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

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

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What Are Columbia's Supplemental Essay Questions?

Columbia's writing supplement is where officers test whether an applicant has thought specifically enough about Columbia to belong there. The seven questions form a composite portrait of a student who reads across disciplines, engages with the city, and understands what makes Columbia distinct from every other Ivy. By the end of the supplement, officers have built a clear picture of a student who belongs, or they've noticed gaps the application can't recover from.

The seven questions Columbia asks all point at the same underlying test: who would you be on this campus, and would the Core Curriculum work for you?

The supplement runs one list question (100 words) and six short answer questions (150 words each), alongside the Common Application or Coalition personal statement. Brief word counts strip away the room to perform. What's left is whether you can be specific, honest, and clearly Columbian in under 150 words at a time.

Columbia's Supplemental Essay Prompts 2025/26 Admission Cycle

Prompt 1 | List question
List a selection of texts, resources and outlets that have contributed to your intellectual development outside of academic courses, including but not limited to books, journals, websites, podcasts, essays, plays, presentations, videos, museums and other content that you enjoy. (100 words)
Prompt 2 | Lived Experience
Tell us about an aspect of your life so far or your lived experience that is important to you, and describe how it has shaped the way you would learn from and contribute to Columbia's multidimensional and collaborative environment. (150 words)
Prompt 3 | Disagreement
At Columbia, students representing a wide range of perspectives are invited to live and learn together. In such a community, questions and debates naturally arise. Please describe a time when you did not agree with someone and discuss how you engaged with them and what you took away from the interaction. (150 words)
Prompt 4 | Adversity
In college/university, students are often challenged in ways that they could not anticipate. Please describe a situation in which you have navigated through adversity and discuss how you changed as a result. (150 words)
Prompt 5 | Why Columbia
Why are you interested in attending Columbia University? We encourage you to consider the aspect(s) that you find unique and compelling about Columbia. (150 words)
Prompt 6 | Why Major
What attracts you to your preferred areas of study at Columbia College or Columbia Engineering? (150 words)

One of the questions the Director would ask is: do they love Columbia? Are they showing they would truly enjoy being a student here?

Jermaine D.

Former Columbia Admissions Officer

At Columbia, the essay reading isn’t scanning for markers of intelligence. It’s looking to see if you can truly articulate institutional fit.

How Should You Approach the List Question?

Approach the list question as Columbia's clearest test of intellectual omnivory, the prompt that shows officers how you've nurtured your intellectual life outside of assigned coursework. Most applicants underestimate its importance. The format is a list of books, journals, podcasts, essays, museums, and other intellectual inputs that have shaped you outside of academic courses. There's no narrative space; what officers read is the list itself, and what it reveals about how you've structured your intellectual life.
The strongest lists do three things at once. They span disciplines, demonstrating that you're already reading the way the Core Curriculum will train you to. They surface unexpected items, the obscure podcast, the museum exhibit, the regional novelist, that no algorithm would suggest and no other applicant would list. And they hold seamlessly together as one student's intellectual world, not a curated performance designed to impress.
A STEM applicant whose list includes The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks, The Emperor of All Maladies, a science history podcast, and an exhibition on medical photography illustrates a different kind of mind than one whose list is all biology textbooks and AP review books. The first shows a reader thinking about ethics, history, and narrative form alongside the science. The second shows a strong student who hasn't yet learned to branch out intellectually across disciplines.

We want to see that the books or media list lends to a nuanced view of whatever you're trying to study.

Jermaine D.

Former Columbia Admissions Officer

The list question is asking for a portrait of how your mind actually works when no one's grading you. The strongest answers treat that as the gift it is.

How Should You Approach the Six Short Answer Questions?

