Receiving university · Florida

Community college transfer requirements to University of South Florida

University of South Florida is a major receiving institution for community college transfer students in Florida. This page summarizes the published minimum GPA, application deadline, credit cap, and articulation framework you need to plan the transfer.

2
Minimum transfer GPA
60
Credit hours accepted
Jul 1 (fall)
Application window
State University System of Florida
System / governance

Transfer-admission profile

University of South Florida publishes a transfer-admission policy distinct from its freshman policy. The minimum cumulative community college GPA for transfer applicants is approximately 2; competitive majors — particularly engineering, nursing, computer science, and the business school — typically require a higher GPA, often 3.2 or above, plus specific grades in named lower-division prerequisite courses. The university accepts up to 60 semester hours of community college credit toward the bachelor's; anything earned beyond that cap will appear on the transcript but will not reduce the credits required for graduation.

The application window is Jul 1 (fall), and applicants should plan to have an official transcript from every previously attended college, the FAFSA submitted by the priority deadline, and (where required) a brief transfer essay or major-specific supplement. Some University of South Florida programs admit only for the fall term; others admit for both fall and spring. Confirm with the receiving department before you commit to a transfer term.

Articulation framework

Because University of South Florida is part of State University System of Florida in Florida, transfer students from in-state community colleges benefit from the following articulation programs:

  • Florida Statewide Articulation Agreement — A Florida AA earned at a state college or community college guarantees admission to a State University System of Florida institution with junior standing.

Following the relevant articulation program is the cleanest way to ensure a credit-for-credit move into University of South Florida. Out-of-state transfers and applicants who skip the program are evaluated course-by-course by the registrar, which usually loses some credit at the margin.

Step-by-step transfer plan

  1. Decide your target major. Read the University of South Florida department's transfer guide for that major, which lists every required and recommended lower-division course.
  2. Pick a feeder community college in Florida that offers the matching transfer-track associate degree (AA, AS, or the state's transfer-associate variant).
  3. Map every semester against the University of South Florida articulation table. Confirm with both your community college advisor and the receiving department that the courses you plan to take will count.
  4. Maintain a cumulative GPA above 2 — and well above for the competitive majors. Aim for at least 3.2 if you're targeting an oversubscribed program.
  5. File the FAFSA before the priority deadline, request an official transcript from every prior college, and submit your application before Jul 1 (fall).
  6. After admission, attend the transfer orientation, lock in your major declaration with the receiving department, and request a final credit evaluation in writing.

Common feeder community colleges

The community colleges below are the largest in Florida by enrollment, and they each maintain established transfer pipelines into University of South Florida. Each profile lists the college's transfer rate, costs, and program offerings:

Popular majors for transfer-in

Each program-area page below outlines the typical two-year coursework, prerequisites, and recommended sequence for transferring into the corresponding bachelor's program at University of South Florida: