The Summer Advantage: How to Get Ahead Before College Application Season Begins

For many rising seniors, summer feels like a welcome break from tests, homework, and busy schedules. But while it's important to relax and recharge, summer also offers something else: opportunity.
Every year, we see two very different types of students when application season begins. The first group starts senior year feeling organized, confident, and prepared. The second group quickly finds themselves overwhelmed as classes, activities, and application deadlines begin to pile up.
The difference often isn't talent or intelligence—it's preparation.
With college application season just around the corner, now is the perfect time to take advantage of the quieter pace of summer and lay the groundwork for a successful fall.
1. Get Your College List in Shape
One of the biggest mistakes students make is applying to colleges they know very little about.
Before application season begins, take time to evaluate your college list. Make sure each school is there for a reason and that you've researched factors such as academic programs, campus culture, location, size, cost, and available opportunities.
A thoughtful college list not only improves your chances of finding the right fit, but also makes writing supplemental essays much easier later in the process.
2. Make Progress on Your Personal Statement
If there's one task that consistently causes students stress, it's the personal statement.
The strongest essays are rarely written in a single sitting. They require brainstorming, reflection, drafting, and revision.
Summer provides the perfect opportunity to begin thinking about the experiences, challenges, accomplishments, and lessons that have shaped who you are. Even if your essay isn't finished before school starts, having a solid draft in place can significantly reduce stress in the fall.
3. Take Inventory of Your Activities and Accomplishments
The Activities section of the Common App often catches students by surprise.
Start creating a master list of:
- Extracurricular activities
- Employment
- Volunteer experiences
- Leadership positions
- Awards and honors
- Summer programs and internships
Documenting these details now will save time later and help ensure that important accomplishments aren't overlooked.
4. Understand Application Deadlines
Many students don't realize how quickly application deadlines arrive.
Early Action, Early Decision, scholarship applications, honors colleges, and institutional deadlines can vary significantly from school to school.
Creating a master calendar now can help you avoid unnecessary stress and ensure that no important opportunities are missed.
5. Begin Thinking About Supplemental Essays
While students often focus on the Common App essay, many colleges require additional supplemental essays.
Common topics include:
- Why this college?
- Why this major?
- Community and identity
- Leadership experiences
- Intellectual curiosity
Reviewing these prompts early allows you to begin brainstorming ideas before the school year becomes hectic.
6. Confirm Your Recommendation Strategy
Strong letters of recommendation can provide valuable insight into who you are as a student and person.
Before school starts, identify the teachers, counselors, or mentors who know you best and can speak meaningfully about your strengths. Thinking through this process now will make recommendation requests much smoother once school resumes.
7. Have Honest Conversations About College Costs
College affordability should be part of the discussion long before applications are submitted.
Families should take time to discuss budgets, scholarship opportunities, and financial aid expectations. Understanding these factors early can help students build a realistic college list and avoid difficult surprises later.
8. Recharge Before Senior Year Begins
This may sound counterintuitive, but one of the smartest things students can do this summer is take a break.
The college admissions process can feel like a marathon. Students who enter senior year exhausted often struggle to maintain momentum throughout application season.
Spend time with friends. Take a vacation. Read for pleasure. Pursue hobbies. Enjoy being a teenager.
The goal isn't to spend every moment working on college applications. The goal is to start senior year feeling prepared, confident, and energized.
Final Thoughts
The students who experience the smoothest application seasons are rarely the ones who do everything at the last minute. Instead, they're the students who use the summer months to make steady progress before the demands of senior year take over.
A few hours invested now can save countless hours—and a great deal of stress—later.
At Custom College Consulting, we help students navigate every step of the college admissions process, from building balanced college lists and developing application strategies to crafting compelling essays and maximizing scholarship opportunities.
If you're ready to make the most of your summer advantage, we'd love to help.
This version feels less like a "Common App checklist" and more like a strategic summer-preparation article, which aligns better with your audience and remains useful even if someone reads it several weeks later.