You should approach the six 150-word short answers as a single composite snapshot of one specific student rather than six disconnected mini-essays. So how do six different questions reveal one cohesive person? Like a kaleidoscope: each prompt is the flick of the wrist that shows a new angle of the same student.
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 lived experience prompt rewards essays that delve into granular details. The instinct to reach for a defining hardship rarely produces the strongest writing. The version that works often surfaces a particular detail, a household routine, a recurring observation, a specific relationship, that reveals something real about how the student sees the world and what they'd bring to a Columbia dorm hallway.
— The disagreement prompt looks for essays that sit with the discomfort rather than resolving it too neatly. Officers want to see how you actually think when challenged, not how you wrap up the conflict in a tidy lesson. The strongest versions show a student who can hold competing ideas in tension without rushing to a clean consensus.
— The adversity prompt is where students most often default to the defining-hardship narrative. Officers read thousands of essays about hardship; what stands out is the texture of how a student processes and adapts, not the magnitude of what they faced. The strongest adversity essays often reframe what counts as adversity, or focus on a small, specific moment rather than a sweeping arc.
— The why-Columbia prompt is the most direct test of specificity. It prizes naming: the specific Core Curriculum text, the specific professor, the specific Columbia tradition or program. The version that fails substitutes generic Ivy enthusiasm for actual research. The one that works could not have been written about any other school.
— The why-major prompt pushes applicants to articulate not just what they want to study but how they arrived at that conclusion. Officers want to trace the path from earlier interests, activities, or lived experience to the chosen area of study, with concrete reasons why Columbia's version of that field, the Core, the faculty, the New York context, is the right fit.

Keep it very, very specific. Keep it nerdy. Keep it passionate. There is no limit to how nerdy one can get about what they're passionate about.

Jermaine D.

Former Columbia Admissions Officer

The answer that sounds honest and built solely for Columbia beats the answer that strives for impressiveness almost every single time.

Columbia Essay Examples From Successful Admits

The two essays below are real responses from students admitted to Columbia's Class of 2030, 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 Columbia 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 critical choices that turn a 150-word answer into a portrait of one specific student writing for Columbia.

Example 1: Lived Experience Prompt

Prompt: Tell us about an aspect of your life so far or your lived experience that is important to you, and describe how it has shaped the way you would learn from and contribute to Columbia's multidimensional and collaborative environment. (150 words)

Lived Experience Prompt

Admitted Student | Columbia University, Class of 2030

Sight is our most dominant sense. It tempts us to equate visibility with knowledge: I see, therefore I know. My astigmatism makes my eyes bend light unevenly, exchanging vision for imagination. Without my glasses, when the light bounces off objects, lines blur and the illusion of omniscience dissolves.  

Through my imperfect sight, I’ve ironically come to appreciate that knowledge is never absolute and always mediated. Astigmatism has revealed that seeing—and knowing—is conditioned by inherited l

What makes this work?

The student uses imperfect sight as a way to think about how knowledge gets mediated, then connects that idea to a specific Columbia resource (Gadfly) and a specific intellectual project (deconstructing inherited lenses with classmates). The result is an essay that is as inseparable from the student who wrote it as it is from Columbia as a destination.

Takeaway for applicants

A metaphor only works when it earns its weight across the whole essay. Vague lyrical language about "perspective" or "vision" seems performative; a physical condition, used to reframe what knowing actually means, reads as thoughtful. The most powerful supplement essays often anchor abstract intellectual claims to a concrete, personal detail the student couldn't have invented.



Example 2: Adversity Prompt

Prompt: In college/university, students are often challenged in ways that they could not anticipate. Please describe a situation in which you have navigated through adversity and discuss how you changed as a result. (150 words)

Adversity Prompt

Admitted Student | Columbia University, Class of 2030

Torsos dripping in sweat, the boys confirmed their manhood on the soccer field.  

I used to cheer for meaningless goals, because in Brazil, not knowing how to play or talk soccer is heresy. I begrudgingly put on this façade because I couldn't connect with my father, a hopeless fanatic. I felt like an outsider at home, in school, and in a country where a boy’s worth is bound to the strength of kicks. 

One night, my dad took me to an Athlético match. Engulfed in crimson smoke, Athleticanos spat fury

What makes this work?

The student doesn't reach for a traumatic narrative or a defining external hardship. The adversity is internal: not fitting the model of masculinity his cultural context expected, while still loving the people who held that expectation. The essay's emotional pivot, "Silent, consoling my dad, I accepted my inconformity," is doing extraordinarily compressed work in twelve words. It refuses both rebellion and assimilation; it sits in the harder middle.

Takeaway for applicants

The adversity prompt is where students most often default to the biggest external challenge in their life. The version that works often does the opposite, going inward to an internal contradiction the student is still working out. Columbia officers can tell the difference between an essay that performs resilience and one that lives inside the actual texture of a hard experience.

A metaphor only works when it earns its weight across the whole essay. Anchoring abstract claims to a concrete personal detail is what separates performance from reflection.

Lauren P.

Head of Essay Mentoring at Crimson

What Is Columbia Really Looking For in Its Essays?

