Receiving a rejection letter from a university you had your heart set on attending can feel devastating, but it might not be the end of the road.
An underutilized admissions strategy may help you get a second chance at getting accepted and could save you money to boot. The idea is simple: Attend a community college first — ideally one affiliated with your four-year college of choice — and then reapply as a transfer student. While transferring colleges is a common move, it’s used less frequently as a strategy to gain access to some of the country’s most selective colleges.
“The transfer admission process can be a powerful opportunity for students,” says Han Mi Yoon-Wu, executive director of undergraduate admissions at the University of California system.
Flagship public universities like the UC campuses are often very welcoming to the transfer strategy, according to Lynn Pasquerella, president of the nonprofit American Association of Colleges and Universities.The University of California, Los Angeles, for example, admitted roughly 23% of transfer students compared to less than 8% of first-year applicants for the 2024-2025 academic year, according to admissions data reported in the school’s Common Data Set. At the University of Michigan, 35% of transfer students were accepted, more than double the rate of first-year applicants. Those schools also happen to be among the highest-rated universities by Money this year.
While favorable transfer rates are more common among major public schools, even some selective private colleges are likelier to accept transfer students. Money analyzed acceptance rates for 30 popular colleges, based on the number of applications received each year, pulling out a sample of public and private institutions across the U.S. At 22 of them, transfer students have a better shot at getting admitted than first-year applicants.
|
Location |
First-year acceptance rate |
Transfer-student acceptance rate |
|
|---|---|---|---|
|
Boston University |
Boston |
11.1% |
34.6% |
|
Brown University |
Providence, Rhode Island |
5.4% |
7.2% |
|
Columbia University |
New York City |
3.9% |
9% |
|
Cornell University |
Ithaca, New York |
8.4% |
9.3% |
|
Dartmouth College |
Hanover, New Hampshire |
5.4% |
6.7% |
|
Florida International University |
Miami, Florida |
54.7% |
74.2% |
|
Georgia Institute of Technology |
Atlanta, Georgia |
14.1% |
20.7% |
|
Harvard University |
Cambridge, Massachusetts |
3.6% |
0.7% |
|
Massachusetts Institute of Technology |
Cambridge, Massachusetts |
4.6% |
2.4% |
|
New York University |
New York City |
9.2% |
22.1% |
|
Northwestern University |
Evanston, Illinois |
7.7% |
12% |
|
Penn State University Park |
University Park, Pennsylvania |
10.4% |
69.8% |
|
Princeton University |
Princeton, New Jersey |
4.6% |
1.9% |
|
Rutgers University |
New Brunswick, New Jersey |
65.4% |
57.6% |
|
Stanford University |
Stanford, California |
3.6% |
1.6% |
|
Tulane University |
New Orleans, Louisiana |
14% |
60.1% |
|
UC Berkeley |
Berkeley, California |
11% |
25.5% |
|
UC San Diego |
San Diego, California |
26.8% |
54.6% |
|
UCLA |
Los Angeles, California |
9.2% |
22.7% |
|
UNC Chapel Hill |
Chapel Hill, North Carolina |
15.3% |
36.5% |
|
University of Central Florida |
Orlando, Florida |
44.7% |
67.4% |
|
University of Florida |
Gainesville, Florida |
24.2% |
44.9% |
|
University of Michigan |
Ann Arbor, Michigan |
15.6% |
34.9% |
|
University of Notre Dame |
Notre Dame, Indiana |
11.3% |
25.1% |
|
University of Pennsylvania |
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania |
5.4% |
3.2% |
|
University of South Florida |
Tampa, Florida |
43.2% |
57.3% |
|
University of Texas |
Austin, Texas |
26.6% |
22.5% |
|
University of Southern California |
Los Angeles, California |
9.8% |
21.6% |
|
Vanderbilt University |
Nashville, Tennessee |
5.9% |
21.8% |
|
Yale University |
New Haven, Connecticut |
3.7% |
1.5% |
As expected, acceptance rates were almost always more favorable for transfer students heading to large public universities, but several notable private institutions stood out. Columbia University, Brown University, New York University, and Vanderbilt University all boast higher acceptance rates for transfer students.
