Accounting — community college transfer pathway
The Accounting pathway is one of the most popular and well-articulated routes from a two-year college to a bachelor's degree. Students typically earn an AA / AAS at a community college, then transfer with junior standing into one of the following bachelor's programs: BS Accounting. Done correctly, the route saves between $20,000 and $80,000 versus starting at the four-year institution as a freshman, and it adds no time to the bachelor's calendar.
Typical two-year coursework
The first two semesters focus on the standard general-education core: English composition, college-level mathematics (usually college algebra, pre-calculus, or statistics depending on the receiving major), an introductory natural science with lab, an introductory social science, and a humanities elective. The second year deepens the major-prep sequence, with two to four courses specific to Accounting alongside the remaining general-education distribution. Students should also include at least one writing-intensive course beyond freshman composition, a course satisfying the receiving university's diversity or global-perspectives requirement, and a quantitative reasoning course if not already covered by the math choice.
Electives matter more than students expect. A receiving university looks at whether the transfer applicant has demonstrated curiosity beyond the bare requirement — a second language sequence, an intermediate statistics course, a programming or data course, an upper-division-feeling humanities seminar — these signal academic ambition and can swing competitive transfer admissions decisions in close cases.
Prerequisites and GPA expectations
Most public state universities accept Accounting transfers with a cumulative community college GPA above roughly 2.5; competitive flagships and selective majors push that threshold to 3.0, 3.3, or higher. A handful of receiving institutions and majors — engineering and nursing in particular — also require specific grades (often a "C or better") in named prerequisite courses. Confirm the exact list with the receiving department in your first semester at the community college, not your last.
Where students transfer
The most common destinations are in-state public universities — the flagship campus and the regional comprehensives — followed by select out-of-state public universities with established transfer pipelines, and a smaller number of private colleges that offer transfer-friendly scholarships. Use the state list below to see the community-college base for each Accounting pathway and the typical receiving universities in that state.
Browse Accounting by state
Each state-specific page below combines this Accounting coursework framework with the state's articulation rules, top community colleges, and most common receiving universities for the major.
- Accounting in Alabama
- Accounting in Alaska
- Accounting in Arizona
- Accounting in Arkansas
- Accounting in California
- Accounting in Colorado
- Accounting in Connecticut
- Accounting in Delaware
- Accounting in District of Columbia
- Accounting in Florida
- Accounting in Georgia
- Accounting in Hawaii
- Accounting in Idaho
- Accounting in Illinois
- Accounting in Indiana
- Accounting in Iowa
- Accounting in Kansas
- Accounting in Kentucky
- Accounting in Louisiana
- Accounting in Maine
- Accounting in Maryland
- Accounting in Massachusetts
- Accounting in Michigan
- Accounting in Minnesota
- Accounting in Mississippi
- Accounting in Missouri
- Accounting in Montana
- Accounting in Nebraska
- Accounting in Nevada
- Accounting in New Hampshire
- Accounting in New Jersey
- Accounting in New Mexico
- Accounting in New York
- Accounting in North Carolina
- Accounting in North Dakota
- Accounting in Ohio
- Accounting in Oklahoma
- Accounting in Oregon
- Accounting in Pennsylvania
- Accounting in Rhode Island
- Accounting in South Carolina
- Accounting in South Dakota
- Accounting in Tennessee
- Accounting in Texas
- Accounting in Utah
- Accounting in Vermont
- Accounting in Virginia
- Accounting in Washington
- Accounting in West Virginia
- Accounting in Wisconsin
- Accounting in Wyoming
Common pitfalls in this pathway
- Mixing AAS and AA tracks. The applied (AAS) versions of Accounting are designed for direct workforce entry, not transfer. Many of those credits do not articulate. Confirm you are in the transfer track before you finish your first semester.
- Skipping major prep. Several receiving universities will not let you declare the major as a junior unless specific lower-division courses are already on the transcript. Review the receiving department's transfer guide for the named prerequisites.
- Over-enrolling at the two-year level. Receiving universities cap transferable credit at 60–70 hours. Anything beyond is wasted tuition.
- Late application. Transfer-priority deadlines are typically several months earlier than freshman deadlines. Mark the receiving university's transfer deadline in the calendar app the day you enroll.