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Usc Transfer Gpa Requirements

What are the transfer requirements for USC?

USC requires a number of completed documents for consideration. The table below summarizes the most important pieces of information:

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Admission ItemRequired?
High School TranscriptRequired of All
College TranscriptRequired of All
Essay or Personal StatementRequired of All
InterviewNot Required
Standardized Test ScoresRequired of Some
Statement of Good Standing from Prior InstitutionNot Required

In addition to the above requirements, USC also requires a minimum number of credits completed to apply to be a transfer student.

USC requires a minimum of 64 credits.

What are University of Southern California (USC)’s Transfer Deadlines?

Many universities accept transfer applications during each semester. For this reason, we break down USC transfer deadline by fall, winter, spring and summer.

Closing DateReported Deadline
Fall Transfer DeadlineFebruary 1
Winter Transfer Deadline
Spring Transfer Deadline
Summer Transfer Deadline

Waiting until the last minute to finalize your application could result in a silly mistake.

We recommend you complete your application at least 1 week before the required deadline.

In fact, take a full 2 day break from looking at anything related to your application and then come back to look for errors. I bet you’ll find a few ?

When are decision dates for University of Southern California (USC) transfer applicants?

If you applied to transfer to USC on or before the reported deadlines then you should have your decision date by the notification dates in the below table.

DeadlineNotification Dates
Fall Transfer DeadlineMay 31
Winter Transfer Deadline
Spring Transfer Deadline
Summer Transfer Deadline

Note this data is current as of 2019 and to the best of our knowledge this hasn’t changed.

What is University of Southern California (USC)’s transfer acceptance rate?

In 2019, USC received 9503 transfer applicants.

The school accepted 2335 students. Therefore, the transfer acceptance rate for USC is 24.57%.

This indicates how hard it is to transfer into USC. You can use the free calculator below to predict your chances of getting accepted.

WHAT ARE YOUR CHANCES AT USC?Your SAT ScoreCheck this box if you are not submitting an SAT scoreYour ACT ScoreSelect a scoreCheck this box if you are not submitting an ACT scoreYour GPA*on a 4.0 scale

This free college chances tool calculates your acceptance chances at USC or any other U.S. college

Please note all chances are estimates based on test score and GPA averages.Calculate Your College Options

*or select a school above for a specific calculation

Need chances at another college?Select a School

Additionally, of the 2335 accepted transfer students, 1446 students enrolled – that means the yield was 61.93%.

USC accepts 25 out of every 100 transfer applicants.

Usc Majors

List of Majors

The online catalogue contains a list of all undergraduate majors offered at USC. Check the links for information about the admission and graduation requirements of each program. Many departments offer several programs. In some cases these are separate majors; in other cases, these are options or concentrations available within one major.

Exploring Majors by Group/Topic

How do you think about and understand the world?

  • Do you like to study human expression of ideas through the arts, language, literature, and philosophy? Check out Arts and Humanities.
  • Are you curious about societies, nations, policies, commerce, media and the individuals that form them? Check into the Social Sciences.
  • Do you have an interest in the structures and patterns of living creatures, environments, and the physical world? Check into the Natural Sciences.
  • Do you think well quantitatively and want to learn how to measure, design, and numerically describe ideas and objects? Check out Engineering, Computer, Quantitative, and Technical Sciences.
  • Did you find many topics that interest you on more than one list? Maybe you should choose a second emphasis – we love that here! Did you think a major listed under one area could have been categorized under another? That shows you’re thinking and recognize topics are variable – good for you!

Majors
Minors
African American Studies
American Popular Culture
The interdisciplinary major in American Popular Culture helps students to assess from a variety of perspectives the icons and ideas they encounter every day, to think critically about the images and assertions of the mass media and commercial culture, and to see the experience of popular culture as it interacts with questions of gender and ethnicity in the American context. Students choose classes from a curriculum organized to explore: Critical Approaches to Popular Culture; Gender and Ethnicity in American Popular Culture; and Popular Culture in the Arts.


American Studies and Ethnicity
Anthropology
Anthropology (Visual Anthropology)
Applied and Computational Mathematics
Archaeology
Art History
Asian American Studies
Astronomy
Biochemistry
Biological Sciences
Biophysics
Central European Studies
Chemistry
Chemistry (Chemical Biology)
Chemistry (Chemical Nanoscience)
Chemistry (Research)
Chicano/Latino Studies
Classics
Cognitive Science
Comparative Literature
Computational Linguistics
Computational Neuroscience
Contemporary Latino and Latin American Studies
Creative Writing
Data Science
Earth Sciences
East Asian Area Studies
East Asian Languages and Cultures
Economics
Economics/Mathematics
English
Environmental Science and Health
Environmental Studies
French
Gender and Sexuality Studies
Geodesign
Geological Sciences
Global Geodesign
Global Studies
Health and Human Sciences
History
History and Social Science Education
Human Biology
Human Security and Geospatial Intelligence
Intelligence and Cyber Operations
Interdisciplinary Studies
International Relations
International Relations (Global Business)
International Relations and the Global Economy
Italian
Jewish Studies
Latin American and Iberian Cultures, Media and Politics
Law, History and Culture
Linguistics
Linguistics/Cognitive Science
Linguistics/East Asian Languages and Cultures
Linguistics/Philosophy
Mathematics
Middle East Studies
Narrative Studies
Neuroscience
Non-Governmental Organizations and Social Change
Philosophy
Philosophy & Physics
Philosophy, Politics and Economics
Philosophy, Politics and Law
Physical Sciences
Physics
Physics/Computer Science
Political Economy
Political Science
Psychology
Quantitative Biology
Religion
Russian
Social Sciences (Economics emphasis)
Social Sciences (Psychology emphasis)
Sociology
Spanish

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