First Year Students

Every year, ºÚÁÏ³Ô¹Ï enrolls an academically accomplished student body that encompasses a wide variety of interests, talents, and backgrounds. Our holistic evaluation process considers your academic work, writing, letters of recommendation, extracurricular activities, your unique talents and personal qualities, and testing - if you choose to submit test scores.

ºÚÁÏ³Ô¹Ï is distinctive among highly selective colleges in that we choose to support a non-binding Early Action program as well as a binding Early Decision program, giving students greater flexibility to choose the option that is right for them. At the same time, this has resulted in a large increase in early applicants and a larger percentage of our class enrolling from an early round.

Requirements

We accept the , or QuestBridge Application. We recommend all students begin by submitting the Preliminary Application. There is no fee to apply to ºÚÁϳԹÏ.

The Preliminary Application is a free, fast application to provide us with better insight into how we can better serve you, the student. Based on what you tell us, we will provide information to help you through the application process. By submitting the Preliminary Application, you are expressing an intent to complete your application by your decision plan deadline.

In addition to the required essay(s) for the application of your choice, all applicants will be required to complete one Supplemental Essay for their application to be considered complete.

In seeking to identify students who will thrive here, our supplemental essay prompt asks you to think about your experiences and potential for engagement with ideas in one of three areas that are critical to us as an institution and as a community:

  • Antiracism. ºÚÁÏ³Ô¹Ï is committed to becoming an antiracist institution. We are working to break down systemic racism and foster an inclusive environment in which students, staff, and faculty of diverse backgrounds, cultures, and perspectives can thrive. With antiracism central to our mission, our students are better prepared to make meaningful change in the world.
  • Sustainability. We aspire to make CC a model for sustainability. 24 out of 30 academic departments offer at least one course that includes sustainability topics, we're one of the top institutions in the country for water conservation, and our library is the largest net-zero academic library in the nation. We live our commitment to a thriving future.
  • Wellness. We recognize that there is no singular pathway to wellbeing, and empower students to envision and follow their own paths to wellness. Through a variety of resources designed to address physical, spiritual, and mental health while helping students develop skills in areas like stress management and building healthy relationships, we equip students to live healthy and fulfilling lives. 

With that background information in mind, here is the 2024-2025 supplemental essay prompt:

ºÚÁÏ³Ô¹Ï values creating an equitable, environmentally-conscious, and healthy community. Choose one of these areas – antiracism, sustainability, or wellness – and describe your experiences and the specific ways you plan to get involved in this area at CC.

Visit our 2024-25 Supplemental Essay page for further tips and insights. Recommended length: 250 to 300 words.

We require your official transcript(s) through the end of your junior year and will eventually require your Mid-Year Report - first semester or trimester of your senior year - and Final Report grades. We do not have a specific required minimum number of courses or subjects, but students who have completed the most challenging college preparatory curriculum available at their school are generally most competitive in the evaluation process.

A counselor letter of recommendation is recommended, but not required.

We require two teacher evaluations - preferably from your junior year, from teachers in core subjects: English or language arts, math, science, social studies, and foreign languages. Additional recommendation letters from teachers, supervisors, coaches, and others are not required, but if you feel that they can provide new and compelling prospective's into your candidacy, they can be emailed to admission@coloradocollege.edu.

This item is only required for those applying Early Decision to ºÚÁϳԹÏ. For more about decision plans, please continue to the Decision Plans & Deadlines section on this page.

ºÚÁÏ³Ô¹Ï is test-optional. We believe in empowering students to share information with us that best represents their academic abilities and potential. Standardized test scores are not required for admission. You can choose to opt-in to include SAT or ACT scores as part of your application. However, ºÚÁÏ³Ô¹Ï does not penalize those who submit test scores and will only use them if they enhance your chances for admission. If you apply test-optional or submit scores that do not strengthen your application, we will place greater emphasis on your academic performance. Test scores, if submitted, are only part of a comprehensive, holistic review that also includes careful assessment of personal accomplishments, community involvement, and writing.

Please visit our Test-Optional page for more information regarding our testing policy.

If you intend to apply for need-based financial aid, you will need to submit additional materials including the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA), CSS Profile, and more. Please visit our financial aid page for more information.

