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

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

Princeton, New Jersey · Private

Dana C.

Former Princeton Admissions Officer

What Are Princeton's Supplemental Essay Questions?

Princeton's six supplemental prompts, which the university calls "Princeton-specific questions," were designed to do one thing: surface the authentic voice of a 17-year-old who's reflected deeply on a specific topic.
The prompts ask about academic curiosity, lived experience, service, and three small windows into the student's life right now. The goal isn't perfect polish but a real sense of who you are.

Princeton's supplement is asking you to show up as yourself, and trust that a thoughtful, honest representation of that is more compelling than an impressive version of someone else.

Princeton's supplement includes:
• One 250-word academic essay
• One 500-word Your Voice essay
• One 250-word Service and Civic Engagement essay
• Three 50-word "More About You" questions
• And the Common Application personal statement.
The word counts vary, but the test underneath them doesn't: can you write specifically and honestly about your own life in the words you've been given?

Princeton's Supplemental Essay Prompts 2025/26 Admission Cycle

Academic Interest Essay
For A.B. or undecided applicants — what academic areas pique your curiosity, and how do Princeton's programs suit your interests? For B.S.E. applicants — why are you interested in studying engineering at Princeton, and what experiences inform that interest? (250 Words)
Your Voice Essay
Princeton values respectful conversations that expand perspectives. How will your lived experiences shape the conversations you have at Princeton? What lessons have you learned in life thus far? What will your classmates learn from you? (500 Words)
Service & Civic Engagement Essay
How does your own story intersect with Princeton's commitment to understanding our responsibility to society through service and civic engagement? (250 Words)
More About You Essay
• What is a new skill you would like to learn in college?
• What brings you joy?
• What song represents the soundtrack of your life at this moment? (50 words each)

How Should You Approach the “Academic, Your Voice, and Service” Essays?

Your three substantive essays should work as a connected set rather than six standalone answers. The Academic essay, the Your Voice essay, and the Service and Civic Engagement essay each ask a different question, but the most compelling applications use them together to reveal a student from three different angles. The student whose three essays describe three different people hasn't yet written for Princeton.

The Academic Essay (250 words)

The Academic essay is Princeton's most direct test of intellectual fit. It rewards specificity: named areas of curiosity, Princeton programs, and the specified connections between the two. The version that fails substitutes general enthusiasm for actual research. The one that works names a specific question or interest the applicant has been holding, then traces it to Princeton's programs. For B.S.E. applicants, the prompt asks for engineering exposure and program-specific fit. The same principles apply: specificity over generic enthusiasm, real experience over the engineered one.

The Your Voice Essay (500 words)

The Your Voice essay is the longest and highest-stakes prompt in Princeton's supplement. The prompt asks how your lived experience will shape the conversations you have on campus. It doesn't ask for something dramatic. Some of the strongest responses come from applicants reflecting on being the oldest sibling in an immigrant household, growing up in a rural community, or wrestling with faith and science in thoughtful ways. The 500 words are also where Princeton's senior thesis disposition surfaces most clearly: can you hold an idea, sit with it, and develop it without rushing to resolution?

The Service and Civic Engagement Essay (250 words)

The Service essay is Princeton's most explicitly Princeton-specific prompt. Princeton's "In the Nation's Service and the Service of Humanity" motto is the institutional core, and this essay tests whether the applicant's story actually intersects with that ideal. The most common misstep is writing service as a resume item, listing what the student did without showing their relationship to the work. The most successful versions reframe service through the student's own intellectual interests, naming a particular Princeton resource that extends rather than introduces the work.

We wanted students who would step back and ask themselves: what experiences do I carry that others can learn from? And in a world that is increasingly polarized, how do you collaborate with others?

Dana C.

Former Princeton Admissions Officer

The three essays should function like a triptych. Three panels, three perspectives, one subject.

How Should You Approach the “More About You” Questions?

