ic S/general/checkmark circled Thanks for subscribing! Be on the lookout for our next newsletter.
ic S/general/checkmark circled
Saved to My Favorites. View My Favorites
Articles / Applying to College / Enrollment Deposit Issues

Enrollment Deposit Issues

Dave Berry
Written by Dave Berry | Feb. 11, 2014
May 1 looms. What's so special about May 1? Well, May 1 is the traditional deadline for accepted college applicants to make their enrollment deposit. Most college-bound high school seniors have more than one college acceptance in their arsenal. Of course, those who have applied and been accepted Early Decision (ED) have no other enrollment decisions to make, since they have pledged on their application forms to enroll if accepted. Even those who have been accepted Early Action (EA) have until May 1 to make their enrollment decision.

However, one of the more recent developments within the college admissions arena is a strategy known as “double depositing." Simply put, this is where an applicant (sometimes under the influence of family members) cannot or will not make one enrollment decision by May 1. So, in order to hedge his or her bet, s/he will make an enrollment deposit at more than one college, thus delaying the need to make the ultimate decision of where to attend. Of course, making more than one enrollment deposit means that when that final decision is made, the accepted applicant will lose the other deposit since refundable deposits have not yet become mainstream.

There has been quite a bit of discussion about double depositing. In a related vein, there has also been a lot of talk lately about colleges pressuring accepted applicants to make their enrollment deposits beforethe traditional May 1 deadline. Sometimes the need for a pre-May 1 deposit comes from the need to confirm on-campus housing. Skeptics, though, think that trying to get early deposits is just one way for colleges to firm up incoming class numbers and demographics.


Speaking of deposit-pressuring issues, College Confidential Senior Advisor Sally Rubenstone has some pertinent thoughts (and questions) about this.

Sally notes:

Over the eons, when parents and students insisted that a double deposit was necessary due to some sort of extenuating circumstance, I always adamantly warned them away from this and attempted to offer an ethical solution to each dilemma on a case-by-case basis … one that did not include committing to more than one college concurrently.

BUT … increasingly, I am hearing tales from families (mostly through my College Confidential “Ask the Dean" column) of colleges that are putting pressure on students to submit a deposit months before May 1. Although the colleges do explain (some clearly, some not so clearly) that the deposit is fully refundable up to May 1, the families are also being told something like, “We will fill our class on a first-come-first-serve basis as we have a finite number of spots. Once we are at capacity, admission acceptance is moot without the refundable deposit.

The parents and students who are writing to me are stressed out because they have received two or more of these threat-laden acceptances but are still waiting for additional acceptances and, above all, for financial aid and scholarship information (from these schools, from other schools, and from outside organizations). They cannot possibly commit to any college until they know about costs. (In one case, there is a significant outside scholarship pending that will have a major impact on the child's choice of college, so the family can't put pressure on the colleges themselves to provide a finalized aid package. The family should get this scholarship news in March.)

So, here are my questions:

1. Are colleges that say, “We will fill our class on a first-come-first-serve basis as we have a finite number of spots. Once we are at capacity, admission acceptance is moot without the refundable deposit" in violation of the Candidates Reply Date agreement or does the “refundable" deposit give them an Invisibility Cloak when it comes to rules (and ethics) violations?

2. If colleges are taking this approach, shouldn't families who receive two or more of such warnings be able to ethically send a “refundable" deposit to more than one college prior to May 1, as long as all but one deposit will be withdrawn by May 1?

Sally has promised to do a guest article here about “pressured deposits" once she gets the results from additional research she is currently conducting. However, getting back to double deposits, other insiders have spoken out about that controversial topic.

Here are some excerpts from comments by Michael Sexton, vice president for enrollment management at Santa Clara University in California, on the practice of double depositing:

… [Spring] 'tis the season of double depositing, the act of placing deposits at more than one institution, or simply watching the May 1 deposit deadline pass without informing colleges of one's intentions.

There are parents and even some college counselors who feel that, given the stress of the college search and cost of college today, it's acceptable to send deposits to two different schools and decide later which one to attend.

I can say with certainty that my colleagues across the country feel this practice undermines the integrity of the admissions process, and that it violates the ethical standards set by the National Association for College Admission Counseling. Here are some reasons why college admissions professionals strongly discourage double depositing:

* My institution usually has a critical mass of deposits by mid-April. (We just sent out acceptance letters in late March.) Some send in a deposit, but also send one to another college, essentially holding a seat they may not occupy. Double depositing gums up the works on wait lists. We have to send reminders of the May 1 deadline.

* The point of double depositing or waiting until after the May 1 deadline to decide to enroll escapes me. The entire college search process has been lengthened to months, even years. What more does a student or his or her family think they will learn at this late stage? One thing I know will not happen — financial aid awards are set by then. The pot doesn't get sweetened at the last minute …

… Speaking for my own institution, I would suggest to any applicants that if they are considering double depositing to please just enroll elsewhere. We have enough serious, committed students and parents who have made their decision and stuck with it.

