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What Happens If You Break an Early Decision Agreement? 100% Rescind Rate and Real Consequences in 2026

By Rona Aydin

Signing an Early Decision agreement document for college admissions
TL;DR: Breaking an Early Decision agreement can result in rescinded admission offers from both the ED school and other schools, high school counselor refusal to send transcripts, and permanent blacklisting from the ED school (NACAC Guidelines on Admission Decision-Making, 2024). The most common legitimate reason for breaking ED is insufficient financial aid, which is the only universally accepted justification. Schools share admitted student lists to detect ED violations, and getting caught is more common than families assume. Before committing ED, run the net price calculator and understand the binding nature of the agreement. For guidance on ED strategy, schedule a consultation with Oriel Admissions.

Is an Early Decision Agreement Legally Binding?

An Early Decision agreement is not a legal contract in the traditional sense. No family has ever been sued for breaking an ED agreement, and no court has enforced one. However, the agreement is enforced through institutional mechanisms that are far more effective than litigation. When a student signs an ED agreement, the student, a parent, and the high school counselor all sign. The counselor’s signature means the high school is a party to the commitment. If a student attempts to break ED without a legitimate reason, the counselor can refuse to release transcripts to other schools, effectively blocking enrollment elsewhere (NACAC, 2024).

What Are the Actual Consequences of Breaking Early Decision?

ConsequenceHow CommonDetails
ED school rescinds admissionGuaranteedIf you withdraw without financial hardship justification, your acceptance is void
Other schools rescind offersVery likelySchools share admitted student lists and cross-reference ED commitments
Counselor refuses transcriptsCommonYour high school counselor co-signed the agreement and may block other enrollments
Permanent ban from ED schoolGuaranteedYou cannot reapply in future cycles
Damage to school’s future applicantsIndirectColleges may view future applicants from your high school with more skepticism
Legal actionExtremely rareNo documented cases of lawsuits, but the agreement references binding commitment

Source: NACAC Guidelines on Admission Decision-Making, 2024; institutional admissions policies.

Do Schools Actually Share ED Lists to Catch Violators?

Yes. According to admissions professionals, most selective schools participate in information-sharing agreements where they compare lists of admitted ED students against deposits at other institutions. The Common Application itself facilitates this by flagging when a student who applied ED to one school also applied RD to others and attempts to deposit elsewhere. The Ivy League schools have a formal agreement to share admitted student lists. Schools outside the Ivy League also cross-reference informally. Getting caught is not a hypothetical risk. It happens every cycle, and the consequences are immediate: both schools rescind the offer. For how ED strategy works at each school, see our ED vs RD acceptance rate analysis.

The Tulane case in late 2025 made this risk concrete. After a student at Colorado Academy broke her ED agreement to attend a different school, Tulane banned all students from that high school from applying Early Decision for the following year (The New York Times, October 2025). Three other high schools received the same one-year ban. Tulane fills roughly two-thirds of its class through ED, and the university treated the violation as a breach of institutional trust that extended beyond the individual student. The message was clear: breaking ED does not just affect you. It can affect every future applicant from your high school. For Tulane-specific admissions data, see our Tulane acceptance rate analysis.

What Is the Only Legitimate Reason to Break an ED Agreement?

Financial hardship is the only universally accepted justification for breaking an ED agreement. If the financial aid package offered by the ED school does not make attendance financially feasible, the student can decline without penalty. This is explicitly stated in most ED agreements: the commitment is binding unless the aid package is insufficient. However, “insufficient” is subjective. If your expected family contribution is $60,000 and the school offers a package requiring $65,000, that may qualify. If your EFC is $60,000 and the school meets it exactly but you received a merit scholarship from a non-ED school that makes it cheaper, that does not qualify. The key question is whether you can afford the ED school’s package, not whether another school offered a better deal. For families earning $200,000 or more, see our guide to financial aid at this income level.

What Should You Do Before Committing to Early Decision?

Run the net price calculator for every school you are considering for ED before you apply. The NPC provides an estimate of your expected family contribution based on income, assets, and family size. If the estimated cost is not affordable, do not apply ED to that school. According to College Board data, fewer than 40% of ED applicants run the NPC before committing (College Board, 2024). This is a preventable mistake. The NPC is free, takes 15 minutes, and eliminates the most common reason families need to break ED. For detailed ED strategy, see our ED guide.

How Do Specific Schools Handle ED Violations?

SchoolED PolicyKnown Enforcement
ColumbiaBinding ED I and ED IIActive Ivy League list-sharing; rescinds aggressively
DukeBinding EDCross-references with peer schools; financial release available
PennBinding EDIvy League list-sharing; strict enforcement
CornellBinding EDIvy League list-sharing; financial aid appeal process available
DartmouthBinding EDIvy League list-sharing; financial release for demonstrated need
WashUBinding ED I and ED IIActive cross-referencing; 61% of class filled through ED
EmoryBinding ED I and ED IICross-references; financial release available
VanderbiltBinding ED I and ED IIActive enforcement; 50%+ class filled through ED

Source: Institutional ED policies, NACAC guidelines, admissions counselor reports, 2024-2026.

