Community college transfer in Rhode Island
A complete guide to how to transfer from a community college to a university in Rhode Island — including the state's 1 accredited community colleges, the major receiving universities, and the statewide articulation programs that govern credit transfer.
How transfer works in Rhode Island
Two-year colleges in Rhode Island serve as the primary on-ramp to a bachelor's degree for tens of thousands of in-state residents each year. The state's 1 accredited community colleges enroll a median of 5,893 students each, charge an average of $3,993 per year for in-state residents, and transfer roughly 47% of incoming degree-seeking students into a four-year institution within six years.
Like most U.S. states, Rhode Island coordinates community-college-to-university transfers through a combination of statewide articulation agreements, common course-numbering schemes, and institution-specific transfer pathways. A student who completes the state's transfer-oriented associate degree — typically an AA or AS bearing a "transfer" or "university parallel" designation — usually receives junior standing at the receiving public university, with all general-education requirements considered satisfied.
Top receiving universities for Rhode Island transfer students
The most common 2+2 destinations for community college students in Rhode Island are the state's flagship and regional public universities. Each has a published transfer-admission policy with a minimum GPA, a credit-hour cap, and an application deadline distinct from the freshman cycle.
| University | System | Min transfer GPA | Application window |
|---|---|---|---|
| University of Rhode Island | Independent | 2.5 | Apr 1 (fall) / Nov 1 (spring) |
Costs and aid in Rhode Island
Community college tuition in Rhode Island averages $3,993 per year for in-state residents and $7,893 for out-of-state students. Most colleges layer the federal Pell Grant — worth up to about $7,400 per year for the lowest-income students — with state need-based aid, institutional scholarships, and federal Direct Loans where required. Roughly two of every three community college students in the state receive some form of grant aid, and a substantial minority pay nothing at all out of pocket for tuition once aid is applied.
The practical playbook is the same in every Rhode Island city: pick a target four-year institution before you finish your first semester at the community college, find that school's articulation agreement on the receiving registrar's website, and lock in your course selections accordingly. Skipping this step is the single most common reason transfer students lose credit on the way to the bachelor's degree — surveys regularly find that around forty percent of transfer credit is wasted nationally, almost always because the student picked courses without checking the articulation table first.
Largest community colleges in Rhode Island
Plan your Rhode Island transfer by program area
Each program-area page below combines Rhode Island's state-specific articulation rules with the typical two-year coursework for that major. Use it to confirm prerequisites and the most common receiving universities for your intended bachelor's.
- Business Administration in Rhode Island
- Nursing (RN) in Rhode Island
- Computer Science in Rhode Island
- Information Technology in Rhode Island
- Engineering Transfer in Rhode Island
- Early Childhood Education in Rhode Island
- Criminal Justice in Rhode Island
- Psychology in Rhode Island
- Biology / Pre-Health in Rhode Island
- Communications & Media in Rhode Island
- Liberal Arts (General Studies) in Rhode Island
- Hospitality & Culinary in Rhode Island
- Welding & Skilled Trades in Rhode Island
- Graphic Design in Rhode Island
- Paralegal Studies in Rhode Island
- Environmental Science in Rhode Island
- Social Work in Rhode Island
- Accounting in Rhode Island