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How to write the MIT essays — and read them against real admitted applications

Massachusetts Institute of Technology admits about 4.5% of applicants, which makes it a reach for almost everyone. At that selectivity, your grades and scores get you read — your essays decide the rest. This is an honest guide to what MIT actually looks for in the writing, the mistakes that quietly cost strong applicants a spot, and how to read your own package against the real admitted and rejected ones before you submit.

What MIT actually rewards in your essays

MIT admits roughly 4.5% of applicants, which means the essays are doing the deciding. Strong credentials are the floor, not the differentiator. What reads at MIT is restraint and evidence — a story that shows rather than announces, with the proof living in your activities and the texture of how you write, not in the adjectives you reach for.

MIT uses short-answer boxes instead of one long personal statement, including a pleasure/what-you-do-for-fun prompt and a collaboration prompt. Brevity is the test: MIT reads for genuine maker energy and how you work with other people, compressed.

The most common ways applicants lose MIT

The same handful of mistakes sink strong applicants at MIT every cycle: a Common App essay that lists accomplishments instead of telling one story; supplements that could have been pasted into any other school's application; "why MIT" answers built from rankings and vibes instead of specific programs, courses, or people; an activities list that buries the most interesting thing on it; and a narrative that reads as four different people because four different people helped write it. None of these show up on your transcript. All of them show up to the reader. The fix is rarely "work harder" — it's "tell the truth more specifically."

Read your MIT application against the real ones

This is exactly what Real Admissions Essays does. We've built an archive of thousands of real admitted, waitlisted, and rejected packages — with the actual outcome attached to every file — and you can read your own application against it, scored specifically for MIT. You get a calibrated probability against MIT's real acceptance rate, your essays scored line by line against what MIT actually rewards, and an exact list of what to fix tonight. Then you revise, re-run, and watch the read improve. Your first read is $0.99 (or free with code FIRSTREAD), instead of the $5,000 a consultant charges for the same comparison.

Get an honest read on your MIT package.

Upload your essays, supplements, and activities list. Get a long, structured report scored against MIT's actual current prompts, with a calibrated probability and line-level edits. First read $0.99, or free with code FIRSTREAD.

MIT essays: frequently asked questions

What is Massachusetts Institute of Technology's acceptance rate?+

Massachusetts Institute of Technology admits roughly 4.5% of applicants in recent cycles. At that rate, strong grades and scores are necessary but not sufficient — the essays and the overall shape of your application are what separate admitted from rejected.

Do essays really matter for getting into MIT?+

Yes — more than almost anything else you can still control. By the time you apply, your transcript is mostly fixed. The essays are where a reader decides whether you're a specific, memorable person or one more strong-but-generic file. At MIT's selectivity, that distinction decides the outcome.

How can I tell if my MIT essays are good enough?+

The honest answer is to compare them to real outcomes. Real Admissions Essays reads your package against thousands of real admitted, waitlisted, and rejected applications and scores it specifically for MIT, with a calibrated probability and line-level feedback. Your first read is $0.99 or free with code FIRSTREAD.

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