How To Write MIT's Supplemental Essays For 2025/26

How To Write MIT's Supplemental Essays For 2025/26

Cambridge, Massachusetts · Private

Aman D.

Former MIT Admissions Officer

What Are MIT's Supplemental Essay Questions?

The five short answer questions are designed to help MIT admission officers get to know you, not to evaluate prose quality. MIT's own admissions page is direct on this point: applicants who spend their time stressing or strategizing about what makes them "look best" instead of answering honestly are, in MIT's own words, "doing it wrong."
The format reinforces the point. The questions are brief by design, with no room to over-edit or perform. What's left is whether you can answer in your own voice, about things that matter to you, in compressed form.

MIT rewards applicants who write honestly and easily over those who strategize. The five short answers are a window into how you think when you're not performing, and the format is designed to make performance impossible to hide.

MIT runs its own application platform rather than the Common Application or Coalition.
The 2025-26 supplemental essays consist of five short answer questions plus one optional additional information text box. Word counts vary by prompt (roughly 100-200 words each), and the brevity of the format is intentional.

MIT's Supplemental Essay Prompts 2025/26 Admission Cycle

Prompt 1 | Field of Study
What field of study appeals to you the most right now? Tell us more about why this field of study at MIT appeals to you. (100-200 words)
Prompt 2 | Pleasure
We know you lead a busy life, full of activities, many of which are required of you. Tell us about something you do simply for the pleasure of it. (100-200 words)
Prompt 3 | Blazing Your Own Trails
While some reach their goals following well-trodden paths, others blaze their own trails achieving the unexpected. In what ways have you done something different than what was expected in your educational journey? (100-200 words)
Prompt 4 | Collaboration
MIT brings people with diverse backgrounds together to collaborate, from tackling the world's biggest challenges to lending a helping hand. Describe one way you have collaborated with others to learn from them, with them, or contribute to your community together. (100-200 words)
Prompt 5 | Unexpected Challenge
How did you manage a situation or challenge that you didn't expect? What did you learn from it? (100-200 words)
Optional Additional Information
One open-ended text box for anything else applicants want MIT's admissions officers to know.

I would say the essays are there to flesh out this skeleton of the application. But they're not there to really make a difference in the way people think. It's such a subjective thing.

Aman D.

Former MIT Admissions Officer

MIT's essays decide whether the rest of the application holds together. They can sink a strong file or quietly reinforce one, but they rarely advance a weak one on their own.

How Should You Approach MIT's Five Short Answer Questions?

Approach MIT's five short answers as a coordinated set rather than five standalone responses. Each prompt tests a different dimension of the applicant, but together they should reveal one student from five angles. The applicant whose five answers describe five different people hasn't yet written for MIT.

Prompt 1: Field of Study (100-200 words)

The field of study prompt is MIT's version of the "why major" essay, and it is the most direct test of intellectual fit on the application. A strong answer does three things at once. It identifies a specific field, such as materials science or AI, and explains what genuinely pulls you toward it. It names a specific MIT lab, professor, class, or project that connects to that interest, which proves you have looked past the brochure. And it roots the interest in a real experience, experiment, or problem you have already tried to solve, so the field reads as something you do rather than something you admire.
The version that fails stays vague. "I love STEM" or "I want to solve big problems" is not an answer when every applicant writes the same line. Talking about career goals without tying them back to your current academic work has the same problem, and listing impressive-sounding topics to sound smart reads as positioning. The version that works names a question you have been turning over, then traces it to the resource at MIT that would help you pursue it.

Prompt 2: Pleasure (100-200 words)

The pleasure prompt asks what lights you up when nobody is grading you. It is one of the most personality-driven questions on the application and the clearest filter MIT has on authentic voice. A strong answer reveals a genuine hobby, interest, or ritual you do only because you love it, even if it is niche, like making origami dragons or editing Wikipedia pages. It explains what the activity brings you emotionally or intellectually, whether that is calm, challenge, or connection, and it uses real detail to let your personality come through.
The trap is treating it as another chance to show off. The applicant who answers "competitive math" or "researching quantum physics in my spare time" has misread the prompt. Picking something generic like "watching TV" without a real angle does not land either, and faking a hobby you do not actually enjoy strips the voice out of the answer. MIT wants the human here, not the resume. A connection to STEM is welcome when it is real, but forcing one defeats the point of the question.

Prompt 3: Blazing Your Own Trail (100-200 words)

The trail-blazing prompt reads for initiative, resourcefulness, and a willingness to step off the standard academic conveyor belt. MIT values learners who pursue knowledge independently, whether that means teaching yourself to code, building something from scratch, or trying something ambitious and failing at it. A strong answer describes a specific moment where you pursued learning on your own, even when it was not polished or successful, names what drove you, whether curiosity, boredom, a challenge, or a sense of injustice, and reflects on what you took away from it.
The weakest answers stay conventional or skip the introspection. An AP Chemistry class with no twist is not blazing a trail, and bragging about an achievement without reflecting on it misses what the prompt is testing. Reaching for a dramatic life pivot tends to land worse than a small, concrete example handled with real thought. MIT does not mind hearing about struggle here. It wants to see how you handled it.

