transfer

Transferring to New York University (NYU) 2023

Have you been dreaming of living in New York? Transferring to NYU can give you access to everything New York City has to offer, while at one of the most well-known and well-respected colleges in the country. NYU definitely has the cool factor as far as colleges go. Home to more young celebrities and influencers than we care to count, we’ve found that a rising number of students are looking to NYU as a transfer option because it offers the opportunity to build their career outside of academia parallel to earning their degree. Like with many transfer programs, though, housing is not guaranteed. If you’re looking to transfer to NYU, you may also have to accept the reality of being young and hustling in New York City — numerous roommates in tiny apartments included.  

Transferring to Stanford 2023

When one of our students gets into Stanford, it rarely surprises us. Before we agree to help a student apply to Stanford, we make sure it’s possible that they could get in. With a minuscule regular first-year acceptance rate below 5%, we don’t want stressed-out teenagers wasting their time. If we’re working with a student on a Stanford application, it’s because they are genuinely qualified to get in — which is to say, profoundly exceptional.

Transferring to Duke University 2023

Duke has a reputation as an Ivy League-caliber university outside of the East Coast. The students at Duke are some of the best of the best, and what was once a backup option for the top high school students in the country has become a stretch for even the best and the brightest. We’ve talked a lot about how the whole idea of “transferring up” is a bit of a fallacy, and Duke offers the perfect example of why trying to leverage a year of college into an aggressive transfer isn’t panning out like it used to. It all comes down to numbers.

Transferring to Dartmouth 2023

Up to a third of college students transfer during their collegiate careers, including moving from two-year colleges to four-year colleges. The transfer path is well-trod, and it can be the perfect option for a student who isn’t getting what they need academically, or even socially, from their current school. One of the great myths of transferring, however, is that it is a reliable back door into top-tier institutions. “If you didn’t get in the first time, try again a year later,” is — to be blunt — bad advice. And yet every year we are contacted by hundreds of students (and their parents) who think that now may be little Tommy’s time to get into Dartmouth.

Transferring to Columbia University 2023

There is a pervasive myth in the world of transferring that if you couldn’t get in a college as a first-year, you can wait a year or two and have a better chance as a transfer. This can be true for some schools — especially small and medium-sized liberal arts schools — but it isn’t true for most of the top schools in the United States. Despite the fact the statistics rarely work out in favor of the idea that transferring is a back door into the best schools in the country, we’re constantly contacted by students (and their parents) who think that while the Ivy League wasn’t an option when they were a high school senior, it may be an option with some college under their belts.

Transferring to Princeton 2023

In 2022, Princeton the expansion of their transfer program after years of declining transfer acceptance rates. This is an especially big deal because Princeton paused all transfer programs from 1990 through 2018. Yes. You read that right. For nearly 30 years, Princeton didn’t accept any transfer students — you couldn’t even apply if you wanted to try for the impossible. Now, instead of accepting only a handful of transfer students, they’d accept up to 35.  

Transferring to UPenn 2023

In 2021, the transfer acceptance rate at the University of Pennsylvania (Penn) dropped to . Of the more than 3,500 applicants who applied to transfer, only around 165, or 5%, of students were accepted. While the drop did signify a record, it was part of an ongoing trend and not an anomaly — so we don’t expect to see a rise in the future. It’s only going to be increasingly difficult to get into Penn as a transfer, and Penn isn’t unique in that. The Penn transfer acceptance rate is twice that of fellow Ivy League members Harvard and Princeton. As a result, “.”

Transferring to Cornell 2023

Cornell is a member of the elite Ivy League with a trait all its own: a culture and tradition of bringing in transfer students. Whereas Harvard, Yale, Columbia, Brown, and the rest of the Ivy League accept as few as a handful of transfers each year, Cornell welcomes 500-600 transfers annually. Transfers are accepted for fall or spring starts (another very rare opportunity at such an elite school), and are from diverse backgrounds including community colleges and two-year schools.

Strategies for Transfer Applicants 2022-2023

If you’re here, this is your sign that you should apply to transfer. If you have even one sliver of doubt at your current school, or you’re unhappy, or you just want a bigger and better challenge, you should think about transferring. But, you need to know more about how transferring works in order to have the most success.

What is the Cornell Transfer Option?

Cornell is absolutely the most Ivy in the bunch. Its transfer acceptance rate (estimated at 17%) is higher than its standard acceptance rate (10%) and they between 500 to 700 transfer students a year. The infrastructure and support for transfer students at Cornell is nuts and truly unlike any other school. Compare Cornell’s 17% transfer acceptance rate to Princeton’s 1.2% (or to put it simply, 16 students), or even to a school like Duke which has an approximately 5% transfer acceptance rate.

How to Write a College Essay for Transfer Students

If you are thinking about transferring, you know that you are going to have to write some essays. Great transfer essays are kind of like ven diagrams: they show the overlap between you and the school. Pretty much every essay you write in the transfer process should lead the reader to think, ‘Wow, they are perfect for this place!’ It helps that a lot of the essay questions feel like excuses to write love notes to the school: why do you want to go here? What do you want to study? What do you want from an education? Etc. We see these types of questions pop up every year. While questions can vary from college to college, there are some tricks that can be applied broadly to writing a great transfer essay.

Help with Transferring Colleges

Every year we work with students who are trying to transfer. Every year we get many of these students into top schools, and every year we get the question, “how do you do that?” The long answer is, it’s not just one thing. There is a lot that needs to go into transferring. You need grades and scores and all of that, but when it comes to your essays, they have to be stellar. Writing transfer essays can be tricky, but we do have some processes we think everyone who is trying to transfer should do with or without our help. Again we do this every year, trust us, if you want to transfer there are two things you need to do before you even start writing.

How to Transfer into a Top-Tier College

Just like in first-year admissions, getting into a top-tier college as a transfer is competitive. Top colleges can be very selective when it comes to transfers. But that doesn’t mean that you should be discouraged. Going with a plan and being organized will help you get into an elite transfer school. And we are happy to share our top 4 tips to make a first-rate transfer obtainable.

Transfer Application Strategies for NYU

So you want to transfer to NYU? We get why you would want to. They have great programs in most subjects, plus, getting to live in NYC is nothing to sneeze at. However, NYU is difficult. They even say it on their website, “Admission for transfer students is highly competitive.” So you will need to make your application shine.

5 Tips for Transferring Colleges After One Year

So you are looking into transferring colleges? The first thing we want to say is good for you. It’s easy to stay at a place that isn’t right for you (lots of people do!) We are super pro-transferring if you don’t feel like your current college is the right fit. That being said, transferring takes a little work. Ok, in most cases more than a little, but it doesn’t need to be scary. By utilizing a couple of simple tools and tricks, you can ensure that your transfer will go as smoothly as possible and we are here to give them to you.