

How to Write Dartmouth's Supplemental Essays for 2025/26
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Dartmouth's supplemental essays, explained
The fit question runs both ways. Readers aren't only asking whether you're right for Dartmouth; they're watching for whether you've understood what makes Dartmouth right for you.
What are Dartmouth's supplemental essay prompts for 2025/26?
Choose one of these two prompts
Choose one of these seven prompts
How should you approach Dartmouth's essays?
How to answer Prompt 1: Why Dartmouth?
The fit essay rewards specifics only Dartmouth offers: a named course, the Outing Club, the D-Plan. Praise that could describe any Ivy is the most common way these 100 words fail.
What strong “why Dartmouth?” answers do
Example: The 100-word fit essay
Prompt 1 (Fit)
Admitted student, Dartmouth Class of 2029
Dartmouth is a place for trailblazers (both literally and figuratively). I am constantly searching for new trails, connecting my passions with those of my peers. Through The Problem of Other Minds, I'd connect my knowledge of neural pathways with the information of behavioral psychology that my classmates will provide. I also can't wait to participate in Music Empowerment of the Upper Valley, teaching viola or bodhran and learning about other instruments. In the fall, I hope to hike the trails o
How do you choose and write the two 250-word essays?
Prompt 2: the personal-quality essay (250 words)
Prompt 3: choose one of seven (250 words)
Specificity is the whole game on Prompt 3. The option you'd happily overwrite beats the one that sounds impressive, and one battle teaches a reader more than “the Civil War,” which teaches more than “history.”
Prompt | Choose it if | What works | Avoid |
2A — Quaker, “let your life speak” | Your environment (place, family, culture) shaped a value central to you. | Show, don't tell. Trace one or two values to lived detail rather than a brief life history. | A neutral chronological life story that never reveals a quality. |
2B — Wilde, “be yourself” | You can be bold and declarative and want to make a statement, not tell a story. | Set a clear tone in the first line (playful, curious, kind) and hold it. Reveal a true quirk. | Third-person self-description; bragging; cockiness. |
3A — What excites you? | You have a real obsession you can show with palpable enthusiasm. | Go specific: not “history” but one battle. Take the reader down the rabbit hole and teach them something. | Reusing your Common App “lose track of time” topic. Touting accomplishments. |
3B — Huerta, a life of purpose | You have a substantial service project or volunteer work to share. | About 40% impact, 30% motivation, 30% how you'd sustain it. Describe the broad aim and your specific role. | Any “savior” framing. Judging the causes of the problem or those affected. |
3C — Haig, insight from reading | A specific book truly changed how you understand yourself or others. | Name the book and the shift it caused. Show the before and the after instead of summarizing the plot. | A plot summary. A title chosen to look impressive rather than one that moved you. |
3D — Goodall, a difficult conversation | You have a disagreement where you sought common ground. | Lay out the stakes, emphasize listening, and frame more shared understanding as the win. | Judging the other party; projecting your reconciliation onto the whole world. |
3E — Celebrate your nerdy side | You want to share how you nerd out, with enthusiasm, across one or more interests. | Explain the interest briefly, then show how you explore it. Get subject-matter specific. | Claiming true expertise; staying vague or surveying a whole field. |
3F — Kermit, difference & identity | An aspect of your lived experience matters to you and isn't shown elsewhere. | Speak candidly about what shaped you and the quality that resulted; tie it to inclusive dialogue. | Sensationalizing; settling scores with people who treated you poorly. |
3G — Mindy Kaling, failure & reworking | You have a story of trying, failing, and reworking something toward better. | Show the process: the attempt, what broke, and how you revised. Treat “bad on its way to good” as the point. | A failure that's secretly a humblebrag. Skipping the messy middle and the actual reworking. |
Example: a 250-word “let your life speak” essay
Prompt 2A (Quaker saying)
Admitted student, Dartmouth Class of 2029
Nestled in the foothills of the Adirondack mountains lies the village of Gansevoort. It's where urban meets rural, and where I grew up. The community that has formed here has instilled two values in me: ambition and service. When I was younger, my cousins and I tried to climb a tree, each of us facing limitations with the branches of the maple that caused us to fall many times. By the end of the summer we all climbed this tree, covered in scrapes and bruises to prove it. The tenacity I approache
What is Dartmouth really looking for in your essays?
Authentic voice
Answer in your own voice. A reader can tell when an adult did the writing.
Specificity
One concrete detail from your life beats a broad claim. The small thing outperforms the grand.
Answering the prompt
Answer the question on the page, not the one you wish it asked.
Making the ordinary vivid
An everyday moment, put on the page well, can say more about you than any large one.
What are the most common mistakes in Dartmouth essays?
How do the essays connect to the rest of your Dartmouth application?
The essay is the one place you get to say directly what your application means. When it answers a different question, or belongs to a different school, the whole file goes quiet at the part that should speak loudest.