“What are my chances?” is the most common transfer question, and the honest answer is that it depends almost entirely on the campus and the major. A single UC can admit transfers to one major at 60% and another at under 15% in the same year.
This guide explains how to read UC transfer acceptance rates so the numbers actually help you plan.
Why “the UC transfer rate” is misleading
Overall campus transfer admit rates hide huge variation. UC publishes transfer admission data by campus and major through the UC Information Center, and the spread is dramatic. Highly impacted majors like computer science, business/economics, biology, and nursing admit a much smaller share of applicants than less-impacted ones, even at the same campus.
The practical takeaway: always look at the admit rate for your specific campus-and-major combination, not the campus average.
What drives the differences
- Major impaction: popular majors receive far more qualified applicants than they have seats.
- Campus selectivity: UCLA and UC Berkeley admit transfers at lower rates than UC Riverside, UC Merced, or UC Santa Cruz.
- GPA and major-prep completion: within a major, admitted students cluster at the high end of both.
- Residency: California community college transfers are prioritized under UC policy.
Rough ranges (confirm the specifics for your path)
As a general frame, less-selective campuses admit a majority of qualified transfer applicants to many majors, while the most impacted major-and-campus combinations (for example, CS or business at UCLA, Berkeley, or UCSD) can sit well under 20%. Treat any single number as a starting point and verify the current figure for your exact campus and major.
Where to find verified, per-path numbers
Pipeline’s transfer plan pages show admit-rate and GPA data for specific community-college-to-UC-by-major paths, so you can see the realistic bar for your situation rather than a campus-wide average. Combine that with the official UC Information Center data when you finalize your list.
Related: See admit-rate data on transfer plan pages · UC transfer GPA by campus and major · Which UCs have nursing programs · Example: De Anza to UC Berkeley computer science
