2024-2025 Residency Application Timeline and Month-by-Month Schedule

Med School Insiders

This guide outlines the residency application timeline you should follow, including key dates and an ideal preparation schedule. We’ll break things down based on what you need to accomplish and when each aspect of your application is due, as well as what you should be working on each month as you prepare your application.

Looking for a month-by-month schedule? Scroll below for a breakdown of what you should prepare and work on each month leading up to residency.

A solid road map for the application process will help you secure a residency position without burning out along the way. We’ll cover exactly what to expect throughout the entire application process.

The Electronic Residency Application Service (ERAS)

The Electronic Residency Application Service (ERAS) is the centralized online application service residency applicants use to deliver their application and supporting documents to residency programs. ERAS simplifies the application process for applicants as well as their program directors, Designated Dean’s Office, and letter of recommendation authors.

ERAS has four individual but connected applications.

Each application was created to meet the needs of each user group involved in the application process. ERAS provides a confidential and impartial transmission of all applications to residency programs.

The Steps of ERAS:

  1. Applicants receive a token (one-time access code) from their Designated Dean’s Office.
  2. Applicants use the token to register with MyERAS.
  3. Applicants complete their MyERAS application, assign supporting documents, select programs, and apply to programs.
  4. The applicant’s Designated Dean’s Office and letters of recommendation authors upload supporting documents.
  5. Examining boards receive and process requests for transcripts.
  6. Programs receive the application materials through the Program Director’s Workstation (PDWS).

2024-2025 ERAS Residency Application Dates and Deadlines

The following ERAS dates and deadlines for 2024-2025 come directly from the AAMC website. Check this resource for the most up-to-date information regarding deadlines.

May 31, 2024 2024 ERAS season ends at 5 p.m. ET.
June 5, 2024 2025 ERAS season begins at 9 a.m. ET.
Sept. 4, 2024 Residency applicants may begin submitting MyERAS ® applications to programs at 9 a.m. ET.
Sept. 25, 2024 Residency programs may begin reviewing MyERAS applications and MSPEs in the PDWS at 9 a.m. ET.
May 31, 2025 2025 ERAS season ends at 5 p.m. ET.

These dates represent the hard deadlines provided by AAMC, but there’s plenty you need to be on top of in the months leading up to application season and throughout the summer while applications are open. Below, we’ll share a month-by-month breakdown of what you should be focusing on for your residency application, including applicable resources.

Changes to the 2025 ERAS Residency Application Cycle

Each year ERAS evolves the application process, which means applicants must stay up-to-date with each year’s specifications. For the 2024-2025 cycle, these are the changes and updates ERAS has announced:

  1. Hobbies and interests will be a standalone item in the MyERAS ® application.
  2. Consolidated interview scheduling with Thalamus Core will seamlessly manage interview planning and scheduling.
  3. Dean’s Office WorkStation (DWS) Analytics will make it easier for advisors to access their students’ interview data.
  4. Program signaling will be available for December cycle ERAS fellowship applicants. Specialties and programs that participate in the July fellowship cycle can participate in the 2025-2026 application season, which will launch in July 2025.
  5. Real-time data analysis will be delivered to institutions and programs via Cerebellum.

For a full breakdown of changes for the 2024-2025 application cycle, visit the What’s New page on the ERAS website.

Components of the Medical School Residency Application Process

Much like your medical school application, your residency application has many moving parts that you need to be working on at the same time. The application includes some familiar components, including an experiences section, personal statement, and letters of recommendation, as well as some new aspects, like the optional professional photo.

  1. Experiences
  2. Personal Statement
  3. Letters of Recommendation
  4. Photo
  5. Transcripts

Continue reading for a breakdown of each of these components, followed by our month-by-month breakdown of what you should be working on when.

ERAS Residency Application Checklist

1. Experiences

The ERAS experiences section is an opportunity for you to share your experiences with volunteering, work, and research. Include all of your experiences in this section, not just the ones relevant to your specialty. It’s important to highlight and showcase all of what you have learned and been up to.

You are able to add u p to 10 experiences and can self-select your top three most meaningful experiences.

You can use the following three questions to structure your descriptions of each activity:

Using this three sentence structure will help the reader quickly comprehend the activity and what the experience meant to you. This is where a lot of your interview questions will come from, so it’s a good idea to review this section before heading into your residency interviews.

Note: Hobbies and interests will be a standalone item in your application starting in the 2024-2025 application cycle.

2. Personal Statement

The ERAS personal statement is where you tell your story the way you see it and explain why you want—and are more than qualified—to join a certain specialty. Outside of interviews, this is your only opportunity to personally touch on anything that you feel is underrepresented in the rest of your application.

This is the section where you can put your accomplishments and achievements into context, as much of the rest of your application focuses almost exclusively on your grades and scores.

Your residency personal statement will differ from your medical school personal statement as you are no longer a wide-eyed premed. You have now earned your doctorate, and it’s imperative that your residency personal statement reflects this. Be confident but humble. You are now a young professional with a much deeper understanding of and commitment to medicine. Your residency personal statement must focus on your professional development and the experiences that have crystalized your ambition to pursue your chosen specialty.

While the residency personal statement allows for 28,000 characters, we don’t recommend filling all of this space. A single typed page, about 700-800 words, is all that’s required.

A brilliant personal statement can be enough to land you an interview, while a lackluster essay can ruin your chances of acceptance, regardless of your other academic achievements. View our database of Residency Personal Statement Samples, edit carefully, ask mentors for feedback, and consider professional personal statement editing.

3. Letters of Recommendation

The ERAS letters of recommendation, much like your medical school letters of recommendation, provide residency programs with vital insight into how the professional physicians you’ve worked with see you. Your letter writers will speak to your work ethic, professionalism, and why you are a good fit for your chosen specialty.

While you’re allowed to include an unlimited number of references, you can only include four letters of recommendation per program. Your letters should be standardized and not tailored to each specific program so that your letter writers don’t have to draft multiple letters. Your Dean’s Letter and MSPE do not count as letters.

Ideally, your letter writers should be from a range of specialties and experiences, and it’s imperative that they know you well and will speak very highly of you. Include at least one letter from an attending you worked closely with, a department chair, or a mentor in your chosen specialty. Your mentor will be able to speak directly to your suitability and aptitude for that specific specialty.

It’s also possible that programs will require a letter from someone outside the field of medicine. Each program will list specific requirements on their website. Read these requirements carefully to determine exactly what you’ll need to include.

4. Photo

While optional, including a photo is highly recommended. A professional photo of your friendly, smiling face will help the people evaluating your application put a face to a name and remember you.

Upload your own photo in MyERAS by selecting Upload New Photo in the Actions column.

The photo file cannot exceed these requirements:

The photo should be high-quality and look professional. Ensure you look approachable and friendly, wear professional clothing, such as your interview outfit, and keep the background subtle. You don’t want anything to distract from your face.

If you’re friends with a professional photographer, ask them to take a photo of you, but if not, we encourage you to pay for a professional photo. The cost of a quality headshot is nothing compared to the staggering amount of money you’ve already paid to attend medical school.

5. Transcripts

You must request your USMLE transcript (or COMLEX transcript for osteopathic schools) for your application, so it’s important to authorize the release of this document during the summer. Since it can take weeks for your test results to arrive, schedule Step 2CK long before the September of your residency application.

Once you make the request, your medical school will organize your MSPE (Medical School Performance Evaluation) letter and transcripts and upload them for you.

Month-by-Month Application Preparation Schedule

ERAS Residency Application Timeline

Jan-April 2024