January 2026 has not exactly been a slow month for college admissions. Students and families with an eye on college news are seeing the ripple effects of an eventful 2025-2026 application cycle start to show up across the board. Shocked higher education headlines range from federal policy fights, to shifting enrollment patterns, to the brand-new tools colleges are using to shape their incoming classes.
Wondering how it all affects you, as an applicant or future applicant? This report will cut through the noise and review the latest in college admissions headlines in January 2026.
The landscape of college admissions in January 2026
The new year brought with it a flurry of news headlines about higher education in the U.S. But what’s the big picture? Which stories actually matter?
Key themes we learned this month:
- Enrollment in college is up overall, while international enrollment slows down, which could change both competition and campus budgets.
- Federal oversight and funding fights continue, including moves tied to the U.S. Department of Education and how higher ed programs get managed.
- Early application volume stays strong, and colleges keep leaning on yield management tactics, including the rise of Common App Direct Admissions.
- Standardized testing continues its comeback, with shifting student behavior around SAT vs. ACT.
- AI has moved from “essay panic” to “process reality,” with schools adopting AI tools and more students pivoting from broad Computer Science degrees toward AI-focused pathways.
First, we’ll start assessing the facts about each of these major themes, then discuss what you need to know as a student navigating this space today. Finally, we’ll interpret these headlines into concrete action steps you can take now.

Theme 1: Enrollment trends are up, but the mix is changing
New national data show overall postsecondary enrollment increased in fall 2025, driven mostly by undergraduate growth, with community colleges showing a strong increase. That said, the same reporting flags a decline in international graduate enrollment and a cooling of international undergraduate enrollment numbers.
Why it matters:
- When total student enrollment rises, colleges face pressure on housing, course availability, and advising capacity. Those operational limits can affect everything from first-year course registration to major access.
- On the other hand, the drop in international graduate enrollment can affect research labs, teaching assistant supply, and departmental budgets in some fields.
What families should do next:
- If you are applying to large public universities: plan for capacity pressure.
- Apply by priority deadlines when available.
- Use the housing timeline as a planning tool, since housing shortages can change your first-year experience.
- If you are applying to research-heavy programs: ask direct questions on student support.
- Ask departments how they staff labs, discussion sections, and tutoring in first-year STEM sequences.
- Instead of “Does your school have research?” ask “How many first-year students work in labs, and how do they get placed?”
- If you are on a waitlist this season: capacity pressure affects you, too.
- More enrolled students = fewer open spots later, and more unpredictability overall on the waitlist this year.
- Strengthen your regular decision strategy now to reduce reliance on waitlist offers.
Theme 2: Funding pressure is coming from both policy and private money
As we reported over the fall and winter, federal higher-ed functions are in flux right now. In January, this included a newly announced partnership step between the U.S. Department of Education and the U.S. Department of Labor tied to postsecondary programs and administration. At the same time, Congress is debating budget moves that push back on proposed Education Department cuts.
On the private side, mega-gifts are shaping what institutions build and prioritize. One standout example you may have heard of? Phil and Penny Knight’s record $2 billion commitment to OHSU’s Knight Cancer Institute.
Quick reality check:
- Big philanthropy, while exciting, does not lower tuition for most students directly.
- It often accelerates specific programs, facilities, and hiring in targeted areas, which affects you indirectly.
- On the other hand, families often think institutional “funding news” only impacts universities! In practice, it can affect students pretty immediately, through:
- Scholarship availability and staffing for student support programs.
- Research opportunities for undergrads.
- Program stability, especially for specialized initiatives that depend on grants.
What families should do next:
- Build a two-column college list: mission fit and money fit.
- Mission fit: programs, majors, research access, outcomes.
- Money fit: net price estimates, merit policies, and realistic borrowing limits.
- Watch for scholarships tied to institutional priorities.
- When a school announces major investments in health, AI, climate, or workforce programs, new scholarship pipelines often follow.
- Remember to read the fine print. Check if the funding goes toward undergrad programs, graduate research, or new infrastructure (which may not affect you until later in your college career).
Theme 3: Early admissions stays competitive, and yield management keeps evolving
Applied last fall via Early Action or Early Decision? You’re in good company, as it turns out. Application volume through early-season deadlines remains strong, with Common App reporting year-over-year growth in applicants and applications through December 1, 2025. This means that colleges continue to manage yield by shaping who applies, who gets offers, and how quickly students commit.
