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

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

Cambridge, Massachusetts · Private

Devery D.

Former Harvard Admissions Officer

What Are Harvard's Supplemental Essay Questions?

Harvard's supplemental questions are designed to surface the actual student behind the credentials. The file that makes it through committee is rarely the one with the most perfectly polished prose. It's the one that sounds like a real 17-year-old writing about something that matters to them.
Several Harvard admissions officers serve as proctors and tutors in the first-year dormitories, which means the people deciding whether to admit you may end up sharing a building with you. The essays are where they decide whether you're someone they'd want to greet in the dorm hallway.

Harvard's essays aren't a writing test. They're the place where readers stop asking whether you can do the work and start asking whether they want you in their community.

Harvard's supplement runs five required short-answer questions, each capped at 150 words, alongside the Common Application or Coalition personal statement. Each short answer is doing a different job, and brief word counts strip away the room to perform. What's left is who you actually are.

Harvard's Supplemental Essay Prompts 2025/26 Admission Cycle

Prompt 1 | Diversity Essay
Harvard has long recognized the importance of enrolling a student body with a diversity of perspectives and experiences. How will the life experiences that shaped who you are today enable you to contribute to Harvard? (150 Words)
Prompt 2 | Disagreement Essay
Describe a time when you strongly disagreed with someone about an idea or issue. How did you communicate or engage with this person? What did you learn from this experience? (150 Words)
Prompt 3 | Activities Essay
Briefly describe any of your extracurricular activities, employment experience, travel, or family responsibilities that have shaped who you are. (150 Words)
Prompt 4 | Future Goals Essay
How do you hope to use your Harvard education in the future? (150 Words)
Prompt 5 | Roommate Essay
Top 3 things your roommates might like to know about you. (150 Words)

When you have a student who really knows themselves and can highlight their strengths, their values, their qualities, that's when we say, is this a student I would want in my entryway?

Devery D.

Former Harvard Admissions Officer

At Harvard, academic readiness is assumed. The essays answer the question grades can't: who are you, really, and would Harvard truly be a better place with you in it?

How Should You Approach Harvard's Supplemental Essay Questions?

You should approach Harvard's five short answers as a single composite portrait instead of five disconnected mini-essays. So how do five different questions reveal one cohesive student? Like a kaleidoscope: each prompt is the flick of the wrist that shows a new angle of the same person.
Officers prefer the brief word counts because they make it harder for adults to ghostwrite. A 150-word answer in a teenager's voice can't be polished without sounding like an essay; a 650-word personal statement can.
The instinct to reach for the biggest moment in your life rarely produces the strongest writing. Essays about overcoming hardship arrive by the thousands, and most sound the same.

Prompt 1 Diversity Essay

The first prompt, on diversity and life experiences, works best when it goes small: a specific detail from your actual day-to-day life that reveals something real about how you see the world. The hand-written thank-you notes, the grandmother's recipe, the conversation overheard on the bus.

Prompt 2 Disagreement Essay

The disagreement prompt rewards essays that sit with the discomfort rather than resolving it too neatly. The version that succeeds shows the texture of how you actually think when challenged, not how you wrap up the conflict in a tidy lesson.

Prompt 3 Activities Essay

The activities prompt is where backstory belongs, not what you did, but why any of it mattered to you, the small ordinary thing that made you keep going.

Prompt 4 Future Goals Essay

The future prompt rewards specificity over vague aspirations to "make a difference," with what you've already been doing as the bridge to what you want to do next.

Prompt 5 Roommate Essay

The roommate prompt is the lowest-stakes question and the one most students underestimate. The three things you list should reveal how you actually live, in language that sounds like you actually talking. Accomplishments dressed up as quirks read as performance. The actual person reads as the actual person.

We don't care about the topic of your essay, as long as it's significant to you, and it's specific to you, and it's your story, and nobody else's. You can write about your rock collection, and it could be fascinating. Because it's your story

Devery D.

Former Harvard Admissions Officer

In the short answers, the answer that sounds honest beats the answer that reaches too hard for impressiveness almost every time.

Harvard Essay Examples From Successful Admits

The two essays below are real responses from students admitted to Harvard's Class of 2030, annotated by Lauren Pluchino, Crimson's Director of US Essay Mentoring.
Lauren has worked with thousands of students on their college essays and reads dozens of admitted Harvard supplements each cycle. Her annotations are written in her own voice, the way she'd talk you through these essays in a mentoring session, focusing on the small choices that turn a 150-word answer into a portrait of an actual person.

Harvard has long recognized the importance of enrolling a student body with a diversity of perspectives and experiences. How will the life experiences that shaped who you are today enable you to contribute to Harvard?

Admitted Student | Harvard University, Class of 2030

Yearly, my mom purchased several Dunkin Donuts gift cards for the holiday seasons for my school's staff. We hand-wrote each letter, thanking the secretary for her occasional winks overlooking our tardiness or my seventh-grade teacher staying after school to “tutor” me when my mom couldn't afford after-care during her late shifts. In high school, I hand-sewed 52 reindeer candy-cane pockets for my school's staff, repaying those who made an impact on me. If it weren't for those who listened when I ...

Show more

What makes this work

The Dunkin Donuts gift cards and the personalized thank you cards paint the picture of a young woman who goes beyond performative gratitude and into the space of genuine appreciation and engagement with the community around her.
Bringing qualities of service to Harvard in itself wouldn't feel unique, but the depth of personal connection in honoring the service of those who showed up for her, paints a picture of a student who will bring the same to Harvard. This shows us that she sees service as going beyond helping and into building connections with each other.
The occasional winks regarding her tardiness also connects us to a feeling that in addition to gratitude, she will be bringing her ability to not take herself too seriously to the campus.

