Should My Child Take the ACT® with Writing?
Read time: 5 min · Last updated: June 21, 2026
For most students, the answer is no. Here's the full picture.
What the Writing Test Is
The ACT® Writing Test is an optional 40-minute essay added at the end of the standard four-section test. Students are given a prompt presenting a complex issue and three perspectives on it. They're asked to develop their own perspective, support it with reasoning and examples, and analyze its relationship to at least one of the given perspectives.
The essay is graded on a scale of 2–12 by two human readers, each scoring it 1–6 across four domains: Ideas and Analysis, Development and Support, Organization, and Language Use. Scores are usually returned several weeks after the multiple-choice scores — for the full timeline, see when ACT scores come back.
Critically: the Writing score does not affect the composite score. It is reported separately and does not factor into the 1–36 composite in any way.
Why Most Students Don't Need It
The overwhelming majority of colleges do not require the ACT® Writing Test. Most dropped their requirement years ago, and the trend has continued. Unless a school on your child's list specifically requires it, there is no reason to sit for the essay — it adds an hour to an already long test day, costs extra, and produces a score that most colleges won't look at.
Before registering, check the admissions requirements for every school on the list. Most college websites address this directly under "standardized testing requirements." If none of them require Writing, skip it.
When It Does Make Sense
A school on the list requires it. Some schools, particularly certain public university systems and a handful of selective private schools, still require or recommend the Writing score. If any target school falls into this category, take it. Check each school's website directly — this is not information that stays current in general guides.
Your child is applying to schools with specific program requirements. Some programs, particularly in education and certain humanities fields at specific schools, have historically valued or required Writing scores. Again, verify directly with the school rather than assuming.
Your child is a strong writer who wants to demonstrate it. If the essay is a genuine strength and the scores on the target school list suggest it would be competitive, there's no harm in submitting a strong Writing score. But this is an edge case — most applicants are better served focusing energy on the composite.
A Note on Test Day
Taking the Writing Test adds approximately an hour to an already demanding test. Students who take the standard ACT® finish around 12:35pm. Students who add Writing finish around 1:35pm.
For students who already find the four-section test taxing, adding an essay at the end when mental fatigue is at its highest is worth considering carefully — even if a school technically accepts Writing scores. If stamina or extra time is part of the picture, here's what most parents don't know about ACT accommodations.
The Practical Decision
- Check the requirements for every school on the list. If none require Writing, don't take it.
- If one or more require it, take it.
- If it's listed as "recommended" at a competitive school, treat the recommendation as a soft requirement and take it.
When in doubt, it is easier to take Writing alongside the test and decide later whether to submit it than to realize after the fact that a school required it and have to schedule an additional test date.