Transfer Acceptance Rates at Four-Year Schools

Jessica Bryant
By
Updated on July 3, 2025
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Fact-checked by Marley Rose
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Transfer acceptance rates at four-year colleges can range from less than 1% at Ivy League universities to more than 80% at some public institutions.
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Data Summary

  • checkDuring the fall 2023 academic term, transfer rates across all four-year institutions rose by 6%.
  • checkDespite this rise, transfer acceptance rates across institutions varied greatly by school type.
  • checkIvy League (10.5%) and private institutions (11.1%) generally had much lower transfer acceptance rates than public colleges (52.7%).
  • checkHowever, some selective public schools like UCLA, UC Berkeley, and Georgia Tech only accept roughly 1 in 4 transfer applicants.

Choosing to transfer to a new college or university is often a difficult decision. Students have countless reasons for transferring, from needing more affordable options to seeking bigger academic challenges.

Though transfer rates are on the rise at four-year institutions in the U.S., transfer acceptance rates always vary greatly by institution type.

We analyzed the most recently available data from 50 of the largest and most selective four-year colleges in the U.S. to reveal where students may have the best chances of admission.

Colleges With the Highest Transfer Acceptance Rates

The top 10 schools with the highest transfer acceptance rates admitted roughly 50% or more of their transfer applicants in 2024. Each of these schools is a large, public institution serving more than 45,000 students.

Though these schools may seem easier to transfer to than others because of these rates, each institution still sets high academic standards for its students, requiring at least a 2.5 grade point average on all previous college coursework for transfer acceptance.

Colleges with the Highest Transfer Acceptance Rates, 2024-2025
InstitutionLocationTransfer Acceptance Rate
Arizona State UniversityTempe, AZ90.7%
University of HoustonHouston, TX88%
Michigan State UniversityEast Lansing, MI77.9%
Florida International UniversityMiami, FL74.2%
The Pennsylvania State UniversityUniversity Park, PA69.8%
University of Central FloridaOrlando, FL67.4%
University of ArizonaTucson, AZ64.5%
Rutgers University, New BrunswickNew Brunswick, NJ57.6%
University of South FloridaTampla, FL57.3%
University of California, San DiegoSan Diego, CA54.6%
Source: 2024-2025 Common Data Set

Transfer Acceptance Rates at Ivy League Universities

At Ivy League institutions, the average transfer acceptance rate during the fall 2024 academic term was just 10%. Columbia University had the highest transfer acceptance rate at more than 50%, while Harvard University admitted less than 1% of transfer applicants last year.

Transfer Acceptance Rates, 2024-2025
InstitutionTransfer Acceptance Rate
Columbia University52.4%
Cornell University9.3%
Brown University7.2%
Dartmouth College6.6%
University of Pennsylvania*4.6%
Princeton University1.9%
Yale University1.5%
Harvard University<1%
*Most recently available data is from the 2023-2024 academic year.
Source: 2023-2024 Common Data Set

Transfer Acceptance Rates at Selective Institutions

It’s not just Ivy League schools that keep their transfer rates low. Some selective private and public institutions admitted less than 1 in 4 transfer applicants last fall.

Transfer Rates at Selective Institutions, 2024-2025
InstitutionTransfer Acceptance Rate
Swarthmore College**0%
Stanford University1.6%
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)*1.9%
Rice University*4.5%
John Hopkins University5.3%
Georgetown University5.9%
California Institute of Technology (CalTech)6.2%
University of Chicago*7.9%
Amherst College8.6%
Pomona College8.6%
Northwestern University*12.7%
Georgia Institute of Technology20.7%
Vanderbilt University21.8%
New York University (NYU)22.1%
University of Texas at Austin 22.5%
University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA)22.7%
University of Southern California (USC)24.4%
University of California, Berkeley25.5%
Boston University34.6%
University of Michigan, Ann Arbor34.9%
*Most recently available data is from the 2023-2024 academic year.
**Unable to admit transfer students due to space constraints.
Source: 2024-2025 Common Data Set

At schools like USC and UC Berkeley, where transfer acceptance rates are around 25%, students looking to gain admission may find it much easier to transfer in than to be accepted as first-year applicants. Both of these schools have first-year acceptance rates of less than 12%.

Similarly, UCLA‘s transfer acceptance rate in 2024 was roughly 23% while its first-year acceptance rate was just under 9%.

At Boston University, the difference in admission rates between first-year and transfer applicants is even wider. During the fall 2024 term, BU’s transfer acceptance rate was nearly 35%, while its first-year acceptance rate was just 11% — nearly a 24 percentage point difference.

Conversely, while MIT‘s transfer acceptance rate was just 1.9% in 2023-2024, the institution had a first-year admission rate of about 5% that year. This means MIT’s first-year applicants have a slightly better shot at admission than hopeful transfer students.

The Biggest Challenge to Transfer Acceptance

Though transfer acceptance rates can vary depending on the school type, most colleges have one thing in common: limited space.

At schools with high retention rates, like MIT and Rice, there are a limited number of spots available for transfer students, making the transfer process highly competitive.

Some schools’ high transfer acceptance rates, like many institutions in the University of California system, might be due to guaranteed admissions programs for community college students. Even if the school seems easy to transfer to on the surface, students still might face competition.

Additionally, it’s not always easy for students to ensure they meet all the eligibility requirements to transfer to a new institution.

Students interested in transferring should confirm that the credits they’ve already earned are transferable to the new school they hope to attend. They can also meet with an academic advisor to discuss what the process of transferring might look like.



Sources

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