Common App Trends – Jan 1, 2023

When examining application trends through early deadlines in Fall 2022, the team at Common App saw tremendous growth in applicant and application totals since the start of the Covid pandemic in 2019-2020. The numbers of applicants, applications, and applications per applicant have meaningfully increased since 2019-20; an underrepresented minority (URM1) and first-gen applicants are increasing at faster rates than their non-URM and continuing-gen counterparts; the majority of applicants continue to live in America’s wealthiest ZIP codes; and test score reporting has fallen slightly from last season and is still vary significantly across demographic subgroups. 

Here are the key findings in Common App’s most recent trend report (data through January 1, 2023):

Trend

% change

2022-2023

2019-2020

# First year applicants applying to 841 returning Common App member colleges

↑ 20%

1,079,936

903,533

# Applications

↑ 24%

5,346,600

4,317,709

Average # applications

↑ 4%

5

4.8

# URM applicants

↑ 30%

# First-gen applicants

↑ 35%

Nearly 3x rate of

“continuing gen” applicants

# Common App fee waiver requests

↑ 47%

> 4x rate of non-fee-waiver applicants

# International applicants

↑ 45%

Leading countries: China, India, Nigeria, Ghana, Canada

# Domestic applicants

↑ 17%

972,235

829,440

Applications to public members

↑ 39%

2,438,069

1,753,568

Applications to private members

↑ 13%

2,891,173

2,552,593

# Applications to highly selective (25-49%)

↑ 40%

620,170

443,914

# Applications to most selective (< 25%)

↑ 33%

535,668

404,014

About 56% of domestic applicants live in the most affluent quintile (i.e., top 20%) of ZIP codes nationwide, compared to just 6% from the bottom quintile. These trends were similar to those observed in prior years’ early applying periods, but represent a slight shift from November 2022 (when 61% of applicants resided in the most affluent zip codes). This likely reflects application activity for regular decision deadlines, which Common App has shown in their research to reflect more socioeconomically diverse applicant pools than early decision and early action. 

After a steep decline in standardized test score reporting rates from 2019-20 (78%) to 2020-21 (44%) and a slight rebound in 2021-22 (48%), trends through January 1 suggest a leveling-off of reporting in 2022-23 (47% of applicants reported a score in an application this season). The stark differences in test score reporting by student demographics (URM, first-gen, fee waiver recipient, and sex) persisted through January 1 of this season.

Below you’ll find graphical representations of these data…

  1. Common App uses the term underrepresented minority (URM) in alignment with conventions employed by the National Science Foundation. In their report, applicants identifying as Black or African American, Latinx, Native American or Alaska Native, or Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander are classified as URM applicants.

Judi Robinovitz

Judi Robinovitz is a Certified Educational Planner with more than 30 years of experience in education. Specializing in educational counseling, she is the author of numerous books, articles, and software on test preparation and college planning. Judi has been a featured speaker at national educational conferences and schools. To keep pace with current educational trends, Judi continually travels across America to assess colleges, boarding schools, and therapeutic boarding schools and wilderness programs.

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