ACT Writing Section 2026: Score, Requirements, and Whether to Take It
Should you take ACT Writing? See which colleges require it, how it's scored out of 12, what a good score is, and whether skipping saves you money and time.


What Is the ACT Writing Section?
The ACT Writing section is an optional essay test added at the end of the four required multiple-choice sections. You get one prompt, 40 minutes, and lined paper. The prompt presents a complex social, political, or educational issue, then gives you three different perspectives on it. Your job is to develop and defend your own position — and explain how your view relates to the three perspectives provided.
Writing is always the last section of the ACT. It comes after Science, and only test-takers who registered for Writing stay for that portion. The rest are dismissed after the Science section ends.
What the Prompt Looks Like
A typical ACT Writing prompt introduces a broad issue — something like automation and jobs, the purpose of education, or social media's effect on public discourse. Three short perspectives are given, each representing a distinct viewpoint. You're expected to analyze the perspectives, state and support your own position, and show how your argument relates to at least one of the provided views.
You're not graded on which side you take. The essay is an analytical writing task, not a moral one. What matters is how clearly you develop your argument, how well you use evidence and reasoning, and how effectively you communicate in writing.
Paper or Computer?
Most in-person ACT test-takers write the essay by hand on provided lined paper. If you're taking the ACT online (available at select test centers), the Writing section is typed. Either way, the grading criteria are the same.
How ACT Writing Is Scored
Your essay is scored by two trained human readers — not by an algorithm. Each reader scores your essay on four domains, giving each domain a score of 1–6. The two readers' scores are combined, giving each domain a range of 2–12. Your final Writing score is a rounded average of the four domain scores, reported on a 2–12 scale.
The Four Scoring Domains
Ideas and Analysis — Does your essay engage critically with the perspectives? Do you develop your own argument rather than just summarizing what others think? Readers are looking for nuance: acknowledging complexity, not just restating one side.
Development and Support — Do your ideas have substance behind them? This domain assesses whether you back your claims with reasoning, examples, and evidence. Vague assertions score low; specific, developed reasoning scores high.
Organization — Is your essay clearly structured? A strong introduction, logical progression of ideas, and purposeful transitions all factor here. You don't need a rigid five-paragraph format, but the reader should be able to follow your argument from start to finish without getting lost.
Language Use and Conventions — Does your writing communicate your ideas clearly? This covers sentence variety, word choice, grammar, and punctuation. Frequent mechanical errors lower this score, but stylistic sophistication can raise it.
Score Discrepancies
If the two readers' scores differ by more than one point on any domain, a third reader resolves the discrepancy. This is uncommon but happens. The final score is determined by that third reader when there's a conflict.
What Writing Doesn't Affect
Your Writing score has zero impact on your composite score. The composite is the average of your four multiple-choice section scores — English, Mathematics, Reading, Science — only. Writing sits entirely outside that calculation. It's reported on your score report as a separate figure, and colleges evaluate it independently when they require or review it.

What Is a Good ACT Writing Score?
The national average ACT Writing score is around 6.5–7 out of 12. Because the scale runs 2–12, a 10 or above is genuinely strong — that puts you in roughly the top 15–20% of test-takers. An 8 or 9 is solid and above average. A 6 or below is below the national mean.
What counts as "good" depends entirely on where you're applying. For highly selective schools that require Writing, you'll want a score of 9 or above to stay competitive. For schools that merely accept Writing without requiring it, any score above the national average (7+) is unlikely to hurt you.
Score by Tier
Here's a general benchmark for interpreting Writing scores:
- 10–12: Excellent — top tier writing performance, highly competitive at any school that values the essay
- 8–9: Strong — above average, competitive at most schools that require Writing
- 6–7: Average — national mean range; won't help or hurt at most schools
- 2–5: Below average — may raise flags at schools that require Writing and use it as a threshold
If a school you're applying to requires Writing, treat it as a real component of your application — not an afterthought. A weak Writing score at a school that mandates it can matter in the same way a low English section score would.
To understand how Writing fits within your total ACT performance, what is a good act score covers composite benchmarks by school tier and scholarship threshold. Your composite and Writing score are evaluated separately, so strong performance on both gives you the most flexibility.
Which Colleges Require ACT Writing?
The honest answer: fewer than you might expect. ACT Writing requirements peaked around 2015–2016 and have declined significantly since. Many schools that once required Writing have dropped the requirement or made it optional.
How to Check Each School
Don't rely on memory or outdated lists. Policies change year to year. The most reliable method: search "[school name] ACT Writing requirement 2026" or check the admissions testing policy page directly on each college's website. The Common Data Set (Section C) also lists testing requirements.
Schools That Still Require or Recommend Writing
Some highly selective private universities continue to require or strongly recommend ACT Writing. Schools in the University of California system have historically required Writing from ACT takers, though this policy has shifted in recent years — check the UC application FAQ directly. Some scholarship programs and honors colleges have separate Writing requirements even when the main admissions office doesn't.
Schools That Have Dropped Writing Requirements
Most schools in the Big Ten, SEC, and other large conference systems dropped ACT Writing requirements between 2018 and 2023. A majority of liberal arts colleges, regional universities, and test-optional schools no longer require it.
The Safe Approach
If any school on your list requires Writing, you must register for it — you can't add Writing after test day. Check your school list before you register, not after. If even one target school requires Writing, pay the add-on fee and take it. The only cost of taking Writing unnecessarily is $16 and 40 minutes. The cost of missing a requirement at a target school is much higher.
Writing has no effect on your ACT superscore or composite. If you're retaking for a higher composite or to superscore specific sections, you can decide on Writing separately based purely on your school list. For full details on how multiple test attempts interact with scoring, what is act superscore explains how colleges use your best scores across attempts.