So, from these expert-based comments, we can see two sides of the enrollment deposit issue: (1) accepted applicants' and families' need for more time to make a final decision and (2) colleges trying to firm up their incoming class details. Where should our sympathy lie, on the side of students and families or favoring those institutions of higher education?

To get a further real-world perspective on this, here two comments from a relatively recent College Confidential discussion forum thread entitled Enrollment Deposit Confusion:

– … All right, so I submitted an EA CommonApp the other day, and I checked the box that said “I affirm that I will send an enrollment deposit (or equivalent) to only one institution; sending multiple deposits (or equivalent) may result in the withdrawal of my admission offers from all institutions. [Note: students may send an enrollment deposit (or equivalent) to a second institution where they have been admitted from the waitlist, provided that they inform the first institution that they will no longer be enrolling.]"

Now I'm slightly confused. To register for housing for Bama, they make their students submit a non-refundable enrollment deposit first (for some reason I just cannot comprehend haha. Anyone know why Bama makes you do this? No other schools I'm applying to require enrollment first.). Bama is one of my top-schools, and I would absolutely be thrilled to attend if I'm not accepted to my top choice. Because of this, I wanted to submit the deposit in case I decide on Bama.

However, because I agreed to that on the Common App, am I no longer allowed to apply for housing for Bama since they require the enrollment deposit before I can apply for housing? …

– The reason for applying EA, ED or SCEA are to try and get an early decision from a school that you more than likely will attend should you be accepted. You indicated you checked the box for EA which is the LEAST strict as compared to ED or SCEA which are more of a binding contract. While following the letter of the rules should mean that you should NOT apply and pay deposits at UA because you still really hope to attend your 1st choice school which is the reason you chose EA, I doubt that school would ever know, especially since EA is non-binding and allows virtually any way / reason out of accepting their admission offer you can imagine. Therefore, you may be safe paying both the UA deposits as long as you know that you will forfeit some of that money should you choose to go to your 1st choice school in the end. You're trying to protect the “best of both worlds" view … utilizing EA to perhaps have a better chance at 1st choice, but still lock in the best possible slot at UA (your safety). I'm not an admissions expert, but this is how I read the situation.

This is a fairly long thread with many good observations. I encourage you to read through all the posts. They will help you see what families are encountering these days when it comes to enrollment deposits.

So, check back for further insights from Sally Rubenstone and others as the incoming first-year students across America deal with their enrollment decisions.

**********

Don't forget to check out all my admissions-related articles and book reviews at College Confidential.

Written by

Dave Berry

Dave Berry

Dave is co-founder of College Confidential and College Karma Consulting, co-author of America's Elite Colleges: The Smart Buyer's Guide to the Ivy League and Other Top Schools, and has over 30 years of experience helping high schoolers gain admission to Ivy League and other ultra-selective schools. He is an expert in the areas application strategies, stats evaluation, college matching, student profile marketing, essays, personality and temperament assessments and web-based admissions counseling. Dave is a graduate of The Pennsylvania State University and has won national awards for his writing on higher education issues, marketing campaigns and communications programs. He brings this expertise to the discipline of college admissions and his role as a student advocate. His College Quest newspaper page won the Newspaper Association of America's Program Excellence Award, the Pennsylvania Newspaper Publisher's Association Newspapers in Education Award, the Thomson Newspapers President's Award for Marketing Excellence and the Inland Press Association-University of Kentucky School of Journalism and Mass Communications Inland Innovation Award for the Best New Page. His pioneering journalism program for teenagers, PRO-TEENS, also received national media attention. In addition, Dave won the Newspaper Association of America's Program Excellence Award for Celebrate Diversity!, a program teaching junior high school students about issues of tolerance. His College Knowledge question-and-answer columns have been published in newspapers throughout the United States. Dave loves Corvettes, classical music, computers, and miniature dachshunds. He and his wife Sharon have a daughter, son and four grandchildren.

More on Applying to College

See all
typing at computer- karolina-grabowska-6958506-resized

Authentic Voice in College Essays

That’s why you want to use your authentic voice when writing any college essay.

So what’s the problem? A student has shared an ess…

college-interview

College Interview Prep Tips: Brainstorm, Research, Analyze, Generalize

I recently visited Washington University in Saint Louis and was lucky enough to set up an interview. By speaking with peers of mi…

campus gates

Academic Index Scores: Why They Matter and How They're Calculated

Note: Click here for 10 Summer Programs You Can Still Apply For or keep reading to learn more about academic index scores.

8 Podcasts for Students Going Through the Admissions Process

7 Podcasts for Students Going Through the Admissions Process

Podcasts can offer a wealth of information to busy students, particularly when it comes to the college admissions process. We…

pexels-yan-krukau-8197544

Avoid College Application Regrets: Tips For Getting It Right the First Time

Decision Day occurs each year on May 1st and is the deadline for students to inform the college of their choice of their intent t…

Get a student loan that goes beyond tuition.

Ascent offers cosigned and non-cosigned student loans with exclusive benefits that set students up for success.

Explore Now!
Find Your Scholarship

Want to find money for school that doesn’t need to be paid back? Access insights and advice on how to search and apply for scholarships!

Search for Scholarship