Slushpile
Submissions

Response times — how long is normal

The single biggest source of anxiety in sending work out is how long everything takes. The answer is: longer than you'd like. Response times vary hugely between magazines and between agents, and the best thing you can do for your mental health is understand the distribution, set reasonable expectations, and resist the urge to nudge early.

Literary magazines: what's normal

Response times for short-fiction, poetry, and essay submissions vary enormously. A rough distribution, based on widely-shared statistics from databases that track these things:

Response times in any given year can be affected by summer slowdowns, staff changes, funding changes, and reading-period windows. A magazine that normally responds in three months can take six in a bad year.

Agents: what's normal

Agents read queries and pages in the margins of their working days. Their clients — signed writers whose manuscripts are going out on submission — always take priority over the slush pile. When you've been waiting three months on a full, the agent probably has other things on their plate that are contractually urgent.

Reading the magazine's stated times

Many magazines post their average response time. The Submission Grinder and Duotrope compile user-reported statistics on average response time per magazine, broken down by acceptance and rejection. A magazine that says "6 weeks" and averages "180 days" in user reports should be planned against the 180-day figure, not the 6-week claim.

When in doubt, treat any magazine's stated response time as a floor, not a mean.

When to nudge

A nudge (also called a "status query") is a polite check-in. Conventions:

A working nudge:

Dear Editors,

I'm writing to check on the status of my short story "The Last Light," submitted on [date] and given submission number [#]. I wanted to confirm it arrived and is still under consideration. Thank you for your time.

Best,
Alex Morgan

Do not nudge a magazine that has explicitly told you not to in their guidelines — some have "please do not inquire about status" rules. Respect that.

When silence is the answer

Many magazines now use "tiered ghosting": they send acceptances and personalized rejections, and simply never respond to the rest. After 150% of average response time plus one polite nudge that is also ignored, treat the submission as rejected. You can formally withdraw if you'd like, but most writers just remove it from the open list and move on.

For agents, the convention is more explicit: many agents' submission pages state that no response within a given window means no. At that point, do not nudge; the agent has declared their policy.

Managing the psychology

Long response times compress badly in memory. A piece that has been out for four months feels, in the moment, like it has been out forever — and every day without a response seems like it must mean something. It doesn't. Most of the time, the silence is just the queue. Editors read in batches, often in evening shifts after full-time day jobs, and the queue moves at the speed it moves.

A few practical habits: