Extracurriculars That Actually Matter for Admissions

Written by an admissions expert11 min readKey Takeaways1. Why extracurriculars matter (and why they don’t)2. What admissions officers actually look for3. The types of activities that count4. Depth over breadth5. Quality over prestige6. Building a coherent narrativeExtracurricular Activities That Matter for University Admissions (2026) “What extracurriculars should I do to get into a top university?”…

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By Adam Girsault

Updated on June 21, 2026

Written by an admissions expert
11 min read

Key Takeaways

  • 1. Why extracurriculars matter (and why they don’t)
  • 2. What admissions officers actually look for
  • 3. The types of activities that count
  • 4. Depth over breadth
  • 5. Quality over prestige
  • 6. Building a coherent narrative

Extracurricular Activities That Matter for University Admissions (2026)

“What extracurriculars should I do to get into a top university?” is one of the most misguided questions students ask. The premise — that there’s a secret list of activities that admissions officers want — is wrong. What actually matters is depth, impact, and authenticity, not the specific activities on your list. This article walks through what extracurriculars actually count for university admissions, how they’re weighted differently by country, and how to build a meaningful profile without chasing prestige.

The extracurricular principle

Admissions officers can tell the difference between activities done for admissions and activities done because you care. The second type is what matters.


1. Why extracurriculars matter (and why they don’t)

Extracurriculars serve different purposes across university systems.

In the US:

  • Extracurriculars are a major admissions factor
  • They signal character, passion, and fit
  • They help distinguish applicants with similar grades and test scores
  • Depth and impact matter more than quantity

In the UK:

  • Extracurriculars matter much less
  • Relevant subject-specific activities help
  • Unrelated activities are mostly ignored
  • Academic engagement is paramount

In Continental Europe:

  • Varies by country and university
  • Business schools and Sciences Po value extracurriculars moderately
  • Most technical and academic universities focus on grades
  • Motivation letters sometimes touch on activities

In Canada and Australia:

  • Moderate weight, usually less than the US
  • Academic focus dominates

Strategic implication:

If you’re applying primarily to the US, extracurriculars matter significantly. If you’re applying to the UK or most of Europe, invest your limited time in academic depth instead.


2. What admissions officers actually look for

At universities that weigh extracurriculars, officers look for specific qualities.

Depth over breadth:

  • 2–3 activities pursued deeply
  • Rather than 10 activities done superficially
  • Years of commitment matter
  • Leadership and impact develop with time

Authentic interest:

  • Activities that connect to who you are
  • Not random activities for your resume
  • Genuine passion shows through

Impact:

  • What difference did you make?
  • What changed because you were involved?
  • Who benefited from your work?

Leadership:

  • Taking initiative, not just following
  • Organising, creating, leading
  • Can be formal (president of a club) or informal (started a project)

Coherence:

  • Activities that tell a story
  • Connected to your academic interests
  • Showing growth over time

3. The types of activities that count

“Extracurriculars” is broader than you might think.

Traditional school activities:

  • Clubs and societies
  • Student government
  • Sports teams
  • Music and arts
  • Drama and debate

Independent pursuits:

  • Self-directed projects
  • Research
  • Writing (blog, publication, books)
  • Coding or making
  • Creative work (art, film, music)

Community and volunteer:

  • Long-term volunteering
  • Community organising
  • Youth leadership programs

Work and internships:

  • Paid employment
  • Internships
  • Apprenticeships
  • Family business involvement

Family responsibilities:

  • Caring for siblings or relatives
  • Contributing to family business
  • Financial contributions

Competitions and achievements:

  • Olympiads
  • Science fairs
  • Writing competitions
  • Sports achievements

Rule: Nothing is automatically disqualified as “not extracurricular.” Real commitment in any area counts.


4. Depth over breadth

The depth principle is widely misunderstood.

What “depth” means:

  • 3–5 years of sustained engagement
  • Progression from member to leader to innovator
  • Specific achievements and impact
  • Deep knowledge of the domain

What “depth” doesn’t mean:

  • Spending every waking hour on one thing
  • Sacrificing all other interests
  • Competing obsessively

Example of depth:

A student who joined robotics club in grade 8, built progressively more complex projects, founded a junior robotics mentorship program for middle schoolers in grade 10, won a regional competition in grade 11, and wrote a blog about engineering challenges for beginners — this is depth.