Prompt 4: Collaboration (100-200 words)

The collaboration prompt checks whether you work well alongside people who think differently than you do. MIT is intensely collaborative, and the prompt is not about being the hero of a group project. It is about how you helped a group succeed. A strong answer shows real collaboration, not just dividing up tasks but learning with and from other people, includes a specific challenge or turning point in the group dynamic, and reflects on what the experience taught you about yourself and about working with others.
The answers that fail center the writer. Focusing entirely on your own accomplishments, or pretending the group work was always smooth and conflict-free, drains the prompt of its substance. Forgetting to explain what the collaboration meant to you leaves the reader with a description of a project instead of a portrait of how you operate on a team.

Prompt 5: Unexpected Challenge (100-200 words)

The unexpected-challenge prompt reads for resilience and self-awareness. MIT is not looking for perfect people. It wants people who can recover, reframe, and grow under pressure, and the challenge does not have to be dramatic. It just has to be real. A strong answer identifies a specific, personal moment of uncertainty or failure, explains how you worked through it, whether emotionally, practically, or with help from others, and shows what it taught you about your values, your work ethic, or your coping style.
The weaker answers dodge the prompt. Pretending you have never faced failure, or writing a success story disguised as a challenge, such as "I failed, but actually I won," reads as evasive. A cliched story can still work, but only if you tell it in a way that is genuinely yours.

It's super rare that you read an essay and you're thinking, 'Oh, we're definitely admitting this kid because of this essay.’ And now with the age of AI, the probability is even lower, because admissions officers are so skeptical of all this stuff.

Aman D.

Former MIT Admissions Officer

Forced inspiration is the most common mistake on MIT's essays. The applicant who answers authentically and accurately outperforms the one reaching for a transformation arc.

MIT Essay Examples From Successful Admits

The two essays below are real responses from a Crimson student admitted to MIT, annotated by Lauren Pluchino, Crimson's Director of US Essay Mentoring. Lauren has mentored thousands of students through their college essays and reviews dozens of admitted MIT supplements each cycle. Her annotations focus on the critical choices that turn a 100-200 word answer into a portrait of one specific student writing for MIT.

Example 1

MIT brings people with diverse backgrounds together to collaborate, from tackling the world’s biggest challenges to lending a helping hand. Describe one way you have collaborated with others to learn from them, with them, or contribute to your community together.

“We need to figure this out if we want to have a garden at all,” I warned my Environmental Action Team co-leaders. Huddled around laptops and hand-drawn designs, we had to decide what to prioritize in our new pollinator garden.

Team Pollinators: Passionate about centering pollinators. Advocating for uninterrupted underground nutrient networks and no paths.

Team educators: Passionate about centering students and creating an outdoor classroom. Advocating for wide paths and neatly separated plants

What makes this work:

The essay refuses the easy collaboration narrative. Most applicants describe a team coming together around a shared vision; this student describes three competing visions and the work of finding what each one understood that the others didn't.
The structural move is the breakdown of three factions with named priorities, which lets a reader see exactly what the disagreement was about. Then the student names her own initial bias (favoring pollinators and students, not yet seeing the value of dead brush piles), which is the diagnostic moment.
She didn't enter the meeting already enlightened. The entomologists taught her that dead brush piles weren't clutter, they were habitat. The closing image (narrow paths, densely packed flowers, dead brush piles, all coexisting) is the visible result of the collaboration the essay describes.

Takeaway for applicants:

The Collaboration prompt rewards essays that show how the applicant changed through working with others, not essays that describe team success. The version that works names a specific moment of friction, a specific thing the applicant learned from someone whose priorities differed from theirs, and a specific outcome that wouldn't have existed without the collaboration.
MIT isn't asking for evidence that you can work with people but that you let other people's thinking change yours.

Example 2

We know you lead a busy life, full of activities, many of which are required of you. Tell us about something you do simply for the pleasure of it.

I sit atop my weighted blanket, tugging the fuzzy pink yarn towards me. “Single, Dou-ble. Single, Dou-ble,” I repeat quietly, meditatively, as my crochet hook navigates the tight-knit stitches from 10 minutes prior. The hyperbolic surface begins to take shape in my hands, a thrill passing through me as I trace its edges and admire the curves.

The shape that felt so mind-breakingly confusing earlier feels approachable, my lips tugging into a smile as I fold and bend it, exploring its mysteries. C

What makes this work: 

The joy she experiences with crocheting and the connection she makes to origami, highlights her ability to leverage shapes into creating something beautiful. She creatively connects something she does for fun with a unique way that she sees the world, painting a picture of an applicant that sees patterns in unexpected places. 
Pairing a dinosaur for her brother with a non-euclidian geometry model,  allows us to see that her ability to create shapes takes both academic and nonacademic forms–amplifying her creativity and impact  in the answer.  
Crocheting is not only described in the context of what she learns from it, but the way she  experiences it. The weighted blanket and fuzzy pink yarn make me feel the joy right along with her. 

