<p>UC San Diego considers a student with more than 90 transferable semester units
(135 quarter units) from the combination of a two-year and a four-year institution
to be in senior standing. UCSD sets a 90-semester-unit limit when a student has
attended both a two-year and a four-year institution. UCSD will transfer a
maximum of 70 UC transferable semester units from a community college.</p>
<p>I currently have 120 transferrable quarter units, but if it counts ALL units from both colleges, even the non-transferrables I think I might just have around or just above 135.</p>
<p>Come on, use common sense. I mean, you just said it yourself in the quote below:</p>
<p>UC San Diego considers a student with more than 90 transferable semester units
(135 quarter units) from the combination of a two-year and a four-year institution
to be in senior standing. UCSD sets a 90-semester-unit limit when a student has
attended both a two-year and a four-year institution. UCSD will transfer a
maximum of 70 UC transferable semester units from a community college.</p>
<p>Why would they count non-transferable units?</p>
<p>Transferable only. For the purpose of UC applications, just pretend that your non-transferable units don’t exist.</p>
<p>Not trying to be rude! But you sort of answered your own question.</p>