Round 1: Structure and strategy
We diagnose narrative gaps, improve your central theme, and align your essay with admissions expectations.
Application Support | Personal statement editing for pre-med students applying this cycle
Work with medical students and physicians who understand what admissions committees look for. You get three full rounds of structured edits, clear next steps, and a 72-hour turnaround per round.
Most applicants are forced to choose between low-quality generic feedback and premium editing that is often $800-$1,000 for a single round.
Med-RAMP was built around a different standard: rigorous, human mentorship should be accessible to strong applicants, not just applicants with large consulting budgets.
We diagnose narrative gaps, improve your central theme, and align your essay with admissions expectations.
We strengthen your clinical and service reflections so your motivations read as specific, mature, and credible.
We tighten language line by line for precision, flow, and readability while preserving your tone.
Each pass has a specific job, so your personal statement improves in layers instead of random edits.
Send your current version, even if it feels rough. Early drafts often improve the most.
You receive actionable edits and clear priorities so you know exactly what to revise first.
Use the full three-round cycle to transform your narrative before primary and secondary deadlines.
Our mentorship and research programming is free. Paid editing helps sustain that mission while compensating medical student editors fairly.
For context, many personal statement services still charge $800-$1,000 for one round.
| Plan | Price |
|---|---|
| Public | $199 |
| Med-RAMP Members | $99 |
Pre-med students who want expert guidance and are ready to revise intentionally across three rounds.
Each round returns within 72 hours so you can keep momentum while balancing coursework, clinical hours, and secondaries.
No. We start with narrative strategy, then reflection depth, then line-level polish. Grammar is included, but not the whole service.
Yes. Most applicants spread rounds across drafting, finalizing primaries, and strengthening secondaries.
If you are ready for expert feedback that is rigorous, clear, and mission-driven, start now and use all three rounds strategically.