If you're interested in the arts, we invite you to submit an optional art supplement in visual art, music, dance, theater, creative writing, or film. Art supplements will be included in a your application for consideration as part of our holistic review process.

Art supplements must be submitted via the Applicant Portal. This part of the Applicant Portal will only appear if you indicated on your application that you would like to submit an art supplement. 

There is no fee to submit an art supplement.

We support media files as large as 5 GB, but please be advised that larger files will take longer to upload and may stall if you are on a wireless connection or one that cannot sustain a connection for the necessary period of time. Uploaded documents may contain no more than 75 pages. We support the following file formats:

Video: .3g2, .3gp, .avi, .m2v, .m4v, .mkv, .mov, .mpeg, .mpg, .mp4, .mxf, .webm, .wmv
Audio: .aac, .m4a, .mka, .mp3, .oga, .ogg, .wav
Slide: .bmp, .gif, .jpg, .jpeg, .png, .tif, .tiff
Document: .doc, .docx, .odg, .odp, .odt, .pdf, .ppt, .pptx, .rtf, .wpd

Note: You must submit your application first before the Art Supplement section will appear on your Applicant Portal.

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Decision Plans & Deadlines

Students may choose to apply Early Decision (binding), Early Action (non-binding), or Regular Action (non-binding). Early Decision is a binding method of application where the student commits to attend prior to receiving an offer of admission. Early Action and Regular Action are non-binding and students are able to consider their options until the May 1 National Candidate Reply Date.

If applying for financial aid, all documents - including the , , and more - must be submitted by the application round you choose. Your application is not considered complete until we receive all necessary financial aid documents. We recommend completing the FAFSA and CSS Profile at least two weeks prior to the corresponding deadline. Please visit our Financial Aid website for more information.

Our first-year application deadlines are:

Early Decision I

Application Deadline:
November 1

Decision Released:
December 11

Candidate Reply Deadline:
January 15

Early Action

Deadline:
November 1

Decision Released:
December 17

Candidate Reply Date:
May 1

Early Decision II

Deadline:
January 15

Decision Released:
February 13

Candidate Reply Deadline:
February 28

Regular Action

Deadline:
January 15

Decision Released:
March 13

Candidate Reply:
May 1

How to apply

We accept three different applications for first-year students and will review all three with the same holistic standards in place - no one method offers an advantage over the others. Regardless of how you choose to apply, we recommend beginning with the Preliminary Application, which allows us to create your Applicant Portal, notify you of your applicant and financial aid checklists, and counsel you as you complete your application.

We accept the following applications:

Common Application

The Common Application was created in 1975 by a group of colleges seeking to make the application process easier, and it is accepted by nearly 900 institutions. The Common App offers the following:

  • Students enter personal information only once, and the applicable sections of all their Common App will populate.
  • An easy way to search and view college options within the application.
  • A streamlined process for submitting transcripts, letters of recommendation, and counselor letters.

Visit  for more information, or  and start your application.

Apply Coalition powered by Scoir

ºÚÁÏ³Ô¹Ï joined the Coalition for College in its inaugural year. Our membership in the Coalition for College provides a range of resources for students and their supporters as they navigate the admissions process. Find advice from Coalition member schools, opportunities to connect with admissions counselors at events, and more on the .

For students using to search for colleges with their high school counselor, applying is a simple 2 step process: Start building applications on Scoir for multiple Coalition colleges at once. Then, finish and submit our supplemental questions. Get started by your Scoir account. 

QuestBridge Application

Since 2013, ºÚÁÏ³Ô¹Ï has partnered with QuestBridge — a non-profit organization that matches high-achieving, underserved students with opportunities in higher education. To learn more about this application process, please visit our QuestBridge Application page.

Alternate Entry Options

ºÚÁÏ³Ô¹Ï is unique in that first-year students may consider a variety of entry options when applying. A traditional fall entry is the default consideration for most students under review by the Admission Committee, however, some students may be considered candidates for alternate entry options - especially if an interest has been indicated via an application or form.

Students may be considered for the following entry options:

Gap Year

In a typical year, approximately 50-60 admitted students elect to delay the start of their ºÚÁÏ³Ô¹Ï education by designing and pursuing a year-long adventure of their own making, or by considering existing options. While there are a multitude of personal reasons students cite for pursuing a gap experience, each tends to point to a quest for experiential learning that isn't found in the confines of a classroom.

