California Associate Degree for Transfer (ADT)
AA-T or AS-T from any California Community College guarantees admission to a California State University in a similar major with junior standing.
What the agreement covers
California Associate Degree for Transfer (ADT) is administered by the California Community Colleges Chancellor's Office. It exists to do one thing: remove uncertainty about whether the courses a student takes at a California community college will count toward a bachelor's degree at a California public university. AA-T or AS-T from any California Community College guarantees admission to a California State University in a similar major with junior standing.
In practice, the program functions as a contract between the state's two- and four-year systems. A student who satisfies the published GPA threshold (currently 2) and completes the named coursework at any participating community college receives a guarantee — codified by statute, regulation, or system policy — that the credits will move into a participating four-year institution. Without an articulation framework like this one, transfer credit is evaluated course-by-course by each receiving registrar, a process that historically loses students between 30% and 40% of the credits they earned.
Why it exists
Statewide articulation programs are the policy answer to the most expensive failure mode in U.S. higher education: students who pay tuition for community college courses that ultimately don't count toward their bachelor's. Federal data has documented this loss for decades; the U.S. Government Accountability Office estimates it at roughly 43% of credits, on average, when there is no system-wide agreement in place. Programs like California Associate Degree for Transfer (ADT) close the gap by standardizing course numbering, establishing a common general-education core, or both, and binding receiving universities to honor the result.
Who participates
All public community colleges in California participate, as does the public four-year university system. The 8 receiving universities profiled on DegreeMapper for California are listed below. Some private institutions in California also voluntarily honor the framework — read your target receiving institution's transfer page to confirm participation before you rely on the guarantee.
| Receiving university | System | Min transfer GPA | Application window |
|---|---|---|---|
| University of California, Berkeley | University of California | 3 | Nov 30 (fall) |
| University of California, Los Angeles | University of California | 3.2 | Nov 30 (fall) |
| University of California, Davis | University of California | 2.8 | Nov 30 (fall) |
| University of California, Irvine | University of California | 2.8 | Nov 30 (fall) |
| University of California, San Diego | University of California | 2.8 | Nov 30 (fall) |
| California State University, Long Beach | California State University | 2 | Nov 30 (fall) |
| San Diego State University | California State University | 2 | Nov 30 (fall) |
| San Francisco State University | California State University | 2 | Nov 30 (fall) |
How to use the agreement
- Identify your target receiving university and major by the end of your first semester at a participating community college. The agreement's value depends on knowing which articulation table to follow.
- Pull the receiving department's transfer worksheet. It lists every lower-division course the major requires, mapped to the equivalent at each participating community college.
- Register only courses on the worksheet. Anything outside it can still count as elective credit, but only on-list courses will move toward the major-prep block.
- Maintain a cumulative GPA at or above 2. Many competitive majors require a higher GPA; the program-wide minimum is the floor, not the target.
- File the application before the receiving university's transfer deadline, and request an official transcript from every prior college.
- Confirm the credit evaluation in writing after admission, and lock in your major declaration with the receiving department before your first registered semester at the four-year.
Common pitfalls
- Choosing a non-transfer associate degree. Only the transfer-track variant of the associate degree is covered. Applied (AAS) tracks are typically excluded.
- Skipping the program prerequisites. A handful of receiving departments — engineering, nursing, computer science — have additional named-course requirements on top of the program's general framework.
- Assuming all four-year institutions participate. Out-of-state and many private universities do not honor California Associate Degree for Transfer (ADT) automatically.
- Applying after the transfer-priority deadline. The agreement does not waive deadlines.
Eligible community colleges in California
The largest community colleges in the state — all of which participate in California Associate Degree for Transfer (ADT):
Hartnell College
Porterville College
Lemoore College
Los Medanos College
College of Alameda
Citrus College
Imperial Valley College
Fresno City College
Other articulation programs to compare
- UC Transfer Admission Guarantee (UC TAG)
- Intersegmental General Education Transfer Curriculum (IGETC)
- Texas Fields of Study
- Texas Common Course Numbering System (TCCNS)
- Florida Statewide Articulation Agreement
- SUNY Seamless Transfer
- CUNY Pathways
- Illinois Articulation Initiative (IAI)
- North Carolina Comprehensive Articulation Agreement
- Ohio Transfer Assurance Guides (TAG)
- Washington Direct Transfer Agreement (DTA)
- Virginia Guaranteed Admission Agreements (GAA)