Columbia is looking for essays that demonstrate intellectual vitality, real specificity to Columbia, and the kind of passionate zeal that's impossible to fake. The qualities that consistently distinguish the Columbia essays that succeed from the ones that don't aren't about polish or eloquence; they're about whether the student has done the harder work of figuring out who they are, why Columbia in particular, and where they want their education to lead them.

Intellectual Vitality

Real curiosity about the process of learning that registers across disciplines.

Specificity to Columbia

If you only swap “Columbia” for “Harvard” in your essays, you haven't done the work yet.

Nerdy Passion

Lean into the niche pursued for years. Officers want granular detail about what you love.

Clarity of Vision

Officers want to see that you understand where Columbia fits in your personal trajectory.

Community Awareness

Columbia is cerebral and deeply communal. Essays that show a student who thinks beyond themselves.

Cross-Disciplinary Mindset

The Core Curriculum trains a particular kind of mind. Your essay should indicate that.

The six qualities above describe what Columbia is admitting for. Two craft principles from Crimson's work with admitted Columbia students surface across the strongest supplements. First: a metaphor only works when it earns its weight across the whole essay. Lyrical language about "perspective" or "vision" comes off as performative; a specific physical detail used to reframe a larger idea appears thoughtful. Second: the strongest adversity essays often go inward. Students reach for the biggest external challenge in their life because it feels like what the prompt rewards. The version that works often does the opposite, surfacing an internal contradiction the student is still grappling with.

Selective admissions is looking for a rare level of introspection, a rare level of intellectual vitality, a rare clarity of vision.

Jermaine D.

Former Columbia Admissions Officer

Columbia isn't looking for evidence that you're extraordinary. It wants you to prove that you've thought long and hard about Columbia, and about yourself, to show you're the kind of student the Core Curriculum will work for.

What Are the Most Common Mistakes in Columbia Essays?

The Columbia essays that fail share a single pattern: students writing what they think Columbia wants to hear instead of what they actually have to say. Six versions of this recur across files officers describe as forgettable.

The Generic Ivy Essay

Swap “Columbia” for “Harvard.” If the essay still tracks, it isn't doing its job.

No Core Curriculum Anywhere

The Core isn't extra credit. It's the institution.

Reaching for the Biggest Story

Identity. Transformation. Hardship. In 150 words, the biggest themes collapse into cliché.

NYC as Backdrop

New York functions as a resource at Columbia.

The AI Fingerprint

The grammar is clean, the sentences track, but the student’s personal imprint is missing.

The Adult-Voiced Essay

When the essay voice sounds older, or more strategic than in the activity list, the gap shows.

If an applicant can replace the word 'Columbia' with a Harvard or a Princeton, then it's not specific enough.

Jermaine D.

Former Columbia Admissions Officer

The Columbia essays that fail aren't badly written. They're written for the wrong reader: an imagined admissions officer rather than a real person who wants the 3D version of you.

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

The Columbia essays connect to the rest of the application through the same test that runs through Columbia's whole evaluation: is this the same student? Every essay, every recommendation, every activity gets compared to every other piece of the file. When the answer is yes, the application presents as one coherent person who already embodies the values Columbia is admitting for.
The activity list shows what you've done, the supplements explain why any of it mattered to you, and the Core Curriculum should link through both. Together, they make a compelling argument about who you are and why Columbia, specifically, is where you should be next. Officers can feel almost immediately when the pieces don't quite line up.

The Common Application Personal Statement

The 650-word personal statement is the universal essay every Common App school will read, and it's where your application becomes recognizably yours. For Columbia specifically, the personal statement also functions as a setup for the supplement. The way you introduce yourself in the personal statement should make the Columbia-specific essays feel like a natural continuation, not a different argument. Officers read the personal statement and the supplement as one document. A shift in voice or values is one of the first things officers notice.

I'm not here deciding whether a student is smart. They're all smart. But how strong is their case for admission?

Jermaine D.

Former Columbia Admissions Officer

The 650 words are a gift, but only if used for depth rather than scope. The strongest personal statements pick one thread and follow it down to its core: a hobby, an observation, a moment, used to reveal something real about how the student thinks. The test is simple: if your name could be swapped for someone else's at the top of the essay and the writing would still make sense, the personal statement isn't doing its job.

Every part of the application is making the same argument. The essays, the activities, the recommendations, the academic record: when they all describe the same student, the file moves forward on its own momentum.

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