What are the most important admission tips for international students applying to the University of Delaware?

I’m an international student starting to work on my college applications, and the University of Delaware is one of the schools I’m considering. I want to make sure I understand what matters most in the admissions process for applicants like me.

I’m mainly looking for general tips that could help an international student present a strong application to UD.
3 days ago
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Sundial Team
3 days ago
For international students applying to the University of Delaware, the biggest priorities are strong academics, clear English proficiency, and showing a real fit with the university. UD reviews applicants holistically, but grades in college-prep courses matter most, and international applicants also need to submit proof of English proficiency unless they qualify for a waiver.

A strong transcript is the foundation of your application. UD will look closely at your secondary school record, the rigor of your coursework, and how well you have performed over time. If your school offers advanced or externally examined courses, doing well in those helps because it gives admissions a clearer sense of your preparation.

Your essays and activities should make your academic interests feel specific and credible. If you say you want engineering, business, or computer science, your application should show related classes, projects, clubs, competitions, work, or independent study. That kind of alignment matters more than trying to sound impressive in a generic way.

It is also important to pay attention to practical items early. Check UD’s international application requirements, financial documentation rules, and whether your documents need official translation or credential review. For international students, missing one required document can delay or weaken an otherwise strong application.

One useful mindset with UD is to be concrete. Show what you have done, what you want to study, and why that path makes sense based on your record. A focused, organized application usually comes across much better than one trying to cover too many unrelated strengths.

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