Example without depth:

A student who joined 15 different clubs, never leading any, and quit most after a few months — this is breadth without depth.

Why depth wins:

  • Shows commitment and follow-through
  • Develops real skills
  • Creates meaningful stories for essays and interviews
  • Signals capacity for future sustained effort

5. Quality over prestige

Prestige is often mistaken for quality.

Prestige trap examples:

  • Attending an expensive summer program just for the name
  • Volunteering abroad for “cultural exposure” tourism
  • Joining prestigious clubs you don’t actually engage with
  • Paying for a “research” internship

Quality alternatives:

  • A locally-run summer program you genuinely engaged with
  • Long-term volunteering in your own community
  • A club you actively help run
  • A genuine research project, even if unpaid

Admissions officers can usually tell the difference. Students who list expensive prestigious activities without real substance often look worse than students with humble but genuine engagement.


6. Building a coherent narrative

The strongest extracurricular profiles tell a story.

Example: A science-focused student

  • Grade 8–9: Science club member, reads science magazines
  • Grade 10: Started a physics study group, chemistry olympiad
  • Grade 11: Research internship at a local university, founded a STEM outreach program at a nearby elementary school
  • Grade 12: Published paper in a student journal, national olympiad finalist

Narrative: Growing engagement with science, from consumer to creator to teacher.

Example: A social justice-focused student

  • Grade 8–9: Local food bank volunteer
  • Grade 10: Started a school sustainability club, organised a clean-up drive
  • Grade 11: Partnered with a local NGO, organised a community event
  • Grade 12: Founded a youth advocacy group, wrote op-eds

Narrative: Deepening commitment to community action.

What both have in common:

  • Progression over time
  • Connection to identity
  • Real impact
  • Leadership and initiative

Avoid:

  • Random activities that don’t connect
  • Brief commitments
  • “Leadership” titles without substance

7. Activities for different profiles

Different students can build strong profiles in different ways.

For humanities-focused students:

  • Writing (school newspaper, blog, literary magazine)
  • Debate club or Model UN
  • History or political science olympiads
  • Reading circles or book clubs
  • Starting a podcast

For STEM-focused students:

  • Science olympiads
  • Robotics or maker projects
  • Research internships
  • Coding projects or apps
  • Science fair competitions

For business-focused students:

  • Starting a small business
  • Business competitions (DECA, FBLA)
  • Investment clubs
  • Internships at local businesses
  • Running fundraising campaigns

For arts-focused students:

  • Performing or exhibiting work
  • Creative projects
  • Music lessons and performances
  • Film or photography projects
  • Art portfolios

For social impact-focused students:

  • Sustained volunteer work
  • Founding or leading community projects
  • Advocacy and activism
  • Fundraising for causes
  • Youth leadership programs

For sports-focused students:

  • Team leadership
  • Coaching or mentoring younger players
  • Organising tournaments
  • Balancing athletic and academic commitments

8. Common extracurricular mistakes

Mistake 1: Quantity over quality.

10 activities barely engaged with beats 3 activities deeply engaged with.

Mistake 2: Prestige chasing.

Expensive or famous-sounding activities don’t impress if they lack substance.

Mistake 3: Starting too late.

Grade 11 or 12 is too late to build depth. Start in Grade 9 or 10.

Mistake 4: Inauthentic engagement.

Activities done for your resume look like activities done for your resume.

Mistake 5: Ignoring family responsibilities.

Caring for siblings, contributing to family income, or running a household counts as meaningful engagement. Don’t hide it.

Mistake 6: Not taking leadership.

Membership without leadership is weaker than leadership in fewer things.

Mistake 7: Sacrificing academics for activities.

Grades are foundational. Activities can’t compensate for weak academics.

Mistake 8: Listing activities without explaining them.

Admissions officers need to understand what you did and why it mattered.

Mistake 9: Faking or exaggerating.

Easy to detect, disqualifying when caught.

Mistake 10: Copying other students.

What works for one student may not work for another. Be yourself.


9. The activity list on applications

Most US applications include a short section for listing activities.

Common App activity list:

  • Up to 10 activities
  • 50 characters for position/title
  • 150 characters for description
  • Honours/awards section separate

How to describe each activity:

  • Be specific about your role
  • Quantify impact where possible
  • Use strong verbs (founded, led, organised)
  • Avoid generic phrases (“helped,” “participated”)

Example of strong description:

“Founded coding club, grew membership from 5 to 40, organised 8 workshops teaching beginners to build websites, won 2nd place at regional hackathon.”

