Match Day has passed.
If you're reading this because you didn't match — you're in the right place. SOAP is open right now and closes March 21. What you do in the next 96 hours matters more than anything else. This is not the time to process. It's the time to move. And yet the silence of this waiting period has a way of filling itself with noise. The second-guessing. The mental replay of every interview. The question that has been sitting at the back of your mind for weeks now, the one you may not have said out loud to anyone: what if I don't match?
If that is where you are right now, this is for you. Not to offer reassurance that may not be warranted. But to help you replace anxiety with clarity, and to ensure that whatever happens on March 16, you are not caught without a plan.
Anxiety Is Information. Use It.
Almost every applicant experiences some version of this in late February. Including applicants who go on to match at their first-choice program.
The anxiety itself is not a signal that something is wrong. It is a signal that this matters, which it should. What separates applicants in this window is not who feels worried and who does not. It is what they do with that feeling.
The ones who channel it into preparation come out ahead. The ones who sit with it, hoping March 16 delivers good news, end up either relieved or blindsided. Neither is a strategy.
So the first and most important thing you can do right now is this: name the specific concern underneath the worry.
Most applicants who feel genuine anxiety about matching are not imagining things. There is usually something real underneath it. A Step score that felt borderline for their chosen specialty. An interview season that was shorter than expected. A visa concern that was never fully resolved. A personal statement that did not quite capture their trajectory. Naming it is not pessimism. It is the beginning of doing something about it.
Understand SOAP Before You Need It
The Supplemental Offer and Acceptance Program opens the same morning Match results are released, on March 16.
It moves fast. Programs review applications and extend interview invitations within hours. Decisions are made the same day. It is not a second Match and it does not operate like one. It is a real-time, relationship-dependent process that rewards preparation and penalizes applicants who encounter it for the first time on Match Day morning. The applicants who navigate SOAP successfully are not always the strongest on paper. They are the most prepared. They have already identified which programs to target, how to position themselves, and how to answer the question every program will ask: why are you in SOAP, and what makes you the right fit for us now?
You have three weeks to think through all of that. Most applicants do not use them. That is an advantage available to you right now, at no cost, that requires nothing except intentionality.
This is not about accepting that you will not match. It is about being the kind of applicant who has a real plan for every outcome. There is a significant difference between the two.
What to Do Between Now and March 16
Keep your personal statement accessible and think through how you would revise it quickly if your situation changed. Not a complete rewrite. Just know which parts would need to shift and in what direction.
Gather your letter of recommendation writers' contact information. In SOAP, response time is competitive. Knowing you can reach your writers within an hour is something that takes five minutes to organize now and becomes genuinely difficult to manage at 8am on Match Day. Research which specialties historically have positions available in SOAP. Internal Medicine, Family Medicine, Psychiatry, and Pathology tend to carry the most. If your target specialty is highly competitive and this is not your first application cycle, understanding your options is not conceding defeat. It is being prepared. Finally, speak with someone who actually knows this process. Not a friend or family member who is trying to be supportive, but an advisor who has sat with applicants through this exact moment and can give you an honest read on where you stand and what your options realistically look like.
The Reality We Have Seen, Year After Year
Some applicants reading this will match on March 16. Some will not.
We have worked with both, and we have watched what happens in the weeks and months that follow. The applicants who do not match and who eventually find their way into residency are not the ones who had the cleanest profiles or the highest scores. They are the ones who treated an unmatched result as a problem to be solved rather than a verdict on their ability as a physician. They identified what their application was missing. They acquired the clinical experience that programs needed to see. They repaired the elements of their profile that were holding them back. They returned the following cycle with a different strategy, and it worked. Going unmatched is not a permanent outcome. It is not random. There are specific, identifiable reasons why applications do not match, and almost all of them are addressable. The only question is whether you address them with clarity and intention, or whether you allow the experience to become the end of the story.
If You Want an Honest Conversation Before March 16
Our team is available for applicants who want a direct, no-pressure conversation about where their application stands and what their options look like going into Match Week.
Not a sales call. A real conversation with advisors who have guided physicians through this process many times and who can help you think clearly about what the next three weeks, and whatever comes after them, should look like for you specifically.