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  • Blog > Applications

Make Your Winter Break Count: A College Prep Checklist

Picture of Madeleine Karydes

Madeleine Karydes

  • December 11, 2025

Facing down a few weeks without school? It’s true, winter break gives you the longest stretch of uninterrupted college prep time before January deadlines hit. And when school pauses, your calendar opens up for the work that keeps slipping down the list during busy weeks: essays, college research, recommendation follow-ups, and financial aid organization.

Here’s the catch: January moves fast. A clear plan now helps you start the new term with fewer loose ends and fewer last-minute surprises.

Looking for productive ways to use your winter break time? This student video shares just a few ideas to get your ideas flowing. You can also use this time to focus on college readiness.

But what should you do first?

Use our winter break college prep checklist to cover the basics and prioritize the tasks with the biggest payoff, broken into simple steps.

Student plans for winter break 2025

If you have more time and flexibility, then the old adage is true: ā€œan ounce of prevention beats a pound of cure.ā€ Winter break time works best with a short list, clear work blocks, and a defined stopping point each day. Start with the checklist for your grade, then customize based on deadlines and goals.

For Seniors (Class of 2026)

Your goal: clean submissions, zero portal surprises, and a plan for January.

A) College portal audit

  • Log into each portal and verify everything is complete:
    • Application marked ā€œreceived.ā€
    • Recommendations marked ā€œreceived.ā€
    • Transcript marked ā€œreceived.ā€
    • Test scores marked ā€œreceived,ā€ if submitted.
    • Any missing items and their deadlines.

B) Handle deferrals from Early Action or Early Decision

  • Step 1: Stay calm.
  • Step 2: Read the deferral message and instructions in the portal.
  • Step 3: Send an update (only if the college invites updates).
  • Step 4: Keep Regular Decision applications moving. A deferral means ā€œnot yet,ā€ not ā€œno.ā€

C) Finish Regular Decision writing

  • A clean system beats all-nighters. Use a ā€œmaster essayā€ folder with one file per school.
  • Consider scheduling a group ā€œessay jamā€ with friends or classmates, and make it fun. Reading each other’s drafts out loud or just co-working together can spark fresh ideas and help you catch mistakes.
  • For each school, complete three passes:
    • Pass 1: match the prompt and word count.
    • Pass 2: add specific details tied to programs, classes, labs, clubs, or local opportunities.
    • Pass 3: voice check and fact check
    .
  • Remember, done is better than perfect.

D) Scholarship search

  • Treat scholarship work like application work, and take it seriously.
  • Give yourself a minimum winter break goal:
    • Start combing scholarship databases to filter by geography, grade, interest, or identity.
    • Build a shortlist of scholarships that match your eligibility.
    • Draft one reusable essay (identity, growth, service, or goals).
    • Submit at least one scholarship application.

High school seniors working on college applications over winter break

For Juniors (Class of 2027)

Your goal: create a testing plan, do early school research, and begin one strong project thread.

A) Testing plan for the digital SAT or ACT

  • Step 1: Take one full, timed diagnostic test for practice.
  • Step 2: Build a mistake log by question type.
  • Step 3: Pick one test date and a weekly schedule.

B) Start a college list with clear filters

  • Build a starter list of 12 to 18 schools across three groups (safety, target, reach).
  • Add non-negotiables:
    • budget and aid approach.
    • distance and travel.
    • major and academic options.
    • campus setting and size.

C) The deep dive project

  • Pick one topic and one output to finish by spring.
  • Choose a project with proof — for instance:
    • Research: annotated bibliography plus a short literature review.
    • Community work: three events, documented outcomes, clear role.
    • Engineering or CS: one shipped project, user feedback, iteration notes.
  • Keep a simple ā€œproject logā€ with dates, hours, and outcomes.

D) Summer planning: programs, jobs, or internships

  • Create a short list of summer options and their application requirements.
  • Gather materials once:
    • short resume.
    • transcript.
    • one teacher name for a recommendation, if needed.
    • two short story examples for short answers.

High school student on winter break planning for college prep

For Freshmen & Sophomores (Class of 2028/29)

Your goal: strong grades, curiosity, and early exploration with low pressure.

A) Build one reading and thinking habit

  • Pick one book or long-form topic and one output to track your progress:
    • one-page reflection.
    • short review.
    • discussion notes for a mentor, teacher, or parent.
  • Keep the output in a ā€œlearning logā€ folder.

B) Plan next summer early

  • Competitive programs and structured opportunities often ask for applications in winter or early spring.
  • Winter break move:
    • list three summer paths: service, work, program, or independent project.
    • list requirements and dates for each.
    • choose one ā€œprimary planā€ and one ā€œbackup plan.ā€

C) Try a shadow day or informational interview

  • Learn more about your potential future field.
  • Follow-up rule: send a thank-you note within 24 hours.
  • Write three bullets in your learning log:
    • one surprise.
    • one skill to build.
    • one next step.

D) Set up a stronger spring routine

  • Write a short plan for January:
    • one academic goal.
    • one activity goal.
    • one rest goal.

The ā€œwinter rechargeā€ rule

Finally, remember to also rest up and spend time with family and friends. Winter break prep should fit inside life, not replace life. 

Why? Because this approach supports grades and follow-through in the spring semester. Burnout is real, and you cannot run on empty in January.

Quick wins for low-energy days

If you only have 30 minutes of focused effort in you, try one of these quick wins to continue making forward progress: 

  • Update your resume with new roles or awards
  • Read one student blog on a college’s website
  • Write thank-you emails to teachers or mentors
  • Draft a personal ā€œbrag sheetā€ for rec letters
  • Research one school’s major and save the link

Your best winter break yet

Instead of letting this time slip through your fingertips, put it to good use! A focused plan over the next one to two weeks lowers January stress and sets up a stronger spring. Pick your grade-level checklist, schedule three work blocks, and complete the highest-impact tasks first. Then close the laptop and recharge for the next adventure.

And, if your family wants help building a realistic winter plan, reach out to Empowerly. Our team of college experts can help you build a college application plan that makes sense for you and your family’s goals. We are ready and waiting to help you ring in a great new year!

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Madeleine Karydes

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