Timeline for Application and Admission to Medical School
Each person’s journey and experience are different, but this guide can help you prepare for the medical school application and admission process. Talk with your prehealth advisor to create a plan that works best for you.
Read the timeline in its entirety, or navigate directly to a specific year:
- Three Years Before You Plan to Attend Medical School.
- Two Years Before You Plan to Attend Medical School.
- One Year Before You Plan to Attend Medical School.
- Gap Year(s) Before You Attend Medical School.
- After You're Accepted to Medical School.
Four or More Years Before You Plan to Attend Medical School
Prehealth Advisor Activities
A prehealth advisor can help you navigate the journey of becoming a competitive applicant and then applying to medical school. If your school doesn’t have a prehealth advisor, connect with one via the The National Association of Advisors for the Health Professions.
Make an appointment with a prehealth advisor to:
- Introduce yourself.
- Finalize your fall classes.
- Discuss how to sequence your classes moving forward.
Campus Activities
- Learn about campus resources and organizations for prehealth students.
- Attend prehealth meetings and subscribe to email and social medial updates.
- Develop relationships with faculty, advisors, and mentors on campus. This will be helpful for finding volunteer, shadow, and research opportunities and for your letters of evaluation.
Work and Activity Experiences
- Visit the career services office on campus to learn about health care related internships or employment opportunities.
- Look for medically related work or volunteer experiences for during the school year and summer.
- Search for opportunities to shadow a doctor or other health care professionals.
- If interested, identify potential research opportunities.
- Keep a journal about your experiences to refer to later for essays and interviews.
- Consider participating in the Summer Health Professions Education Program, other summer enrichment opportunities or research programs.
AAMC Resources, Services and Tools
- Explore the AAMC's Aspiring Docs program.
- Apply to summer enrichment programs or research programs.
- Follow AAMC Premed on Facebook and Twitter.
- Subscribe to the AAMC Premed Navigator.
- Determine eligibility for the AAMC Fee Assistance Program. The program provides financial assistance to individuals who, without this aid, would find it very difficult — if not impossible — to take the Medical College Admission Test ® (MCAT ® ), apply to medical schools through the American Medical College Application Service ® (AMCAS ® ), and fulfill other obligations on the path to a career in medicine.
- Reference the What’s on the MCAT exam content outline to familiarize yourself with the foundational concepts, content categories, skills, and disciplines you’ll need to know for the exam.
- Utilize tools to help you manage your finances and prepare for medical education expenses.
- Apply to medical school with the AMCAS program. The AMCAS program is the AAMC's centralized medical school application processing service. Most U.S. medical schools use the AMCAS service as the primary application method for their first-year entering classes.
Three Years Before You Plan to Attend Medical School
Prehealth Advisor Activities
- Check in with your prehealth advising office, attend prehealth meetings, and make sure you’re receiving information and updates.
Campus Activities
- Continue to develop relationships with faculty, advisors, and mentors.
Work and Activity Experiences
- Pursue or continue meaningful medically related activities, including volunteer roles, paid work, research positions, and/or leadership opportunities in health organizations.
- Consider returning to your previous summer position or applying for a new summer volunteer, paid, or research position in a health care related environment.
AAMC Resources, Services, and Tools