Slushpile
Submissions

Simultaneous submissions

A simultaneous submission (sim-sub) is the same piece sent to multiple magazines at the same time. For short fiction, poetry, and essays, sim-subs are now the norm — response times are long enough that single-market submission would keep a piece tied up for a year or more. But conventions still vary by magazine, and the etiquette matters.

Why sim-subs exist

Magazine response times for short work commonly run three to nine months, and sometimes longer. Submitting a piece to one magazine at a time means that over the course of a single year, a piece is out to maybe two magazines, total. Most writers have many more target magazines than that for any given piece. Sim-subs let you submit to a dozen or more simultaneously, and dramatically increase the chance of any given piece finding a home.

Magazines have, broadly, accepted this. The vast majority of literary magazines allow sim-subs explicitly in their guidelines, on condition that you notify them immediately if the piece is accepted elsewhere.

What to look for in the guidelines

Always read the magazine's submission guidelines before sending. Four possible statements you will encounter:

  1. "Simultaneous submissions welcome, please notify us immediately if accepted elsewhere." Standard. Most magazines. Go ahead.
  2. "We accept simultaneous submissions, but please note this in your cover letter." Same as above, with a small disclosure obligation. Add a line to the cover letter.
  3. "No simultaneous submissions." The piece must be exclusively with them while under consideration. Some prestigious magazines still require this. Respect it, or do not submit.
  4. "Please wait for a decision before submitting the same piece elsewhere." Same as "no sim-subs" with a kinder phrasing.

When the guidelines are silent, assume sim-subs are acceptable and disclose them in the cover letter. When the guidelines explicitly forbid sim-subs, honor that. Breaking a no-sim-sub policy is noticed and remembered.

How many is too many

There is no formal rule. In practice, sending a single piece to 25–40 magazines simultaneously is common and reasonable. Beyond that, you start to lose track of where the piece is out, which is how accidental etiquette failures happen. Send in batches of ten to twenty, keep a record (the submission tracker is designed for exactly this), and add new markets as rejections come in.

One caveat: if a magazine has an especially short reading period or charges a reading fee, be thoughtful about including them in a large sim-sub batch. Their return rate for fee-paid submissions is an economic question, and placing the same piece in dozens of paid submissions at once is not a great use of your money.

Notifying on acceptance

When a piece is accepted by one magazine, you need to withdraw it from every other magazine you sent it to — immediately, the same day if possible. This is the single most important etiquette rule in sim-subs. Two ways to do this depending on the submission portal:

See withdrawal etiquette for templates and more detail.

What counts as accepted "elsewhere"

A formal acceptance email or contract, with intent to publish. A "we like this and want to hold it for consideration" note is not an acceptance. A personal rejection with a request to see the piece again after revision is not an acceptance. An editor's expression of interest without an offer is not an acceptance. Don't withdraw from other magazines until you actually have the offer in hand — and if you're unsure, ask the editor whether their note constitutes an acceptance.

Special cases

What happens if you break the etiquette

Two common failures:

The practical system

Keep one record — spreadsheet, tracker tool, whatever — of what you have where, when you sent it, and the magazine's status. When an acceptance arrives, your job is straightforward: reply to the accepting editor, withdraw from every other market that has the same piece, update your record, and move on.