EricGerman
New member
- Joined
- Mar 10, 2026
- Messages
- 3
When I started my PhD, I thought: *"3-4 years, done."* HA. HAHAHA.
Now I'm in year 4 and nowhere near done. I wish someone had given me REALISTIC timelines. So here they are, from talking to actual graduates:
The absolute minimum (if everything is perfect):

The absolute minimum (if everything is perfect):
- Already have data collected
- Write full-time (40+ hours/week)
- Minimal revisions
- 6-9 months for writing

- 1-2 years from proposal to defense
- Includes research, writing, revisions
- Usually 12-18 months active writing

- Often longer—2-3 years
- Archival research, language learning, theory digestion
- 18-30 months common

- 3-5 years
- Depends on hours
- Most common for people with jobs

- Field (sciences often faster than humanities)
- Data collection (existing data vs. new experiments vs. archives)
- Writing speed (some people are fast, some slow)
- Advisor responsiveness (HUGE factor!)
- Life (kids, health, money, sanity)
- First draft takes longer than you think. Double your estimate. Then double again.
- Revisions take months. Not weeks. Months.
- Committee feedback takes weeks each round. They're busy. You wait.
- Formatting and final checks take time. More than you'd believe.
- Year 1-2: coursework, reading, flailing
- Year 3: proposal, ethics approval, data collection
- Year 4: analysis, writing first draft (current hell)
- Year 5: revisions, defense, freedom (hopefully)
