate energy on stronger-fit RD schools. AtomicMind can help with this. If you want support for your RD schools, reach out to us sooner rather than later!

Whatever happens in the ED/EA round, enjoy the remainder of your senior year. This is your final holiday season at home as a high school student - make the most of it! Spend time with friends and family, and savor these special moments before college begins.

Whether You Are Accepted, Deferred, or Denied in the ED/EA Round, Your Grades Still Matter

It can be tempting to ease up during your final months of high school, but keeping up your grades through the end of the school year is important. Your final report card will be sent to schools and they could rescind your admission decision if your grades drop significantly.

Final Thoughts on 2025 ED and EA Release Dates

Early Decision and Early Action season can feel overwhelming, but having a clear sense of when results are likely to drop can make the waiting more manageable. Keep this list bookmarked, check your portals calmly and intentionally, and take each update one step at a time. No matter what your early outcome is, there’s always a path forward and you’ll have plenty of opportunities to put your best work into the remainder of your applications. If you want help with that, keep in mind that AtomicMind gets ambitious students into top colleges–even on a tight timeline. Get in touch to learn more about how AtomicMind can help you strategically pivot from a maybe (and even a no!) to a yes!

College
College Admissions
College Applications
Early Action (EA)
Early Decision 1 (ED1)

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