86 Units

<p>just because your friend got rejected for having more than 80 doesnt mean someone else will. isn't the limit for berkeley 90 anyhow</p>

<p>baik, if your friend went to a cc, what does it matter if he she had over 80 units?</p>

<p>From the general UC site</p>

<p>UCB
Each of the colleges and the Haas School of Business establishes its own unit limitation policies for students who have attended a four-year institution before enrolling at a community college:</p>

<p>College of Letters and Science: A student who has accumulated more than 80 transferable semester units from a four-year institution is considered to have excess units and will not be admitted. A student who has completed 80 or fewer UC-transferable semester units at a four-year university and then transfers to a community college will not accrue excess units and will be considered for admission.</p>

<p>Sorry, here the rest:</p>

<p>College of Environmental Design: This college follows the same unit accumulation policy as the College of Letters and Science (see above), except that its limit on transferable coursework taken at a four-year university is 86 semester units.</p>

<p>Other colleges: UC Berkeley's other colleges total both university units and a maximum of 70 community college UC-transferable units. The limits on combined transferable university and community college work are as follows:</p>

<pre><code>College of Chemistry: 80 semester units; applicants with more than 80 units require special approval.

College of Engineering: 89 semester units.

College of Natural Resources: 90 semester units. Though the College does not have a specific unit limitation, it carefully reviews applicants with 90 or more semester units to ensure that they can graduate within a reasonable time.

Haas School of Business: No maximum limit.
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