hey can you apply Early Decision to one college and early action to another?

<p>i want to apply</p>

<p>ED: Syracuse
and...
EA: Northeastern or Fordham</p>

<p>am i allowed to apply ED to Syracuse, even though i am applying to NEU or FU? </p>

<p>and if i get ito Syracuse, ill just withdraw the other appilcation.</p>

<p>You can unless the application instructions say you can’t or you sign something saying that you won’t.</p>

<p>Yes. 10 char</p>

<p>Yes, unless either Northeastern or Fordham have restrictive early action.</p>

<p>It depends on the policies of individual colleges. For example, if you apply Early Action to Georgetown, you are agreeing NOT to apply Early Action or Early Decision at any other colleges.</p>

<p>Actually, Georgetown let’s you apply to other schools EA, just not ED. I believe Yale is the only EA program that doesn’t let you apply anywhere at all EA.</p>

<p>Stanford has the same policy as Yale; Boston College has the same policy as Georgetown (EA anywhere, no ED).</p>

<p>Before you apply anywhere EA or ED, you need to read the individual college websites carefully.</p>

<p>this is exactly my question in my thread right below this thread…
do you guys know anything about Bates, Conncoll, Dickinson and Trinity?
I alr researched on those schools’ websites but couldn’t find much information</p>

<p>What’s the diff. between EA and ED?</p>

<p>So Stanford and Yale don’t let you apply to any other school early, while Georgetown and Boston College do?</p>

<p>EA is not binding-- you have until the Regular Decision deadline to decide if you want to go there.
ED is binding. You sign an agreement that if you get in and the schoolmakes it financially affordable for you to attend, you will.</p>

<p>If you apply to Stanford or Yale EA, you cannot apply to any other school early. Georgetown and BC do not let you apply ED anywhere, but you can apply EA to other schools.</p>

<p>Yeah my friend did that with Chicago and Georgetown</p>