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Data & Stats

What 100+ Successful YC Applications Have In Common

Patterns from publicly shared accepted YC applications: word counts, structure, the demo video, and the answers that worked.

March 25, 2026 · 7 min · application · patterns · interview

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

Patterns across publicly shared accepted YC applications
PatternFrequencyExample
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.
Source note: Compiled from YC's own 'inside the application' blog posts and founder interviews.

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.

Sources