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    UC Transfer GPA: What You Actually Need

    6 min read · Published January 2026 · Updated March 2026

    The published UC transfer GPA minimum and the GPA that actually gets students admitted are two very different numbers. Knowing the gap early tells you how much margin you have, and whether a campus is a reach, a match, or a safety.

    The minimum vs. the competitive reality

    The UC eligibility minimum is a 2.4 GPA in UC-transferable coursework for California residents (2.8 for non-residents). That clears you for consideration, but it does not make you competitive. At selective campuses and in impacted majors, admitted transfers commonly sit between a 3.5 and a 4.0.

    How UC calculates your transfer GPA

    • Only UC-transferable courses count toward the GPA UC uses.
    • All attempted UC-transferable courses are included, so a repeated course does not erase the original the way some community college GPAs do.
    • Honors and some AP or IB credit can factor in, but the core driver is your community college coursework.

    Realistic GPA targets by selectivity

    • UC Merced, UC Riverside, and UC Santa Cruz: many majors are accessible in the 3.0 to 3.4 range.
    • UC Davis, UC Irvine, UC Santa Barbara, and UC San Diego: aim for 3.4 to 3.8, higher for impacted majors.
    • UCLA and UC Berkeley: competitive applicants are typically 3.7 to 4.0, especially for CS, business/economics, and biology.
    • These are general frames. Verify the current figure for your exact campus and major.

    If your GPA is below target

    GPA is the lever you can still move. Prioritize strong grades in major-prep courses, since they carry the most weight in impacted majors. Retake a weak prerequisite where it materially helps, and consider a less-impacted campus or a TAG campus that guarantees admission at a defined GPA. A semester-by-semester plan shows you exactly which grades matter most.

    Frequently asked questions

    What is the minimum GPA to transfer to a UC?

    A 2.4 in UC-transferable coursework for California residents, 2.8 for non-residents. That is the eligibility floor, not a competitive GPA.

    What GPA do I need for UCLA or Berkeley transfer?

    Competitive transfer applicants to UCLA and UC Berkeley typically have a 3.7 to 4.0, and impacted majors skew toward the top of that range.

    Does retaking a class fix my UC GPA?

    UC includes all attempted UC-transferable courses in its GPA, so a retake adds the new grade rather than replacing the old one. It can still help, but it does not erase the original attempt.

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