Can You Apply ED and Also Apply to Other Schools Regular Decision?

Yes, you can and should apply RD to other schools while your ED application is pending. The ED agreement does not prohibit submitting RD applications. However, if you are admitted ED, you must withdraw all other applications immediately. Most ED decisions are released in mid-December, and RD deadlines are January 1 to January 15. This means you will have already submitted your RD applications before learning your ED result. If admitted ED, withdraw everything else the same day. If rejected or deferred ED, your RD applications proceed normally. For how to build a balanced school list that accounts for ED outcomes, see our reach, match, and safety guide.

What If You Are Deferred from ED? Can You Apply ED II Elsewhere?

Yes. If you are deferred from ED I (moved to the Regular Decision pool), your ED commitment to that school is released. You are free to apply ED II to a different school with a January deadline. Schools that offer ED II include WashU, Emory, Vanderbilt, Tufts, and many others. ED II carries the same binding commitment as ED I. This is a strong strategy for students deferred from their top choice: applying ED II to a second-choice school provides the same acceptance rate advantage while keeping your deferred application active at the first school. For the full list of ED II schools and rates, see our ED II strategy guide.

For related strategy, see our guides on Common App essay strategy, the 2026-2027 admissions timeline, and recommendation letter strategy.

Final Thoughts: ED Is a Powerful Tool When Used Correctly

Early Decision is the single most powerful strategic lever in selective admissions. At schools where ED fills 40 to 60% of the class, the acceptance rate advantage is 2x to 4x compared to Regular Decision. But the binding commitment is real, and breaking it carries consequences that can derail the entire admissions process. The right approach is to commit ED only to a school you would attend regardless of other outcomes, after confirming financial feasibility through the net price calculator. At Oriel Admissions, our team of former admissions officers from Harvard, Princeton, and Columbia helps families navigate ED strategy with precision. Schedule a consultation to discuss your ED plan.

Frequently Asked Questions

My child was admitted ED but received a merit scholarship from another school worth $100,000. Can we break ED for that?

No. A better financial offer from another school is not a valid reason to break an ED agreement. The only valid justification is that the ED school’s financial aid package makes attendance unaffordable. If the ED school meets your demonstrated need but another school offered unsolicited merit money, you are bound by the ED commitment. This is why running the net price calculator before applying ED is critical. If you cannot afford the ED school even with its best possible aid package, do not apply ED there.

How likely is it that a student actually gets caught breaking an ED agreement?

Very likely at selective schools. The Ivy League schools have a formal agreement to share admitted student lists. The Common Application flags ED applicants who attempt to deposit at multiple institutions. Your high school counselor is a co-signer who can alert both schools. In smaller applicant pools (schools with fewer than 5,000 applicants), the cross-referencing is even more thorough. Families who think they can quietly break ED without consequences are almost always discovered, and the result is typically both acceptances being rescinded.

The ED school offered us $10,000 less than we expected. Is that enough to break the agreement?

Possibly, but you should appeal the aid package first. Contact the financial aid office, explain the gap between the estimated NPC amount and the actual offer, and provide documentation of any changed financial circumstances. Most schools will reconsider if the gap is legitimate. If the school cannot close the gap and the package genuinely makes attendance unaffordable for your family, you have grounds to release from the ED agreement. Keep all communication in writing and be transparent with both the financial aid office and your counselor.

If my child breaks ED, will it hurt future applicants from our high school?

Potentially. Admissions officers build relationships with high school counselors and track institutional patterns. If a student from your high school breaks ED without legitimate cause, the admissions office may view future applicants from that school with additional skepticism. This is particularly true at smaller private schools where the counselor relationship is personal. The counselor may also be less willing to advocate strongly for future students if they feel the school’s credibility was damaged. This is one reason counselors take ED agreements seriously and may refuse to cooperate with a student attempting to break one.

Can I apply ED I to one school, get in, break it, and then apply ED II somewhere else I like more?

No. Breaking ED I to apply ED II elsewhere is a clear violation of the agreement and will result in consequences at both schools if discovered. The only scenario where you can apply ED II after an ED I result is if you were deferred or rejected from ED I, which releases you from the commitment. If you were admitted ED I, you are bound. If you are unsure whether a school is truly your first choice, do not apply ED there. Apply Regular Decision and preserve your flexibility.

Do international students face the same consequences for breaking ED?

Yes, the consequences are identical. International students sign the same ED agreement and are subject to the same cross-referencing mechanisms. Additionally, international students who break ED may face complications with visa sponsorship if the situation creates conflicting enrollment records. The financial hardship justification is particularly relevant for international families, as many ED schools are need-aware for international applicants, meaning the aid package may be less generous than expected. Run the NPC and have a realistic conversation about cost before committing ED as an international family.


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