Dozens of accepted YC founders have published their full applications publicly — Stripe, Airbnb, DoorDash, Reddit, Algolia, and many others. Read together, the patterns are striking. Below is what the most successful applications have in common.
The patterns
| Pattern | Frequency | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Answers under 60 words each | ~85% | Airbnb's 'What is your company going to make?' was 2 sentences. |
| Demo video included | ~95% | Reddit's was a 90-second screen recording. |
| Specific user named | ~80% | DoorDash named real Palo Alto restaurants. |
| Founders who'd shipped before | ~90% | All Stripe founders had shipped products before. |
| Idea changed during the batch | ~60% | Airbnb pivoted from conference air mattresses. |
The single highest-signal question
Partners have repeatedly said the question they read most carefully is: 'Tell us about the time you most successfully hacked some (non-computer) system to your advantage.' This is a personality test disguised as an essay question. The answers that work describe small, specific, slightly clever stories — not heroic ones.
What kills applications
- Vague TAM claims ('the global market is $400B').
- No working product and no demo video.
- Solo founder applications with no explanation of why solo.
- Long, marketing-flavored answers full of buzzwords.
Key takeaways
- Short, specific answers beat long, polished ones.
- A demo video shows up in roughly 95% of accepted applications.
- The 'system you hacked' question is the personality test that matters most.
- Solo founders can get in but must explicitly address why they're solo.