Approach the "More About You" questions exactly as Princeton instructs: "There are no right or wrong answers. Be yourself!" Three 50-word answers, on a future skill, a source of joy, and a song that soundtracks your life, are Princeton's clearest test of whether the applicant can follow that instruction. Most students underestimate these prompts but they shouldn't. The word count makes it almost impossible to ghostwrite or perform, which is exactly why Princeton uses them.
The three prompts work together as windows onto the same student. A song that's the soundtrack of your life, a thing that brings you joy, a skill you want to learn. Together these create a fast personality snapshot the longer essays can't deliver. The strongest answers don't strive to be impressive. They sound like the student talking, in fewer words than the student would use in a text to a friend.
The failure mode is the overly strategic answer. The applicant who chooses the song they think sounds intellectual, the joy they think sounds Princeton-appropriate, the skill they think indicates depth, has missed what Princeton is asking for. Princeton's instruction is direct: be yourself. The sharpest 50-word answers take that at face value.

The “More About You” questions reward applicants who answer honestly in their own voice. The strategic answer designed to impress is the one that fails.

Princeton Essay Examples From Successful Admits

The two essays below are real responses from a Crimson student admitted to Princeton'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 Princeton supplements each cycle. Her annotations focus on the critical choices that turn a 500-word essay into a portrait of one specific student writing for Princeton.

Example 1: Your Voice Prompt

Admitted Student | Princeton University, Class of 2030

I used to think of it as Narnia. It stood inside the tiny kitchen of our apartment as an ordinary wooden shelf lined with thyme, tumeric, and paprika. At age 7, I still climbed onto the chair, pushing it open and ducking through to enter another world: my parents' art commune. The air there was heavy with turpentine and filled with conversation. Students from every corner of the world painted, argued and laughed. Instead of painting, I watched. I soaked in their words and gestures like a sponge.

What makes this work

The cupboard metaphor is doing structural work from the first line to the last. The student opens with Narnia, lets the cupboard close when the new school arrives, and reopens it at Princeton as the Lewis Center for the Arts. Each return deepens the meaning rather than repeating it. The Princeton references at the close read as natural continuation rather than added-on enthusiasm. The student has written themselves into Princeton before naming a single program.

Takeaway for applicants

A metaphor only works when it earns its weight across the whole essay. A reader can tell when imagery has been decorated onto the writing versus when it's doing genuine structural work. The cupboard works because it opens, closes, and reopens with meaning. Lyrical language about "perspective" or "discovery" without that structural anchor reads as performative. 
The essay also shows that holding contradictions productively beats resolving them too neatly. The student doesn't choose between Waldorf freedom and structured schooling; they find that the two can become one argument. Most importantly, Princeton references should feel like the next natural chapter of the student's story, not enthusiasm added to satisfy the prompt. If a reader can imagine you already moving through Princeton's spaces because the rest of your essay has shown them who you are, the school-specific work is doing its job.

Example 2: Service and Civic Engagement Essay

Admitted Student | Princeton University, Class of 2030

I sat in the school library with ten Grade 5 students in a small circle of chairs. On the board, I had written the question: Can robots ever truly think? I had come to help run the Philosothon, a forum where young children discussed ethical dilemmas.

At first, the pupils clashed. One pointed to Star Wars' C-3PO, insisting that if a robot could talk and worry, it must be able to think. A girl countered that R2-D2 couldn't even speak, so how could it think? Pausing them, I asked: "What does thinkin

What makes this work

The essay refuses the traditional service narrative. Most applicants reach for what they did and how many people they helped; this student reframes service as their own intellectual work made available to others. Helping in itself is far less interesting than working directly with students to think critically and challenge traditional ideals, and the essay frames the service work exactly that way.
The result roots service in a story deeply aligned with the student, avoiding the traps of generalizations or generic commentary. The impact is made clear in a way that goes beyond direct numbers, centering on the student's unique ability to help younger pupils take historical ideas and give them new life. 
The Princeton reference at the close earns its place because the inquiry-based workshops at the University Center for Human Values are directly connected to the student's previous work. The result positions service as an extension of personal interest rather than an essay add-on.

