Sundance is one of the highest-volume tier 1 festivals in the world, fielding roughly 14,000 to 15,000 submissions a year against a slate of around 90 features and a few dozen shorts. The reported 2026 figures were about 90 feature films and seven episodic projects from 16,201 total submissions, including 4,255 feature-length films, plus 54 short films from 11,480 short-film submissions, but these counts move every cycle, so check Sundance's published numbers for the current year. The headline odds are brutal, but the rate is misleading if you ignore eligibility, section fit, premiere status, format, and runtime.
If your film is genuinely eligible and genuinely fits a Sundance section, the real odds are better than the headline number suggests.
Eligibility, the part that disqualifies most submissions
Premiere requirements differ by section. The two US competitive sections (US Dramatic, US Documentary) require world premiere status: the screening must be the very first official public screening of the film anywhere on Earth. The two World Cinema sections (World Cinema Dramatic, World Cinema Documentary) require only an international premiere, the first screening outside the country of origin, which means a prior domestic screening in your home country does not disqualify a World Cinema submission. Sundance spells out exactly what counts as a prior screening, so check its own eligibility rules before assuming you still qualify.
Premieres section can take international premieres for selected international titles. NEXT inherits its category bar, and Midnight has more flexible premiere rules. Shorts are different again: under Sundance's rules a short does not need to retain any premiere status at all, so it may have screened, streamed, or broadcast anywhere, including online.
For the competition sections, the rules set a prior-exhibition cutoff, which for the 2026 festival was February 2, 2026. If a competition-section film has played another festival or streamed online before that cutoff, it is almost certainly out of the main competition. Check the current cycle's exact cutoff date and triple-check it before paying the fee.
Submission windows and fees
Submissions open late July or early August. Feature deadlines are typically:
- Early deadline: mid-August, around $80 for features depending on category
- Regular deadline: mid-September, around $100
- Late deadline: late September, rising to around $125
Shorts run a parallel timeline with fees roughly in the $55 to $95 band. These figures track the most recently published cycle and change year to year, so confirm the current fees on FilmFreeway before you submit. Decisions land in the first week of December. The festival runs in late January in Park City, Utah.
Captions are part of the professional package
Check the current Sundance submission FAQ before uploading. Sundance's festival accessibility materials show a strong captioning baseline for exhibition, and filmmakers should expect to supply accessible versions where the submission or delivery process asks for them. SDH means subtitles for the deaf and hard of hearing: dialogue plus speaker IDs plus non-verbal cues (music, door slams, off-screen sounds).
Even when a portal does not reject an upload on the spot, an uncaptained screener can create avoidable delivery and access problems. Read the current rules before paying the fee.
What programmers have said publicly
Sundance's programming team has done multiple public interviews about how they select. Common themes:
- Story over form. Slick packaging without a strong story underneath gets discarded. They want films that have a clear point of view.
- Emerging voices welcome. First-time directors do get in. The programming team actively looks for new voices and does not weight industry connections.
- The screener wins the slot. Paperwork is separated from the film at screening time. Elaborate covers, custom DVDs, gift packages do not influence the watch.
- Originality is the differentiator. The 90th film in a hot genre needs to do something the first 89 did not.
- No external lobbying. Letters of support from filmmakers, agents, sales reps do not move the needle.
The sections, briefly
- US Dramatic / US Documentary Competition: around a dozen-plus films each, world premiere required, US-produced or US-helmed
- World Cinema Dramatic / Documentary Competition: around a dozen films each, international premiere required (a prior domestic screening is allowed)
- NEXT: formally bold, lower budget, often first features. Inherits the premiere bar of its category.
- Premieres: high-profile fiction with stars, accepts some international premieres
- Midnight: genre, horror, cult cinema
- Shorts: seven sections including animation, narrative, documentary, midnight, experimental. No premiere status is required.
One Sundance-specific definition catches people out: a short is a film under 50 minutes, and a feature is 50 minutes or longer. That is not the 40-minute line used at TIFF and for the Oscars, so do not assume your runtime category carries over from another festival.
Submission via FilmFreeway
Sundance accepts submissions through FilmFreeway. You upload the screener, write your synopsis and director's statement, attach the EPK, pay the fee, hit submit. The submission itself is straightforward. The decisions you make before submitting (which section, which premiere status, which cut to send) are the parts that decide whether the film gets watched.
Frequently asked questions
How hard is it to get into Sundance?
Sundance is one of the highest-volume tier 1 festivals in the world, fielding roughly 14,000 to 15,000 submissions a year against a slate of around 90 features and a few dozen shorts. The reported 2026 cycle drew 16,201 total submissions against about 90 feature films and 54 short films. The headline odds are brutal, but they are misleading if you ignore eligibility, section fit, premiere status, format, and runtime. A film that is genuinely eligible and genuinely fits a Sundance section has better real odds than the raw number suggests.
Does Sundance require a world premiere?
It depends on the section. The two US competitive sections, US Dramatic and US Documentary, require world premiere status, meaning the screening must be the very first official public screening of the film anywhere. The two World Cinema sections require only an international premiere, so a prior domestic screening in your home country does not disqualify you. Shorts do not need to retain any premiere status at all, and Premieres and Midnight have more flexible rules.
How much does it cost to submit to Sundance?
Feature fees track the published cycle and rise as deadlines pass, running roughly from around $80 at the early deadline to around $125 at the late deadline depending on category. Shorts run a parallel timeline with fees roughly in the $55 to $95 band. These figures change year to year, so confirm the current fees on FilmFreeway before you submit.
When is the Sundance submission deadline?
Submissions open in late July or early August. Feature deadlines are typically mid-August for the early deadline, mid-September for the regular deadline, and late September for the late deadline, with shorts on a parallel timeline. Decisions land in the first week of December, and the festival runs in late January in Park City, Utah. Dates move each cycle, so check the official site for the current year.
RelatedCheck your Sundance fit before you pay the fee
Circkit scores festival fit against your project profile, premiere status, and strategy goals, so Sundance-level submissions are made deliberately.