Students admitted under our Early Decision, Early Action, or Regular Action programs may submit a gap year request to delay their enrollment for one year. We will approve longer gap terms for purposes of national service or religious mission. Students admitted to the Winter Start Program are not eligible to apply for a gap year.

Visit our Gap Experience page for more information, including request and approval information, and recommended programs.

Winter Start (Gap Semester)

Nearly every enrollment cycle, approximately 30 students admitted to our Winter Start program will embark on an independent semester-long gap experience in the fall semester before joining their classmates in January to enroll in their first block on campus.

Students admitted to our Winter Start program will participate in the Winter Start Orientation (WSO) and will also engage in our First Year Program — designed to prepare students for the rigors of the Block Plan.

Visit our Gap Experience page for more information, including recommended programs for credit and non-credit options.

DACA & Undocumented Students

All applicants to ºÚÁÏ³Ô¹Ï - regardless of citizenship - will be considered for admission. DACA and undocumented students are well supported at ºÚÁϳԹÏ, and although admission to ºÚÁÏ³Ô¹Ï is highly competitive, we plan to admit and fund those who compete successfully in our process. We meet full demonstrated need of every admitted student, which in the case of DACA and undocumented students, is accomplished by using private grant aid from the college.

Please note that our current students will receive our continued support, and we are continuously monitoring the federal stance on DACA and undocumented students. For more information about funding and support for DACA and undocumented students in the United States, please visit the .

We also encourage students to visit the our DACA Resource page to learn more about DACA status and ºÚÁϳԹÏ. For admission questions regarding DACA and undocumented, please contact Alex Dominguez in the Office of Admission.

Athletic Recruitment

Goals

ºÚÁÏ³Ô¹Ï enrolls students who will enhance and enjoy the intellectual, social, and extracurricular communities our campus provides. We seek students who are interested in the wide range of rigorous intellectual experiences offered, and value the role that extra-curricular activities, such as music, debate, theater, political action, and athletics, play on campus. In addition, we are committed to racial, ethnic, socio-economic, and geographical diversity.

Recruitment Philosophy

ºÚÁÏ³Ô¹Ï is committed to academic excellence and has established shared recruitment practices to strengthen athletic programs. The Office of Admission partners with the Athletic Department to ensure that students on all intercollegiate teams are representative of our student body and are admitted with the expectation of their full participation in the life of the college. Student-athletes should be aware that we have committed to the following:

  • All admission decisions are rendered and delivered in writing by the Admission Office only. Any communication regarding the status of an admission decision conveyed by non-admission personnel, including verbal commitments, should be considered preliminary, unofficial, and subject to change.
  • No admission decision, including an Early Decision, will be made until the candidate's application is complete and all necessary supporting documentation has been received (including application, supplement, transcripts, standardized test scores and recommendations).
  • By NCAA policy, there are no athletic scholarships awarded in Division III programs. Merit-based scholarship offers and need-based aid packages are made only by the Office of Financial Aid after the student has been admitted. Therefore, we recommend that families use our Net Price Calculator to estimate the cost of attendance prior to being admitted.

Coach's Role

While admission decisions are made exclusively by the admission committee, the coach's assessment of the athletic ability and potential contribution of each candidate is considered. Coaches at other colleges may evaluate a student-athlete's ability differently. Positional considerations may also lead to different assessments of an applicant's value to a team.

It is important to remember that this is a college admission process with an athletic component, not an athletic recruiting process that comes with the opportunity to attend college. Our coaches actively identify and recruit student-athletes and act as advocates for them; but no coach at the college has the authority to offer, promise, or otherwise guarantee a spot in the incoming class to any recruited student-athlete.

We encourage interested student-athletes to complete the recruitment form on the respective in order to begin the pre-review process.

Homeschooled and nontraditional students

ºÚÁÏ³Ô¹Ï has always evaluated candidates for admission on an individual basis. In recent years we have been asked about our policies regarding home schooling, narrative transcripts, portfolio assessment, and other non-traditional approaches to a standard high school transcript. Please review additional information on our admission policies for non-traditional applicants

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