At some point in the college search, every parent asks the same question. “How many colleges are we actually supposed to visit?”
The short answer: not 20. But also, not 2.
The goal of college visits isn’t to see every possible option. It’s to gather enough real-world information so your teen can say, “Yes, I could live here,” or “Absolutely not, and thank you for showing me why.”
The Magic Range: 6–10 Colleges (Total)
For most families, six to ten college visits total is the sweet spot. That range gives your teen:
- Enough variety to notice real differences
- Enough repetition to identify preferences
- Enough sanity left to remember which campus was which
Anything beyond that starts to blur together. I know because at this point I’ve had done this with all three of my kids.
Why this range works
- Fewer than six visits often doesn’t provide enough comparison, unless they know they are staying in state. The less is probably fine. My oldest son knew he didn’t want to leave the state of Oregon where we lived at the time. There’s only two main state schools there, so it was basically which one.
- More than ten leads to visit fatigue, crankiness, and bad decisions.
- Memory and attention drop fast after campus number seven or eight. If you are doing student athlete visits, the number of visits can rapidly add up, especially since you often need to make a regular visit to learn about the school when the athlete visit is all about the sports program.
If your teen can’t remember something basic like which school had the good dining hall, you’ve gone too far

Quality Beats Quantity (Every Single Time)
Three thoughtful, intentional visits beat ten rushed ones where everyone is tired, hungry, and annoyed by the tour guide.
A good visit means:
- You did some research beforehand
- Your teen asked questions
- You explored beyond the official tour
- You talked about it afterward
A bad visit means:
- You checked a box
- Everyone just followed the group
- No one remembers anything
Parent takeaway:
Don’t count visits. Count clarity.
How the Number of Visits Changes by Stage
Your teen’s college list evolves and so should your visit strategy.
Early Exploration (3–4 Colleges)
This stage is about contrast, not commitment.
Visit:
- A large school and a small school: This is when your teen learns they absolutely do (or do not) want 40,000 classmates.
- Urban and rural
- Public and private
These visits help your teen discover what they don’t want—which is just as valuable as finding what they do. Do yourself a favor and do not waste time visiting any that are financially unfeasible.
Active Search (4–6 Colleges)
Now you’re visiting schools your teen could realistically apply to, afford, and attend.
These visits should answer:
- Can I see myself here?
- Do I like the students?
- Does the academic vibe fit me?
This is the heart of the process.

Final Decision Stage (2–3 Colleges)
Once acceptances arrive, visits become confirmation, not exploration.
Revisiting top choices helps:
- Resolve indecision
- Compare similar schools
- Evaluate details that matter long-term
Admitted student days often tip the scale here. My daughter completely changed her mind during an admitted student day at UT Austin, where they really immerse you in what to expect. Because of this, I highly recommend attending these when possible.
Parent takeaway:
If your teen is torn, a second visit is often worth more than hours of debate.
| Stage | Number of Visits | Purpose |
| Early Exploration | 3-4 colleges | Visit different types of schools (large vs small, urban vs rural) to determine preferences |
| Active Search | 4-6 colleges | Visit the schools your teen is seriously considering for applications |
| Final Decision | 2-3 colleges | Revisit top choices after acceptances arrive to make final enrollment decision |
When Fewer Visits Are Actually Fine
Not every family can (or should) visit ten campuses.
Fewer visits work if:
- Geography limits travel
- Budget matters (and it does)
- Your teen is highly focused on a specific type of school
Virtual tours, student interviews, and online info can eliminate schools before you ever book a flight.
You are not failing your child if you don’t physically visit every school on their list.
Signs You’re Visiting Too Many Colleges
Burnout leads to bad decisions. Pause when energy drops. Here’s how you know it’s time to stop scheduling:
- Every campus feels the same
- Your teen seems disengaged or irritated
- They say things like “I don’t care anymore”
- You’re arguing over lunch choices instead of academics
- No one can remember school names without checking notes
College visits are mentally exhausting—even for motivated teens.
The Bottom Line (What Parents Actually Need to Hear)
There is no magic number that guarantees the “right” choice.
What matters is that your teen:
- Sees enough campuses to understand themselves
- Feels confident ruling schools out
- Has a short list they feel good about
Most students could thrive at more than one school. Visits aren’t about finding the one. They’re about narrowing the field until the decision feels manageable instead of overwhelming.
And if you do this right, your teen walks away saying:
“I know what I’m looking for now.”
That’s the win.





