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  • Blog > Academics, Applications

How to Submit Strong Midyear Reports to Colleges

Picture of Madeleine Karydes

Madeleine Karydes

  • January 22, 2026

January brings a strange mix of calm and chaos for high school seniors. Applications are in. Decisions still feel far away. Then a portal message shows up on your dashboard: ā€œMidyear Report Required.ā€

What does that mean?

Here’s the good news: a midyear report is not some mystery document that floats to colleges on its own. Quite the opposite, actually: in most cases, you and your counselor have real control over timing, accuracy, and what gets highlighted.

Our advice? Don’t drop the ball now. In a year where many Early Action and Early Decision applicants move into the Regular Decision pool after a deferral, the first-semester senior grades often become a major factor that colleges consider.

This guide walks you through what to submit, who submits what, and how to use midyear grades as a final academic signal. Together, we’ll take care of those notifications and send strong midyear reports: signed, sealed, and delivered.

What is a midyear report?

A midyear report is a school document sent to colleges after your first-semester or term grades are posted in the 12th grade. Many colleges use the new information shared to review senior-year performance, especially when earlier transcripts include few or no senior grades yet.

Dr. Hoffman, a former Director of Admissions at several top schools, explains why these reports are important to college admissions officers:

Where do I find the midyear report?

On the Common App, the Mid-Year Report sits inside the counselor forms. Counselors are asked to submit updated details such as GPA information, rank (when available), and an updated transcript.

However, some colleges may use a separate or additional midyear school report form. Check if the college lets you upload grades through an applicant portal or other student platform. The guidelines and format can vary.

Who needs a midyear report?

Some colleges treat the report as a required component for all applicants (Harvard, for example, lists a midyear school report requirement), while some colleges only want to know if your school issues new grades mid-year. If you aren’t sure, it’s best practice to check the college’s application requirements page for the final verdict.

Common patterns:

  1. Regular Decision applicants often see a midyear report request once first-semester or term grades post. 
  2. Deferred Early Action or deferred Early Decision applicants should assume colleges want fresh grades and updates as admissions reviews continue in the Regular Decision pool.Ā 

If a college does request official midyear grades, notify your counselor right away, with a clean list of schools that need it.

When midyear reports are due in 2026

The short answer? It depends. Deadlines depend on grade posting dates at your school and document policies at each college.

Here’s a practical way to think about timing:

  1. Submit as soon as first semester or term grades are available at your school. Common App guidance supports sending midyear reports once grades are available. 
  2. Many colleges expect midyear materials in January or February, since grades often post during that window. Yale describes midyear report timing as ā€œtypically January or Februaryā€ once senior grades become available. 
  3. Some colleges provide a planning timeline. Harvard’s first-year applicant timeline points families to request submission around mid-February. 

Even better? Set a personal deadline, just in case. Aim for ā€œwithin one week of grade postingā€ unless a college portal shows an earlier due date.

How can I leverage a strong midyear report for a competitive edge?

The midyear report is often misunderstood as a “passive” document sent by counselors. But the midyear report isn’t just letter grades; it can be an opportunity. Counselors often have a comments section where they can highlight:

  • Academic rigor: If a student added an extra AP or honors course for the second semester.
  • Upward trends: For students who struggled in 10th or 11th grade, this is the final proof of their “comeback.”
  • New achievements: Any national awards (like National Merit or Science Fair) earned between November and January.

So, help your counselor use the comments section well! Think of this area as a short ā€œwhat changed since Novemberā€ update, grounded in facts.

High-value updates that could qualify (choose one or two):

  • Senior project or independent study description
  • New academic award earned during winter
  • New leadership role with real scope (team captain, editor role, club president with project outcomes)
  • New paid work with hours and responsibility
  • Major performance or exhibition role with selection context (like a theater role in the spring play)

Remember to emphasize quality over quantity. The goal is not more words. The goal is clearer evidence.

What if my grades dropped?

Be proactive. If a grade fell from an A to a C, you should use the Additional Information section or a direct email to your admissions officer to explain the context, before the college has to ask. Send a concise, factual update—overexplaining or emotional appeals backfire.

A lower grade does not always end an application. Silence plus surprise, on the other hand, is a bigger risk.

Use this plan:

  1. Diagnose the reason in one sentence. Illness, family disruption, schedule overload, learning difference documentation update, teacher transition, or a mismatch between course level and prep.
  2. Act fast inside school. Meet the teacher. Ask for a clear plan: missing work, retakes, tutoring hours, office hours schedule.
  3. Loop in your counselor. Your counselor is the right person to add context in the midyear report, especially when the story ties to verified circumstances.
  4. Add applicant context only when needed. Use an application portal update or short email when the drop is significant and context is real. When you do, skip drama. Use facts, timeline, and actions.

A clean explanation structure:

  • What happened (one sentence)
  • Impact on grades (one sentence)
  • What you are doing now (two sentences)

A note about discipline or schedule changes

Midyear report forms often include basic questions beyond grades. NACAC’s sample midyear report form includes sections for counselor reporting alongside the transcript.  If a schedule change happened, your counselor should document the change and the reason, similar to a grade drop.

Student transcript sheet close up with subjects and marks mentioned, exams results concept. University, college, grades

How to make the most of this time

Midyear reports matter, yet January is bigger than one document for high school seniors. Use the same window to get ahead on next steps.

Keep grades strong through spring

Many colleges require final reports for admitted students, and schools review continued performance. Yale notes final report submission for admitted students and frames midyear reporting around new grades. 

Apply for scholarships

Build a list, track deadlines, submit a few strong applications each week.

Check portals and email with a system

Two quick checks per week beats constant refreshing. Use filters and a folder.

Prepare for financial aid steps

Federal Student Aid outlines FAFSA completion steps through studentaid.gov, including guidance for filling out the form and gathering required information. The College Board also provides a practical framework for comparing financial aid offers once award letters arrive.

Elevate your college admission odds with Empowerly. Book your free consultation here.

Final checklist

  1. Confirm which colleges require a midyear report. Send your counselor the list of schools.
  2. Add two meaningful updates for counselor comments, when relevant. If you don’t have standout updates, don’t force it. A clean midyear report with strong grades is enough.
  3. Check each portal until ā€œreceivedā€ appears.

A midyear report is not just a formality. For many applicants, midyear grades are the last major academic update before decisions. Treat the process like a short project: clear list, clean request, fast follow-through. Then move on with your life. Admissions officers want a strong finish, not an exhausted one.

Need a helping hand?

If you want a guide for this stretch, you don’t have to do it alone.

Empowerly counselors help students build a smart midyear strategy, craft the right update plan after a deferral, and communicate context the right way when grades slip. We also help families map scholarship deadlines, financial aid steps, and the final months of senior year so nothing falls through the cracks.

Ready for a plan that fits your situation? Book a counseling consult and we’ll help you turn your midyear report, and your next few weeks, into an advantage.

Book A Free Consultation
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Picture of Madeleine Karydes

Madeleine Karydes

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