Example of weak description:

“Member of coding club. Helped with events and activities.”

Prioritisation:

  • Most important activities first
  • Rank by depth and impact, not by prestige

10. How to build extracurriculars from nothing

Some students start late or have limited options. Here’s how to build anyway.

Start with genuine interest:

  • What do you actually enjoy?
  • What would you do for free?
  • What’s missing that you could create?

Identify small steps:

  • Start a personal project (blog, podcast, research)
  • Join an existing group and take initiative
  • Volunteer with a local organisation
  • Teach younger students (tutoring, workshops)

Build over time:

  • 6 months: member and contributor
  • 12 months: active participant, some leadership
  • 18–24 months: significant role, real impact
  • 24+ months: leader with measurable impact

Even late starters can build meaningful profiles — they just need to start now and engage seriously.


11. Extracurriculars and academic balance

Extracurriculars shouldn’t compete with academics.

Healthy balance:

  • 15–20 hours per week on school + homework
  • 5–10 hours per week on extracurriculars
  • 2–3 hours per week on test prep (during prep periods)
  • 7–9 hours of sleep per night
  • Time for family and friends

Unhealthy patterns:

  • Sacrificing sleep for activities
  • Falling grades due to commitments
  • No time for yourself
  • Chronic stress and burnout

Rule: If your activities are hurting your academics, reduce activities. Grades are foundational.


12. What about during COVID and its aftermath

Many students lost extracurricular opportunities during COVID. Universities understand this.

Universities are understanding of:

  • Cancelled competitions and events
  • Limited in-person activities
  • Virtual alternatives to in-person engagement
  • Gaps in your activity timeline during 2020–2022

What still counts:

  • Independent projects during lockdown
  • Virtual volunteering
  • Online learning and self-directed study
  • Family responsibilities during the pandemic
  • Creative adaptations of traditional activities

Don’t apologise for COVID disruptions. Just describe what you did and what you learned.


13. FAQ

How many extracurriculars should I have?

3–5 meaningful activities is ideal. Fewer if each is very deep.

Do sports count?

Yes, especially if you show commitment and leadership.

Does a job count as an extracurricular?

Absolutely. Work experience is valuable.

What if I can’t afford expensive activities?

Free and low-cost activities can build equally strong profiles. Prestige isn’t what matters.

Should I start activities in senior year?

Too late to build depth, but not too late to start something small. Depth matters more than timing.

Do admissions officers contact my activity supervisors?

Very rarely. But they can often tell from descriptions whether involvement was genuine.

What about community service?

Sustained, meaningful community service is valuable. Tourism-style “service” is not.

Can I exaggerate on my activity list?

Don’t. If caught, it’s disqualifying. Admissions officers often detect inauthentic descriptions.

Do I need a “passion project”?

You don’t need one, but a genuine self-directed project shows initiative and character.


14. Your extracurricular action plan

  1. Start in Grade 9 or 10 with 2–3 activities that interest you
  2. Engage deeply rather than trying many things
  3. Take initiative — start something, lead something, create something
  4. Build over years, not weeks
  5. Pursue authentic interests, not resume items
  6. Document your impact specifically
  7. Balance with academics (grades come first)
  8. Tell a coherent story across your activities
  9. Describe activities clearly on your applications
  10. Remember: depth, authenticity, and impact over prestige

The best extracurriculars are the ones you’d do even if universities didn’t care. Admissions officers can tell the difference between students chasing prestige and students pursuing genuine interests. Be the second kind of student — for your applications, and for yourself.

Need help building a meaningful extracurricular profile? Book a free strategy call and we’ll help you identify where to invest your time and energy.

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Adam Girsault Author
About Adam Girsault

With a Bachelor's (LLB) from UCL and Assas, and the Grande Ecole program at HEC Paris, Adam has over 10 years of experience in education and student mentoring. Passionate about helping students achieve their academic dreams, he co-founded Your Dream School to guide students through university admissions and interview preparation for top global institutions.

Our Quality CommitmentThis article is written and fact-checked by our team of admissions consultants, graduates of HEC Paris, UCL, and other top institutions. All information is verified against official university sources.
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