Key Takeaways: 

Who you  become in the process, matters just as much as what brings you joy itself. By coupling her understanding of geometric shapes through yarn and origami, the depth of her creativity becomes tangible. It complements and connects to her overall profile. 
A personal setup helps build the connection to the student and grounds the experience in something that feels real. By pairing the weighted blanket with the 5-year old brother's geometric creations, it allows us to connect with the way that she playfully explores shapes. This feels significantly more real than if she was to just share her love of crocheting.

Having thoughtful, good essays about yourself really is about you being attuned to yourself and knowing what makes you tick, having the self-awareness, and feeling content with the way you're showing up in the essay.

Aman D.

Former MIT Admissions Officer

What is MIT really looking for in its essays?

MIT looks for several qualities in the essays including:
— Real love of math and physics,
— Science-minded curiosity that surfaces even in non-academic topics,
— An authentic voice that has not been edited into nothing.
The first two are MIT-specific dispositions. The third is the craft requirement that separates files that work from ones that fall flat. MIT's own guidance puts it plainly: be honest, be open, be authentic. The qualities below tend to emerge when you write from self-knowledge instead of strategizing for admission.

Love of math and physics

MIT requires two years of advanced math and physics. Officers sense a mismatch in the essays

Science-minded curiosity

An experimenter's instinct applied to anything, from reverse-engineering radios to making chainmail.

Techno-optimism

Essays read best when you believe what you build could make the world better.

Joy and resilience

MIT is hard. Strong essays keep curiosity and pleasure visible even under pressure.

Community footprint

MIT runs on collaboration. Show how you extend your work outward to other people.

Coherence with the file

With 4 activities and 5 short essays, readers cross-check fast. Answers should reinforce each other.

I had a student who got into MIT whose essay was about being in China. They're really big on loose-leaf tea, so he would make loose-leaf tea concoctions. It's something which he did for fun, but it still showed him having a science-y mindset.

Aman D.

Former MIT Admissions Officer

MIT's essays surface the kind of mind that would thrive in its classrooms. Beautiful writing helps less than honest specificity about how you actually think.

What Are the Most Common Mistakes in MIT Essays?

The MIT essays that fail share a single pattern. In MIT's own words, applicants who spend their time stressing or strategizing about what makes them "look best" instead of answering honestly are "doing it wrong." The six mistakes below are all variations of that one diagnosis. With short word counts and five prompts, there's nowhere to hide.

The contrived file

Activities say one thing, essays claim another, recs describe a third person. Readers feel it fast.

Performing inspiration

5 transformation arcs in a row read as false. Ordinary subjects with real reflection beat forced

STEM cosplay

Applying as a non-STEM major with no STEM-adjacent interest. The math and physics filter is sharp.

Pleasure-prompt anxiety

Answering “what do you do for fun” with another achievement misreads the prompt completely.

The AI fingerprint

Smooth vocab & balanced rhythm with no personal imprint. Readers spot it against your other writing

Generic enthusiasm

“I've always loved engineering” fails the field-of-study prompt. Name the question and the resource.

It's super rare that you read an essay and think, 'We're definitely admitting this kid because of this essay.' And now in the age of AI, the probability is even lower, because admissions officers are so skeptical of all this stuff.

Aman D.

Former MIT Admissions Officer

Forced inspiration is the most common mistake on MIT's essays. The applicant who answers honestly and accurately outperforms the one reaching for a transformation arc.

How do the MIT essays connect to the rest of the application?

The MIT essays connect to the rest of the application through coherence across a small, tight file. MIT gives you four activity slots, five short essays, two teacher recommendations, one counselor letter, and an optional Maker Portfolio. Against the Common App's ten activities and 650-word personal statement, MIT's application is compressed. There is less room for the parts to line up by accident. Either they cohere or they do not, and officers spot the gaps quickly.
Within that coherence test, your four activities show what you have spent time on. Your transcript shows what you have taken seriously. Your recommendations describe how you operate where officers cannot watch. Your prizes establish credibility before the file is even read. Your essays are the only place where you explain why any of it mattered to you. When the essays name values and interests that the rest of the file confirms, the application gains momentum.

Calibrate your application to match the school's interests a little bit better. And still be authentic, because you have all those different parts within you.

Aman D.

Former MIT Admissions Officer

The optional additional information text box

MIT's application includes one optional text box for anything else you want officers to know. It is truly optional, so do not pad it if you have nothing specific to add. The applicants who use it well add context the rest of the application cannot carry: a personal circumstance affecting an academic record, an activity that did not fit the four-slot list, a note on an unusual grading scale. Treating it as extra personality marketing usually backfires. Officers can tell when someone is performing rather than informing.

MIT's essays are where you tell officers what your activities, prizes, and recommendations mean. When they do that work well, the rest of the application stops needing to argue for itself.

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How To Write MIT's Supplemental Essays For 2025/26