<p>I'll be starting at Santa Monica College this fall, hoping to transfer to UCLA or UC Berkeley or other UCs in the future. I did some research online and looks like Haas does accept transfers, yet after 1 hr of diggin CC posts, I can't find a significant thread discussing about this matter. I also went on the "UC Berkeley Transfer thread" and seems like no one is attempting to transfer to Haas (i just see a couple econ transfers). Does anyone know more about this? Sorry if this has been discussed before, my "search" function doesn't seem to be working.</p>
<p>Youre awful at doing research.</p>
<p>lol actually i went on my friends computer afterwards and dug up some transfer posts from last year.</p>
<p>It’s actually not that hard to get into Haas as a transfer as long as you have your breadth requirements done. Essentially, if you have your requirements done, the admit rate is like 24%, which is about the same as most impacted majors on campus.</p>
<p>24% seems awfully high for HAAS. But I haven’t looked it up myself so I would have to assume you’re right.</p>
<p>I believe it’s a 7% admit rate in general, but out of those that completed all requirements, it’s a 24% admit rate.</p>
<p>Ah, ok. That makes much more sense.</p>
<p>You can definitely transfer into Haas. It’s important to complete all breadth requirements, the main thing that disqualifies applicants when it comes down to admission decisions. More info here: [Transfer</a> Eligibility, Undergraduate Program - Haas School of Business, University of California Berkeley](<a href=“http://www.haas.berkeley.edu/Undergrad/transfer_eligibility.html]Transfer”>http://www.haas.berkeley.edu/Undergrad/transfer_eligibility.html)</p>
<p>You are not even eligible if you don’t have your Prereqs done. </p>
<p>If you check the stats on Haas’s transfer page you can see like some 1500 applied and only 375 or so were eligible and from that 375 about 100 were accepted so if you are eligible then you have about a 28% chance of being accepted. So technically, its about the same admissions rate for any other UC. That is of course if you are ELIGIBLE. </p>
<p>But if you are applying for the Fall 12, then you have different prereqs and you don’t have to do your Breadth courses which sucks because that means people who apply just to apply may actually have a chance of getting in.</p>
<p>I think the 28% or whatever is a little misleading because those 375 who finished the prereqs are cutthroat competition, so it’s a 28% chance of admission against mostly 3.8+ applicants. Still, you have a decent shot if you finish all of the classes with a high gpa.</p>
<p>Check the stats. </p>
<p>3.60-4.00 is the middle 80% of GPA acceptances. They take a wide variety of GPA. It is not the only thing they take into consideration when looking at grades. They also look at course load and grade trends.</p>
<p>i met with the transfer rep in May. she said that a 3.9 gpa or above is the average. My gpa is 3.4, soon it will be going up. Im still going to apply because aside from my GPA, i have actual business experience. </p>
<p>About the breadth requirements, they’re not required in regards to transferring to Haas (Fall 2012) but they are for graduating. Since 1500 people applied and 375 were eligible last year, Im just wondering how will it affect the number of applicants apply here on out?</p>
<p>Hey monkey did you get into Haas?</p>
<p>Also…getting into Haas will be significantly more difficult for fall 2012. Why? Because a lot of people who would otherwise be ineligible (taking wrong courses and whatnot) will not mess up thanks to new requirement changes. </p>
<p>@bf9451 LOL actual business experience. Like what?</p>
<p>will not mess up or now mess up? you mean the transfer requirements have been relaxed?</p>
<p>@Investment, you seem like a very harsh straight to the point guy, which is good. </p>
<p>My experience runs in different fields. Real Estate, mainly in the short sale and loan modification department. I have a partnership with Tony Toni Tone management group, i want to see you try getting that. Started a Solar company in the Silicon Valley area, i wont say the name because im in the process of selling it. I can put up an entire event from scratch; marketing, booking, hiring, financials, celeb bookings, venue, and the hardest part the production. Once the event is over, take care of the financial statements to report, not that hard. There goes most of my experience. I also play the market, but that i wont bother going into that at the moment. </p>
<p>What are your experiences buddy?</p>