College Admission Essay Writing Service
This one can tip the scale. We help you tell your story — specific, honest, not generic.
What it is
A college admission essay answers the prompt the school gives you. Often it’s “why us,” “tell us about yourself,” or a moment that changed you. They want to see your voice and your fit. We help shape that without inventing facts.
Why it matters
Grades and test scores show ability. The essay shows who you are. A strong one is specific (one story, one theme), genuine, and on-topic. We don’t write fake stories — we help you turn your experience into a clear narrative.
What we do
We work from your notes, draft, or outline. Or from scratch if you tell us your story and the prompt. Same as application essay and personal statement: your facts, our structure and polish. For money for school: scholarship essays.
Why the admission essay matters
Grades and test scores show what you've done. The essay shows who you are. Admissions officers read thousands of essays; a generic one blurs. A strong one is specific: one story, one theme, your voice. We help you get there without inventing facts. We tighten, structure, and make sure you answer the prompt. Your experiences, our clarity.
Common prompts and how we handle them
"Why this school?" — We need your reasons (program, campus, fit). You send notes; we turn them into a focused essay. "Tell us about yourself" or "a moment that changed you" — We need your story. One concrete moment works better than a list of traits. "Diversity" or "community" — We help you say what you contribute without sounding like a brochure. Paste the exact prompt and we'll match it.
What to send when you order
The prompt, word limit, and deadline. Your draft, bullet points, or a description of your story and why you're applying. The more you send, the more we can sound like you. We don't need your full life history — one or two strong angles are enough. If you have a first draft, we can edit and polish it.
FAQ about college admission essays
Do you write from scratch or edit my draft? Both. If you have a draft we polish it. If you have notes we build the essay. Will it sound like me? We work from your material and keep your voice. You review and add any details only you can. How many schools? One essay per order. For multiple schools with the same prompt we can adapt; say so in the instructions. Original? Yes. Written for your order only.
Openings that work (and ones that don't)
Admissions officers see "Ever since I was a child..." and "I have always been passionate about..." all the time. They tune out. What works is jumping into a specific moment: a conversation, a mistake, a place, a decision. We help you start there. If your draft opens with a generality, we'll suggest a stronger hook from the material you gave us — or we'll restructure so the first line is concrete and the "why it matters" comes right after.
What readers say they skip
Generic praise for the school ("your excellent program"), long lists of achievements already on the transcript, and essays that could fit any university. They remember the ones that answer the question with a real story and a clear voice. We don't pad with flattery or repeat your CV. We use the space to show who you are and why you fit — in your words, tightened and clear.
Undergrad vs grad admission essays
Undergrad essays (Common App, Coalition, or school-specific) often ask for one main personal story or "why us." They're usually 250–650 words. We keep the tone genuine and specific — one moment, one theme. Grad school essays (statement of purpose, personal statement) are often longer and more focused on research interests, fit with the program, and career goals. We still use your material: your research experience, your reasons for applying, your fit with faculty or labs. We don't invent your background. When you order say undergrad or grad and paste the prompt so we match the expected tone and length.
Word limits and how we trim
Most admission essays have a strict word or character limit (e.g. 650 words, 4000 characters). We cut filler first: vague openings, repeated ideas, and phrases that don't add meaning. We keep every sentence that advances your story or your argument. If you send a draft that's over the limit we trim to fit without losing your voice or your key points. If you're under and the essay feels thin we can suggest where to add one concrete detail — but we don't pad. The goal is to hit the limit with content that earns its place.
What "your voice" means in practice
We work from your draft or your notes. Your words and your experiences stay; we fix grammar, flow, and structure. We don't replace your phrasing with something that sounds like a different person. If your draft is informal we might tighten it slightly for clarity but we don't make it stiff. If it's too formal we can loosen it so it sounds more like you. The reader should feel they're hearing you, not a template. After we deliver you can add a line or a detail only you would know — that final pass keeps it yours.
Multiple prompts and supplements
Many schools ask for one main essay plus shorter supplements ("why us," "why this major," etc.). We do one essay per order. If you have several supplements for the same school you can place separate orders or ask for a quote for the set — mention it in the instructions. For "why us" we need your real reasons: a program, a professor, a campus culture. We don't write generic praise. We turn your notes into a focused, school-specific answer. Paste each prompt and its word limit so we match them.
Revisions and what to check
After you get the draft read it against the prompt. Does it answer the question? Is the opening concrete? Is the word count right? Does it sound like you? If something is off — wrong tone, missing point, too generic — request a revision. We don't charge when we missed the brief. Add any detail only you can (a name, a place, a line you want in). There's a time window for revisions (see our terms) so ask soon after delivery.
What to send in detail
The exact prompt and word limit. Your draft, bullet points, or a description of your story and why you're applying. For "why us" any notes on the school (program, faculty, location). Your academic level (undergrad or grad). If you have a first draft we can edit and polish; if you have only notes we build the essay. The more you send the closer the result to your voice and your facts. We don't need your full CV — we need the material that fits this prompt.
FAQ (continued)
Can you do multiple schools in one order? One essay per order. If several schools use the same prompt we can adapt one essay for each; say so and we'll quote. What if I'm not a native speaker? We polish grammar and flow so the essay reads clearly. We keep your ideas and your voice. Is it ethical to get help? We provide writing assistance. Whether and how you use it is your responsibility. Many schools allow help with structure and proofreading; few allow someone else to write the whole essay. Check your institution's policy.
How long before the deadline should I order? Give us at least 2–3 days for a main essay so you have time to review and request changes. Last-minute is possible for shorter pieces; the order form shows availability.
Common App and school-specific prompts
Common App has one main essay (choose one of several prompts) plus optional additional information. Many schools also have their own "why us" or short-answer supplements. We do the main essay and each supplement as separate orders (or we can quote for a set). Paste each prompt and its word limit. For "why us" we need your real reasons — a program, a professor, campus culture — not generic praise. We turn your notes into a focused, school-specific answer that fits the limit.
Pricing and turnaround
Admission essays are priced by length (word count or pages) and deadline. Short supplements cost less than the main essay. The order form shows the total when you enter the details. We often return within 2–3 days for a main essay; shorter pieces can be faster. Give yourself time to review and request a revision if needed. Last-minute orders are possible but cost more per page.
Final check before you submit
Read the draft against the prompt one more time. Does it answer the question? Is the opening concrete? Is your voice there? Add any detail only you can (a name, a place, a line). Spell-check the school name and program. Stay within the word limit. Then submit. We don't see your submission — that's between you and the school. We've done our part; the rest is yours.