December vs. January Querying: The Great Debate
Two Schools of Thought From Our Panel With agent Nour Sallam, Caldwell Literary
(Learn more about the panel’s general takeaways here!)
Camp “Just Get in Line”
- Send whenever your query is ready
- Don’t overthink the timing
- Set realistic expectations for response times
- Remember: agents read queries year-round
Nour’s perspective: “I won’t necessarily get back to a query faster if it was sent to me in January than if it was sent to me in December. I’m really trying to go through things as quickly as I can always.”
Camp “Wait Until January”
- Queries in inboxes over holidays accrue “wait time” without interest
- Agents calculate: time in inbox + no other offers = potential concerns
- Unlikely to hear back during December anyway
- January brings refreshed agents with clearer goals
Jessica’s perspective: “That’s going to add weeks to the amount of time that it’s been in my inbox, and probably you’re not getting interest on it in that time.”
Why January Is Special
“The Happiest Month in Publishing”
- Agents return from break refreshed
- They have bandwidth for bigger, strategic thoughts
- Clearer goals for their lists in the new year
- It’s a “hungry” and “aligned” time
Agent “Yes Mode” When agents see something great, they’re more likely to:
- Expect something great in the next query
- See greatness due to confirmation bias
- Request more manuscripts that day
This effect is especially strong in January when agents return excited and energized.
December Realities
Potential Benefits:
- Agents clearing inboxes to zero = fast yes/no decisions
- Less competition (some writers wait)
- Get in the queue early
Potential Drawbacks:
- Longer perceived wait time
- Family time + client obligations reduce agent bandwidth
- Risk of Christmas Day rejection (yes, it happens)
- Darker season = harder emotionally
The Real Answer: Know Yourself
Choose December if:
- Your query is truly ready NOW
- You can handle potentially longer wait times
- You want a fast yes/no decision
- You’re emotionally prepared for holiday rejections
Choose January if:
- You’ll obsess over edits during December
- You want agents at their most refreshed
- You prefer higher competition but more aligned timing
- You’d rather avoid holiday emotional rollercoasters
Jessica’s Advice: “If you know yourself and you know you’re gonna be like, ‘Ugh, that comma, I really regret that comma,’ spend December editing. No one’s gonna say, ‘Oh no, it’s January. How could you.'”
Key Considerations
What Agents Consider:
- How long has this been in my inbox?
- Has anyone else made an offer?
- What’s my bandwidth right now?
- What are my current list goals?
What You Should Consider:
- Is my query truly ready?
- Can I handle the emotional weight of waiting?
- What’s my submission strategy (10 at a time, targeted, etc.)?
- Am I prepared for whatever timeline unfolds?
Bottom Line
There’s no objectively “wrong” time to query. Both December and January have advantages. The best choice depends on:
- Your query’s readiness
- Your emotional bandwidth
- Your personal timeline
- Your ability to manage expectations
Remember: Average submission quality in January tends to be higher, but agents are also more excited and ready to say yes. Choose the timing that serves both your manuscript and your mental health.
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