Of course, that’s not always the case. First-year applicants who didn’t get into Harvard, for instance, may technically be able to get another shot by applying as a transfer student, but given the school accepts less than 1% of transfer applicants, their chances are even slimmer the second time around.
Other prestigious universities, such as Yale and Princeton, only admit a handful of transfer students each semester, Pasquerella notes, and they are usually focused on specific groups such as veterans or non-traditional students.
For these ultra-selective schools, “it’s a strategy that can work, but it’s often a long shot,” she says.
How to make the most of your ‘second chance’
While the transfer strategy is simple in theory, it can get complicated in practice.
For one, the destination university must be open to accepting transfer students. In some cases, universities have official articulation agreements with nearby community colleges that streamline the transfer process for students, Pasquerella says. These are the community colleges you should aim to transfer from to increase your chances of success.
The University of California system is one notable example with an official pipeline for students who attended one of the state’s community colleges, through which they can get a “transfer admission guarantee” at 6 of the 9 UC undergraduate campuses. System-wide, Yoon-Wu says about a third of all bachelor’s degree earners were community-college transfers.
Several states offer a similar type of guarantee, with programs in Virginia and North Carolina being particularly robust. Articulation agreements at private colleges will likely be much narrower and may include specific community colleges for specific fields of study.
At New York University, a selective private college, one of its core transfer agreements focuses on 13 specific community colleges and features scholarship assistance. While attending one of the partnering schools, transfer students through the program need to maintain at least a 3.0 GPA and be nominated by a community college faculty member.
Having a plan upfront is crucial, Woon-Yu says. The key is to know which school you want to ultimately attend, what you want to study and how the articulation agreements — if any — work before you start at a community college.
This often requires extra legwork upfront, especially given that articulation agreements vary from state to state and college to college. The best place to start is by actively checking your destination college for articulation agreements. (You can do this by searching the school’s name and “articulation agreement for transfer students.”) From there, home in on a partnering community college and reach out to a counselor at the community-college level to help guide you along your transfer path.
The transfer strategy commonly requires that you earn credits equivalent to an associate’s degree at a community college before transferring into the four-year institution. Depending on the destination school and field of study, you may also need to maintain a respectable cumulative GPA and meet other criteria, especially for private schools.
Transfer pitfalls to avoid
If getting a second chance at your top school is your goal, experts highly recommend finding mentors or advisors to help you plan your path. Not all universities are as welcoming to transfer students as NYU or UCLA. And even if they appear to be transfer-friendly, that’s no guarantee that all of your community college courses will be accepted.
While you should strive to keep in close contact with your community college counselor throughout the process, you can also use DIY tools such as Transferology or ones offered by the destination school to get a sense of what transfer credits will be accepted.
Pasquerella, who was a community-college transfer herself and is a strong supporter of the strategy, says that faculty at top colleges don’t always agree that community college courses are as rigorous as the ones they teach, and they might be opposed to accepting certain courses, even if they are otherwise open to transfer students.
That means that you may be forced to retake courses in some instances. While transferring from community college is typically framed as an affordability hack — retaking courses can eat into those savings and delay graduation. According to the latest college cost data from College Board, average annual tuition and fees at a public four-year colleges run almost $12,000, whereas community colleges cost about $4,200. The cost gap is sizable, but adding an extra semester or two at the four-year college due to unaccepted credits is fairly common.
For example, at the City University of New York (CUNY), almost half of students transferring from a community college into a bachelor’s program lost some academic credit, a 2022 CUNY study found. On average, transfer students lost about 11 credits, almost a semester’s worth of studies.
Still, Pasquerella remains a strong advocate for transfers, and argues that community college builds unique traits that a full four years at a university couldn’t.
For her, she says community college allowed her to stay near her home to take care of her mother, and it also gave her a strong sense of purpose and granted her access to mentors and connections she says she wouldn’t have otherwise had as a first-generation college student.
And the icing on the cake — even if you have to retake a few courses? “It’s much more affordable than attending all four years,” she says.
