A selective essay contest offering scholarship outcomes for university and career preparation programmes.
Best for
Ages 13-18 testing subject interest
Yes, essay competitions can help applications when they show subject curiosity, clear thinking and reflection, but they rarely outweigh grades, course fit or deeper evidence.
Essay competitions are structured writing challenges where students respond to a prompt, argue a case and submit work for review. For university applications, their value is not just the result: the strongest benefit is the evidence they create of reading, thinking, argument and independent interest in a subject.
Universities do not usually treat a competition win as a shortcut around academic evidence. Official admissions guidance places more weight on course fit, academic potential, subject engagement and the applicant's ability to explain what they learned. A competition helps most when it gives you material for a personal statement, interview, activity description or future writing sample.
The right question is not whether essay competitions are prestigious in the abstract. It is whether a specific competition is credible, relevant, manageable and likely to help you produce a stronger application story than the same time spent reading, researching, volunteering or building a project.
Choose prompts that connect directly to the subject, themes or skills your target course values.
Common mistake: Avoid unrelated prestige chasing.
Check entry rules before committing time, especially where registration, referee approval, AI-use rules, late fees or parental consent apply. A missed registration date can make a finished essay unusable.
| Dimensions | Essay competition | Research project | Ongoing activity |
|---|---|---|---|
| Best evidence | Argument and writing | Depth and independence | Commitment and impact |
| Application strength | Strong if relevant | Strong if rigorous | Strong if sustained |
| Time shape | Deadline-based sprint | Longer investigation | Weekly commitment |
| Prestige value | Depends on organiser | Depends on output | Depends on responsibility |
| Interview usefulness | Defend your argument | Explain your method | Discuss your contribution |
These Succeed-listed competitions are useful starting points because they create concrete written work and clear application evidence.
A selective essay contest offering scholarship outcomes for university and career preparation programmes.
Best for
Ages 13-18 testing subject interest
A Sixth Form essay competition for students intending to study Classics or a joint Classics course.
Best for
Sixth Form Classics applicants
A Sixth Form history essay competition based on an independently chosen historical essay.
Best for
Sixth Form History applicants
An online personal essay competition for teenagers developing concise reflective writing.
Best for
Ages 13-19 building writing confidence
Use Succeed to compare relevant competitions, save deadlines and keep notes on the evidence each one could add to your application.
Compare essay competitionsThe topic connects to your intended course.
You can explain why the question matters.
The organiser and judging rules are clear.
The deadline fits your school workload.
The cost and late fees are acceptable.
The format suits your strongest evidence.
You will keep notes on your reading.
You can discuss the essay honestly later.
| Age / year group | Best focus | Good opportunity types | What to prepare |
|---|---|---|---|
| 13-14 | Explore interests | Short essays, creative prompts | Reading notes, first drafts |
| 15-16 | Build subject direction | Themed competitions, school awards | Evidence log, feedback |
| 16-17 | Show academic depth | Subject essays, research projects | Reading list, refined argument |
| 17-18 | Support applications | Selective essays, course-linked prizes | Reflection, interview examples |
| Gap year | Fill evidence gaps | Targeted essays, independent projects | Updated portfolio, deadlines |
Prestige helps only when the entry is relevant and you can explain the thinking behind it. Admissions teams still judge the whole application.
Choose relevance before brand name.
Use the match quiz to narrow competitions by subject fit, age, time commitment and the kind of evidence you want to build.
Step 1 of 4

Selection reviewed by
Co-founder, Succeed | Founder, Immerse Education (2012–2026)
Sean works at the intersection of academic enrichment, programme quality and university preparation, with expertise in evaluating pre-university experiences for ambitious secondary school students.
Use this guide to build a shortlist, then find matching opportunities in Succeed.
We use cookies to make this site work. We'd also like to use analytics cookies to understand how you use the site so we can improve it. You can accept, reject, or manage your preferences at any time.