Takeaway for applicants

A civic engagement essay doesn't require abandoning the core narrative the rest of your application is making. The strongest versions are an opportunity to expand on a personal and impact-driven connection to the work. The specificity in those connections is what makes the essay come alive and what creates deep alignment across the supplement.
The concrete classroom question, "Can robots ever truly think?", puts a reader in the room with the student, giving larger concepts like service and civic engagement a more personal feel. The most successful service essays don't introduce a new theme to satisfy the prompt; they extend the work already running through the rest of the application.

The best essays weren't just stories, they were stories that the student had thought deeply about. If someone wrote about failing at something, they didn't just describe the failure, they unpacked what it taught them, how it changed their approach moving forward.

Dana C.

Former Princeton Admissions Officer

What Is Princeton Really Looking For in Its Essays?

Princeton looks for three things in its supplemental essays: intellectual vitality, service-orientation, and writing that sounds like the student talking rather than performing for admissions. The first two are Princeton-specific dispositions; the third is a craft requirement. Together, they describe a student who would thrive in Princeton's seminar culture and contribute to the community Princeton is trying to build.

Intellectual Vitality

Ordinary moments that reveal how a student thinks, questions, and learns.

Service-Oriented Mindset

Interests that extend outward and benefit people beyond the applicant.

Authentic Teen Voice

A real student voice, polished enough to be clear without losing its life.

Specificity to Princeton

Specific courses, professors, programs, or spaces that show real Princeton fit.

Reflection Over Story

The strongest essays unpack what an experience changed, taught, or revealed.

Cohesion Across the Supplement

Each answer reveals a different angle of the same student and values.

I define intellectual vitality as learning for the sake of learning. Some of the most striking essays were about things like cooking with grandparents, or playing pickup basketball, but the student used that as a lens to show how they think, how they connected the dots, and how they found meaning.

Dana C.

Former Princeton Admissions Officer

Don’t worry about proving you’re extraordinary. Use the space to show officers the lens through which you actually see the world.

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

Princeton's essays connect to the rest of the application through coherence across the file. Officers reading your supplement also read your activities, your recommendations, your transcript, and your personal statement, and they're checking whether all those pieces describe the same student. Princeton doesn't require applicants to brand themselves with a single hook, but it does require alignment. Admissions can tell when a counselor's letter sounds routine versus invested, when an activity entry says one thing and an essay says another, when a coached supplement reads next to unsupervised parts of the file.
The supplement does a specific job within that coherence test. Your activities catalog what you've spent time on, your transcript reveals what you've taken seriously academically, and your recommendations describe how you operate in environments officers can't directly observe. Your supplement is the only place where you explain why any of it mattered. When it names values, interests, and dispositions that the rest of the file confirms, the application develops momentum. 

The Common Application Personal Statement

The 650-word personal statement runs alongside Princeton's supplement and is read as part of the same writing portfolio. The personal statement is where you introduce the student officers will then meet in greater detail in the Princeton-specific essays. For Princeton specifically, the strongest personal statements set up themes that the supplement extends rather than themes the supplement contradicts. An applicant whose personal statement names intellectual restlessness, then writes a “Your Voice” essay about quiet conformity, has produced two essays that work against each other.
The 650-word format is also long enough to reward depth over scope. The personal statements that succeed tend to follow one thread closely: a specific hobby, a particular relationship, a recurring observation, used as the lens through which the student thinks. Personal statements that try to summarize everything the student has done usually produce essays that read as fragmented rather than substantive.

I always recommend that you give whoever's writing your letters of recommendation information about what you're hoping to get out of your college experience. Give them a copy of your essays, give them a copy of your extracurricular activities. Spell it out for them.

Dana C.

Former Princeton Admissions Officer

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

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