First-year requirements
- Subject requirement (A-G)
- GPA requirement
- Admission by exception
- English language proficiency
- UC graduation requirements
Additional information for
- California residents
- Out-of-state students
- Home-schooled students
Transfer requirements
- Understanding UC transfer
- Preparing to transfer
- UC transfer programs
- Transfer planning tools
International applicants
- Applying for admission
- English language proficiency (TOEFL/IELTS)
- Passports & visas
- Living accommodations
- Health care & insurance
AP & Exam credits
Applying as a first year
- Filling out the application
- Dates & deadlines
- Personal insight questions
How applications are reviewed
- After you apply
Applying as a transfer
Types of aid
- Grants & scholarships
- Jobs & work-study
- California DREAM Loan Program
- Middle Class Scholarship Program
- Blue and Gold Opportunity Plan
- Native American Opportunity Plan
- Who can get financial aid
- How aid works
- Estimate your aid
Apply for financial aid
- Tuition & cost of attendance
- Glossary & resources
- Santa Barbara
- Campus program & support services
- Check majors
- Freshman admit data
- Transfer admit data
- Native American Opportunity Plan
- Apply for aid
We spend time evaluating your academic achievements in light of the opportunities available to you and your demonstrated capacity to contribute to the intellectual life at UC. Some factors we may consider are:
- Academic grade point average in all completed A-G courses, including additional points for completed UC-certified honors courses.
- Number of, content of and performance in all A-G subject areas beyond the minimum requirements.
- Number of and performance in UC-approved honors, Advanced Placement, International Baccalaureate Higher Level and transferable college courses.
- Identification by UC as being ranked in the top 9 percent of your high school class at the end of your junior year ( Eligible in the Local Context , or ELC).
- Quality of your senior-year program as measured by the type and number of academic courses in any A-G subject area in progress or planned.
- Quality of your academic performance relative to the educational opportunities available in your high school.
- Outstanding performance in one or more specific subject areas.
- Outstanding work in one or more special projects in any academic field of study.
- Recent, marked improvement in academic performance as demonstrated by academic GPA and the quality of coursework completed or in progress.
- Special talents, achievements and awards in a particular field, such as visual and performing arts, communication or athletic endeavors; special skills, such as demonstrated written and oral proficiency in other languages; special interests, such as intensive study and exploration of other cultures; experiences that demonstrate unusual promise for leadership, such as significant community service or significant participation in student government; or other significant experiences or achievements that demonstrate the student's promise for contributing to the intellectual vitality of a campus.
- Completion of special projects undertaken in the context of your high school curriculum or in conjunction with special school events, projects or programs.
- Academic accomplishments in light of your life experiences and special circumstances, including but not limited to: disabilities, low family income, first generation to attend college, need to work, disadvantaged social or educational environment, difficult personal and family situations or circumstances, refugee status or veteran status.
- Location of your secondary school and residence.
Selection process by campus
While all UC campuses use the same factors to evaluate applications, they often apply these factors differently. Be sure to review the selection process of each campus:
- Los Angeles
Do campuses make their admissions decisions independently from other UC campuses?
Each UC campus evaluates each application without knowing the status of the same application at another campus. In making admission decisions, campuses do not consider where you've applied or your admission status to other campuses. All campuses consider your application simultaneously, yet independently of all other campuses you applied to.
Good to know
Because the pool of students who apply to UC is different every year, the level of academic performance necessary for admission to a particular campus or major is different, too.
Acceptance rates depend on the number of applicants, their academic qualifications and the spaces we have available.
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