Takeaway for applicants

Small details amplify and diversify key takeaways. What could have been an "I am willing to bring my passion for service" becomes a story about bringing humility, understanding, humor and gratitude to the people who help us. This helps build a lens on service that is significantly more nuanced and amplifies how we see the student showing up on campus.
Going beyond an initial lesson from an experience, helps honor the unique way that the lesson is expressed for the student, moving away from generalizations and into something that feels personal and real. In this case, the ability to honor moments of thanks in the support she receives, highlights not just what she'll do at Harvard, but how she'll do it.
Humility embedded in the lessons only amplifies what she'll bring, as gratitude and the occasional tardiness work to highlight a young woman who is deeply self-aware and unafraid to be honest.

Top 3 things your roommates might like to know about you.

Admitted Student | Harvard University, Class of 2030

No matter the occasion, I never miss a Duolingo lesson. Seconds before midnight, it's not surprising to hear the dings of my mistakes after a long day. Brazilian Portuguese, French, Italian — with a 675 day streak, I'm relentless. I finished one lesson at a carnival at 11:58pm, mercilessly spun around in a teacup.

I regress to my 8 year-old self every few months, singing every One Direction song alone in my room. Remembering my attachment to the band that taught me to "dream out loud," I re-disco

What makes this work

Values are intertwined with a playfulness that brings a sense of lightheartedness to the essay, ensuring that she sounds like a roommate someone would actually want to live with. The teacup spinning and One Direction boy band songs shows that dreaming out loud and honoring the favorite songs of our 8-year old selves, aren't mutually exclusive.
Preserving items that bring sentimental value highlights a consistent narrative theme in the other essay, where appreciation and gratitude of even the smallest of items (such as name tags) are fully driving this student.

Takeaway for applicants

Cohesion matters just as much as the depth of what we learn about the student. The same girl who writes hand-written notes feels like it's the exact same person who would bring her sister's DIY trinkets. As a reader this adds to the feelings of authenticity that builds one story.
Playful language and depth of reflection complement each other rather than compete for attention in the writing process. Finishing her Duolingo streak at 11:58 in a teacup, supports the narrative of a student that is fully committed, while showing that she is not above a little fun.
Humanizing yourself in the roommate question gives a unique opportunity to not just add a new dimension, but show that you are somebody who does not just believe certain values, but embodies them in how you live and exist in the world.

When you have a student who can highlight their strengths, their values, their qualities through a few anecdotes that really support that quality, support our suspicion in a good way — that's when we get to know them.

Devery D.

Former Harvard Admissions Officer

What Is Harvard Really Looking For In Your Essays?

Harvard is looking for essays that reveal a real, distinctive student behind the credentials, written with self-knowledge, authentic voice, and concrete detail rather than flourish.
The qualities that consistently separate the essays that succeed from the ones that don't aren't about polish; they're about whether the student has done the harder, quieter work of introspection to figure out who they actually are before sitting down to write.

Self-Knowledge

The students whose essays work are the ones who've checked in with themselves before writing.

Specificity

A single precise detail does more work than a paragraph of general claims.

Purpose-Driven Action

Harvard reads activity lists for evidence of initiative, not participation.

Authentic Voice

Polished essays flag like inauthentic ones—both lose genuine personal voice through coaching.

Community Awareness

Essays that show a student who notices others and contributes without being asked.

Distance Traveled

Harvard doesn't admit based on where you started, but how far you’ve come from where you started.

When somebody doesn't have purpose, their essays lack life. There's no personality. When somebody writes something because they're excited about it, because it feels real to them, you can tell.

Devery D.

Former Harvard Admissions Officer

Harvard isn't asking you to prove that you're extraordinary. It would rather you be specific, honest, and entirely yourself, and trust that those things, done clearly and well, are extraordinary enough.

What Are the Most Common Mistakes in Harvard Essays?

The most common Harvard essay mistakes happen when students try too hard to do everything right, producing writing that feels rehearsed, performed, or generic instead of honest.

Writing to Please

When you focus on what the committee wants to hear, you’re headed the wrong way.

Reaching for the Biggest Topic

The smaller and more granular the frame, the better the essay tends to be.

The Thesaurus Essay

The words you actually use in your day-to-day life are the right ones. Clarity is the goal.

Writing One Essay Five Times

The five questions are designed to surface five different facets of the same person.

The AI Fingerprint

Officers who've read tens of thousands of essays can tell when a machine has written the prose.

Ghostwriting by an Adult

When a personal statement reads like a 40-year-old wrote it, officers notice immediately.

You can tell when it's an 18-year-old writing it versus a 40-year-old. You can tell. You can tell when it's AI. When you've read 50,000 essays, you just get a sense.

Devery D.

Former Harvard Admissions Officer

The most common Harvard essay mistakes share a pattern: writing about the right topic in a way that could belong to anyone, too broad, too polished, or too focused on what you think Harvard wants to hear.

How Do the Harvard Essays Connect to the Rest of the Application?

The Harvard essays connect to the rest of the application through a single test: is this the same person? Every essay, every recommendation, every activity gets read against every other piece of the file. When the answer is yes, the application reads as one coherent person. When it isn't, the gaps become the story.
The activity list showcases how productively you've used your time. The essays explain why any of it mattered to you. Together, they make a single argument about who you are, and officers can feel almost immediately when the pieces don't quite line up.

If they take some time to think about some of their five defining qualities, do those five main qualities show up in the application? Do we see this whole person, or is something lacking?

Devery D.

Former Harvard Admissions Officer

Your essays and your activities aren't separate parts of the application. They're two halves of the same argument. When they point toward the same student, the file moves forward on its own momentum.

Book a free consultation with one of our expert advisors.

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