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Adverse

Adverse: !TEST! !TEST! 2025-04-08 08:50:20

Health and Medicine

Match Day is March 21

Carolina medical students will celebrate in Roper Hall as they learn their residency placements after graduation.

A matching Carolina medical student poses with her family at the 2024 School of Medicine Match Day event.
On Match Day, the UNC School of Medicine will celebrate its nearly 200 students ready to take the next step in their careers. (Jon Gardiner/UNC-Chapel Hill)

Every year, medical students across the country anticipate Match Day as the start of their careers after an arduous journey through medical school. On March 21, nearly 200 students ready to graduate from the UNC School of Medicine will learn where they will be placed for residency for the next several years.

Dr. Alice Chuang, the associate dean for student affairs in the UNC School of Medicine, talks about what Match Day means to these students and how the process connects programs from across the country with Carolina students.

What is Match Day?

It is the day that the vast majority of medical students across the country find out where they will be continuing their clinical training, or residency, after graduation. Not only do all students find out on the same day, they find out at the same time! There are some situations that require an early match. The military has its own match with earlier deadlines, so military students secure a position and find out earlier. Additionally, students who are interested in ophthalmology or urology apply through a different process and also find out earlier.

How does the match process work?

Before the match, students apply to residency programs of interest, programs review applications and then interview the students who would make promising residents in their program. After the interview season is over, students submit a list of programs where they would like to pursue residency training in order of preference. Simultaneously, programs submit a list of the applicants they interviewed whom they would like to recruit to their program in order of preference. The match process is a computerized algorithm that matches each applicant to one program based on the lists submitted.

How do students decide which programs to apply to?

Students first decide what specialty they are interested in. Then they research the various programs that offer training in that specialty. At Carolina, we have a system of support for career advising. Each student enters a college in the medical school during orientation and is assigned an adviser who meets with them regularly throughout their medical school career. Students who travel to one of our other campuses and sites in Asheville, Charlotte, Greensboro, Raleigh or Wilmington for their clinical training have access to an on-site campus adviser who can also provide wisdom and insight. Finally, once they have decided on a specialty, they are assigned a specialty-specific adviser who can help them think about what programs would be the best fit for their professional goals. Throughout their time at Carolina starting in their first year, we host information sessions, small group sessions, office hours and more to help them with this process.

Match Day 2025

Read stories about Carolina students preparing for medical careers and learn more about Match Day, a celebratory event in which Tar Heels find out where they’ll continue to research, serve and lead others.

What does Match Day look like at Carolina?

Match Day is a huge in-person event. Students, administrators, family members and faculty gather together on Match Day. We have a countdown, and students open their envelopes at the same time. It’s super exciting!  Afterwards we will reveal the programs which the students in the class matched using a PowerPoint for all to see and celebrate. It is rowdy and joyful. There is laughter and some tears, and it is a very emotional day for everyone. In 2025, we will be having our match celebration in Roper Hall.

What will students accomplish in their matched programs?

Students will continue their medical training. They will, of course, have their medical degrees, but as you can imagine, they still have a lot to learn. While medical school curricula are undifferentiated, residency curricula are particular to the knowledge and skills needed to practice successfully in a specific specialty field of medicine. Residency training length and intensity differ based on the specialty. At the end of residency, the goal is to pass specialty-specific certification exams.

Editor’s Note: This story has been updated from previous years.