Requesting dental school letters of recommendation can be one of the more daunting elements of the dental school application process. While the majority of the AADSAS application depends on you as the applicant (your DAT score, GPA, and personal statement), letters of recommendation come from someone else (a professor, employer, mentor, or dentist), and you never know what they’ll say.
We’ve put together this guide with answers to common questions about dental school letters of recommendation.
Click on any question below to jump directly to it:
The AADSAS application allows a maximum of four evaluations. In recent years, individual letters of recommendation and committee/composite letters were counted as single letters. However, as of the 2023-2024 application cycle, a committee or composite letter will count as three letters, meaning that applicants can only submit one additional dental school letter of recommendation alongside them.
Not all colleges and universities offer a committee letter as an option to undergraduate students. If your school does have this option, we recommend that you get a committee letter so that no one wonders if you’re avoiding the committee.
Some dental schools will accept more letters of recommendation, but your recommender must send them directly to that program as four is the maximum allowed through AADSAS.
Dental schools typically only require three letters of recommendation, but we recommend submitting all four letters—or one committee letter along with at least one individual evaluation—in order to meet every school’s individual requirements (explained below).
Broadly, we suggest getting four letters of recommendation—two from science professors whose class you took for a grade, one from a dentist you’ve shadowed, and a fourth from an employer or another (non-science or science) professor.
Remember that getting a strong letter with specific information regarding your strengths and qualifications from someone who knows you well is far more meaningful than getting a “form letter” with little information about you from someone with impressive academic credentials or a noteworthy job title.
You can ask for a letter over email or in-person. Whenever possible, we recommend an in-person discussion.
Schedule a meeting with your recommender and let them know you want to discuss your career goal of becoming a dentist and would appreciate their advice and perspective on the process of applying to dental schools.
When meeting with a potential recommender, remember these four keys:
If you’re asking someone over email, here’s a sample script:
Dear Professor Webb,
I hope this note finds you well. How has your course been this semester? I still think about your class, especially the final project we did on public health. I don’t know if you remember, but I studied the importance of clean water supply in urban environments. You provided some incredibly important input into research methods as I pursued the project and helped me understand how healthcare practitioners are the custodians of the public’s health in addition to caring for their patient population. I’m applying to dental school now, and am especially interested in how dentistry plays into public health.
I was reaching out to ask if you would be able to write a strong letter of recommendation for me as I apply to dental school. I think you would be able to speak to my academic enthusiasm and my intellectual areas of interest. The deadline is late May/early June.
Thank you so much for considering. I’m very grateful.
No, you do not need to get an A in a course to ask the professor for a recommendation, but you should feel that you performed well and that the professor will be able to sing your praises. We typically recommend you have a B or above in courses from professors providing a recommendation.
Keep in mind that you might get a strong recommendation from a professor in whose course you initially struggled but later improved. That professor could speak to your resilience and drive.
The ADEA AADSAS application opens in May each year and can usually be submitted at the end of the month or in early June. The more time you provide a recommender, the more likely they are to write a strong and detailed letter of recommendation.
We recommend asking recommenders at least three months in advance of your desired submission date, which would be no later than mid-March for submission in mid-June.
All letters of recommendation through the ADEA AADSAS application are submitted electronically. Here’s how the process goes:
The earliest you can send a request for a letter of recommendation through the ADEA AADSAS application system is when the application opens in May. We recommend that you send the request as early as possible, preferably before June, to provide more time to your recommenders to submit their letter of recommendation.
According to ADEA your application will be considered “complete” and placed in line to be verified after finalizing the following:
In other words, you can submit your application and have it marked complete before your letters of recommendation are in. However, most dental schools won’t even begin considering your application if they see that this is the case.
No, ADEA AADSAS does not store recommendation letters from one cycle to another.
Yes, while some information can be carried over from your previous application, letters of recommendation need to be resubmitted and it is in your best interest to get updated letters anyway.
While you do have the option, you should always waive the right to view your evaluations as dental schools will view your letters as a more honest and accurate representation of you as an applicant.
You may not edit or delete your letters of recommendation after submitting your AADSAS application. In fact, be sure the evaluators you choose are the ones that can best speak to your abilities as once an evaluator’s reference is received, they cannot be removed.
No, your letters of recommendation should not be addressed to specific dental schools. Rather, they should be written in a way that allows them to be sent to any dental school.
After entering the recommender’s name and email address into your application, the recommender will receive an email from ADEA AADSAS with detailed instructions on how to complete the evaluation.
We recommend sending three emails, which serve both to thank your recommender and prod them along.
Dr. Shirag Shemmassian is the Founder of Shemmassian Academic Consulting and one of the world's foremost experts on dental school admissions. For nearly 20 years, he and his team have helped thousands of students get into dental school using his exclusive approach.