Virginia · Articulation program

Virginia Guaranteed Admission Agreements (GAA)

Signed GAAs between Virginia's 23 community colleges and most public/private universities guarantee admission for VCCS graduates meeting GPA and course requirements.

2.5
Minimum GPA
VA
Jurisdiction
4
Receiving universities
23
Eligible community colleges

What the agreement covers

Virginia Guaranteed Admission Agreements (GAA) is administered by the Virginia Community College System. It exists to do one thing: remove uncertainty about whether the courses a student takes at a Virginia community college will count toward a bachelor's degree at a Virginia public university. Signed GAAs between Virginia's 23 community colleges and most public/private universities guarantee admission for VCCS graduates meeting GPA and course requirements.

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 2.5) 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 Virginia Guaranteed Admission Agreements (GAA) 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 Virginia participate, as does the public four-year university system. The 4 receiving universities profiled on DegreeMapper for Virginia are listed below. Some private institutions in Virginia also voluntarily honor the framework — read your target receiving institution's transfer page to confirm participation before you rely on the guarantee.

Receiving universitySystemMin transfer GPAApplication window
University of Virginia Independent 3.4 Mar 1 (fall)
Virginia Tech Independent 3 Mar 1 (fall) / Oct 1 (spring)
George Mason University Independent 2.85 Apr 1 (fall) / Oct 1 (spring)
Virginia Commonwealth University Independent 2.5 Apr 1 (fall) / Oct 1 (spring)

How to use the agreement

  1. 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.
  2. 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.
  3. 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.
  4. Maintain a cumulative GPA at or above 2.5. Many competitive majors require a higher GPA; the program-wide minimum is the floor, not the target.
  5. File the application before the receiving university's transfer deadline, and request an official transcript from every prior college.
  6. 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 Virginia Guaranteed Admission Agreements (GAA) automatically.
  • Applying after the transfer-priority deadline. The agreement does not waive deadlines.

Eligible community colleges in Virginia

The largest community colleges in the state — all of which participate in Virginia Guaranteed Admission Agreements (GAA):

Other articulation programs to compare