Too many transferable units for CSU/UC?

<p>I know that CSU and UC only accept up to 70 transferable units.
Going over 80 transferable units will cause problems to be admitted to certain UCs such as Berkeley.</p>

<p>What if I have 79 transferable units completed by the end of my community college? Will my chance be affected by having more than 70 units but less than 80? My schools are</p>

<p>1) UC Davis
2) Calpoly SLO</p>

<p>UCD: Applications from students who have completed 80 or more transferable semester units (120 or more transferable quarter units) of combined baccalaureate institution and community college coursework are subject to review by the deans of the College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences, the College of Letters and Science and the College of Biological Sciences. Units earned through AP or IB examinations are counted separately for this purpose; AP and IB units do not put applicants at risk of being denied admission or of having an admissions decision delayed due to a dean’s review. Applicants subject to review will be admitted if a dean’s assessment is that the student is making good progress toward the baccalaureate degree and can complete the degree within the college’s maximum unit limit. All transfer applications to the College of Engineering undergo careful screening to assess the level of academic preparation for the major; the College of Engineering does not conduct a separate review of applicants who have 80 or more transferable semester units (120 or more transferable quarter units) of combined baccalaureate institution/community college work. Students who are well prepared for the majors will be admitted to the College of Engineering even if they exceed the 80/120-unit standard.</p>

<p>Are all your credits from a CCC or are they a combo of a 4year institute plus CCC classes?</p>

<p>All the credits are from community college.</p>

<p>As far as I am aware, there are no restrictions on units in terms of being considered for transfer when they ALL come from a California community college. Note that all these rule above are for students with “combined bacc-institute and community college coursework” – you only have community college coursework so this doesn’t apply to you.</p>

<p>(the bacc-institute = 4year college)</p>