In addition to emphasis on early applications, another yield management strategy on the rise is direct admissions. This year, Common App Direct Admissions expanded for the 2025–2026 cycle to more than 200 participating colleges and universities.
Why it matters:
- Yield management impacts you even if you didn’t apply Early Decision. Colleges still adjust targets by major, geography, and financial profile as the cycle unfolds.
What families should know:
- Treat “early” as a readiness test, not a status symbol.
- Don’t get pressured to submit before you’re fully prepared. If your essays and testing are not ready, a stronger Regular Decision application beats a rushed early file.
- Treat “direct admissions” like a safety option.
- Don’t ignore them entirely, even if they feel less selective. For many students, they present guaranteed, scholarship-backed options without extra applications.
- Build a yield-proof plan.
- Include true safeties with clear admit history for your profile, and balance schools across different selectivity bands and different institutional types.
Theme 4: Standardized testing is back in the spotlight
With the 2025-2026 cycle, more colleges have returned to requiring test scores, and student behavior is shifting with renewed emphasis on the SAT. Common App data also shows growth in applicants reporting test scores early in the cycle.
Why it matters:
- You do not want to learn in August that your target list now expects scores. Testing seats, prep timelines, and score reporting all take lead time.
Not to mention, testing fatigue is real. Use AP or IB exam prep to double-dip with SAT/ACT studying for core concepts. Be strategic with your time to avoid running up against burnout.
What families should do next:
- Audit your list for testing policy today.
- For each college: confirm “test-required,” “test-optional,” or “test-free” on the admissions site.
- Re-check before you submit, since policies can change across cycles.
- Build a realistic testing plan.
- Choose a test, set two test dates, and plan one retake window.
- Align prep with your hardest academic months so you do not burn out in October.
- Use scores strategically.
- If you have a strong score, submit it.
- If your score is weak and the school is test-optional, focus on academic rigor and strong grades in the most challenging courses available to you.
Theme 5: AI is reshaping both academics and admissions operations
We can hardly say that AI hasn’t made an impact on education. Colleges themselves are increasingly using AI tools to support parts of application review and verification workflows, even when humans keep final decisions.
On the academic side, universities are launching AI-focused degrees and building AI fluency expectations. Prominent examples include UC San Diego’s new undergraduate AI major and USC’s new B.S. in Artificial Intelligence.
What does this mean for students? To put it simply, computing enrollment patterns are shifting. Computing Research Association describes undergraduate computing enrollment declines in many programs, with multiple drivers that include labor market uncertainty and AI-related concerns.
Why it matters:
- “CS is hot” is no longer a complete strategy. Students who show a clear focus inside a broader tech interest, including AI, data, or applied computing, often present a more coherent academic story.
- AI programs are growing, but they vary widely. Some are housed in engineering, others in data science, and some blend ethics and policy. The title alone does not tell you what you will study.
What families should do next:
- Evaluate AI extracurricular programs like an admissions reader.
- Not all programs are the same. Look for required math foundations, programming progression, and capstone or research opportunities.
- Ask where graduates go: internships, labs, employers, grad programs.
- Avoid chasing buzzwords. Show depth.
- It’s not enough to mention “AI” in your essays or activities once. Tie your work to a real community problem or research question you are passionate about. Admissions officers prioritize substance over trendiness.

Your next moves: February 2026 and beyond
What should you do in the next 30 days? How can we translate all this into practical advice for rising seniors planning their applications this year? Let’s break it down.
Week 1: Audit your college list.
- Confirm testing policy for every school.
- Confirm deadlines, including scholarship and honors deadlines.
- Confirm whether the school uses Early Decision, Early Action, or both.
Week 2: Lock your application production schedule.
- Set internal deadlines for drafts, revisions, and final proofing.
- Identify who reviews each part: counselor, teacher, parent, or mentor.
Week 3: Build your evidence file.
- Create a folder with your resume, best graded work, awards, and program confirmations.
- Save a short “process log” for essays and major projects.
Week 4: Stress test your financial plan.
- Run net price estimates for at least 6 schools across your list.
- Set a hard borrowing ceiling your family agrees on.
- Re-check 2026 loan policy changes.
Bonus (if you can): Plan one low-stress week.
- Burnout hits hard in junior spring. Block off one weekend in the month for zero college work or college talk. Just rest and recover.
- Come back with better clarity and stronger execution.
Finally, a reminder: you’re not alone.
If you want a calm, high-precision plan for your list, essays, and strategy, we can help. Visit our website to connect with Empowerly for 1:1 admissions support and a clear timeline built around your deadlines and goals.