Check School Requirements Before You Register
You cannot add Writing after you register — once registration closes, your test format is locked. If you're applying to any school that requires ACT Writing, you must select the Writing option at registration. There's no way to retroactively add Writing to a completed test.
Should You Take ACT Writing?
Most students don't need to. If none of your target schools require or recommend ACT Writing, skipping it saves you $16 at registration, 40 minutes of test time, and a 2-week wait for your essay score to be added to your report.
Take Writing If:
- Any school on your list requires ACT Writing — mandatory, no exceptions
- Any school on your list strongly recommends it for your program (common in honors colleges and some competitive programs)
- You're a strong writer and believe a high Writing score adds something meaningful to your application at selective schools
- You're unsure about your school list and want maximum flexibility
Skip Writing If:
- You've checked every target school and none require it
- You're retaking primarily to improve your composite or superscore — Writing doesn't affect either
- You're applying test-optional and only submitting scores where they help you
- You prefer to invest your prep time exclusively in the four scored sections
The Timeline Factor
Writing scores take longer to process than multiple-choice scores. Your four section scores typically release 2–8 business days after the test. Writing scores add about two weeks to that release timeline. If you're applying Early Decision or Early Action with a tight score deadline, the essay score delay could matter. Factor this into your test calendar — don't take ACT Writing on a date where the essay delay cuts into your application deadline.
ACT registration costs cover the four multiple-choice sections only. Writing is an add-on fee. If you're budgeting your test prep costs carefully, how much does it cost to take the act breaks down all fees including the Writing add-on and how fee waivers work if you qualify.
ACT Writing Tips
If you're taking Writing, here's what actually moves your score.
Start With a Clear Position
Don't spend the first paragraph summarizing the prompt. Readers can see the prompt — they're scoring your response to it. Open by stating your position clearly and directly. You can acknowledge complexity, but don't be so hedged that your thesis disappears. A clear claim in the first paragraph sets up everything that follows.
Engage the Perspectives — Don't Just Pick One
The Ideas and Analysis domain rewards engagement with multiple perspectives, not just the one you agree with. Address at least one perspective that differs from your own. Explain why you find another perspective less convincing, or where it falls short. This is what separates a 6 essay from a 9 — showing you understand the issue from multiple angles, not just your chosen side.
Use Specific Examples, Not Vague Assertions
Weak essays make claims without evidence: "Social media is bad for society." Strong essays support claims with specifics: examples from history, current events, your own experience, or logical reasoning chains. The Development and Support domain explicitly rewards specificity. One well-developed example beats three underdeveloped ones.
Structure Matters, but Rigidity Doesn't
You don't need a five-paragraph essay. What you need is a clear introduction, a logical middle that develops your argument with evidence, and a conclusion that reinforces your position without just restating it. If a four-paragraph or six-paragraph structure serves your argument better, use it. Readers care about logical flow, not paragraph count.
Budget the Last Five Minutes
Leave five minutes at the end to read your essay and fix mechanical errors — agreement errors, missing words, punctuation problems. The Language Use domain is partly about mechanical accuracy. You won't catch every error in five minutes, but fixing the obvious ones keeps your score from being pulled down by simple mistakes that don't reflect your actual writing ability.
Practice Timed Essays Before Test Day
Forty minutes passes faster than you expect. Write at least two or three timed practice essays before the test using real ACT prompts. The goal isn't to memorize arguments — it's to build the pacing instinct so you know how long your introduction takes, when to start the conclusion, and whether you write faster than you think. Knowing that the number of questions across all sections is fixed helps with the overall test rhythm too — for a full breakdown, how many questions are on the ACT covers every section's time and count.
ACT Questions and Answers
About the Author
Attorney & Bar Exam Preparation Specialist
Yale Law SchoolJames R. Hargrove is a practicing attorney and legal educator with a Juris Doctor from Yale Law School and an LLM in Constitutional Law. With over a decade of experience coaching bar exam candidates across multiple jurisdictions, he specializes in MBE strategy, state-specific essay preparation, and multistate performance test techniques.