· · ·

60 Challenging Argumentative Essay Topics

Here’s something I’ve noticed again and again in my years of working with students: when a writing topic doesn’t excite them, the essay shows it. The argument feels hollow. The…

Here’s something I’ve noticed again and again in my years of working with students: when a writing topic doesn’t excite them, the essay shows it. The argument feels hollow. The evidence feels forced. The conclusion barely lands. But give a student a topic they actually care about — a topic that makes them lean forward in their seat — and something shifts. Suddenly they want to make their case. They want to win the argument. That’s when real writing happens.

This is a curated list of 60 argumentative essay topics, organized into two levels of difficulty. They were designed specifically for highly performing students in grades 5 through 12 who are ready to move beyond the standard, predictable prompts and engage with ideas that have genuine weight.

Level 1 topics are accessible and grounded in everyday life — school policies, social media, culture, and current debates. They’re ideal for students who are building their skills in evidence-gathering, logical reasoning, and structuring a clear argument. These aren’t easy topics. They’re just the right kind of challenging: concrete enough to research, open-ended enough to argue.

Level 2 topics are a different kind of challenge entirely. They require students to engage with ethics, philosophy, law, and global systems — the kind of “gray area” debates where there is no clean answer and where the strength of your argument depends entirely on how well you think, how carefully you read, and how precisely you write. These prompts are well-suited for advanced middle schoolers, high schoolers, and any student who’s ready to work at a college-prep level.

A note on how to use this list: don’t just pick a topic at random and start writing. Read through the prompts, notice which ones make you want to immediately take a side, and start there. The best argumentative essays come from writers who genuinely believe what they’re arguing — and who are willing to do the work of proving it.

Level 1: Accessible & Relatable

Level 2: Complex & Abstract

Whether your student is just learning to build a structured argument or is already wrestling with ethical philosophy and global systems, there’s a prompt on this list that will meet them where they are — and push them further. Save this list, share it with your student, and let them pick the fight they most want to win.