UCLA doesn't offer TAG. TAG is the binding admission guarantee offered at UC Davis, Irvine, Merced, Riverside, Santa Barbara, and Santa Cruz. UCLA, Berkeley, and UC San Diego do not participate. But UCLA offers something else — the Transfer Alliance Program (TAP).
TAP isn't a guarantee. It's priority review — and it's the closest thing to a guarantee that California community college students have for UCLA. Admit rates for TAP-certified applicants run 67% to 93% depending on the community college, versus 23% for general applicants. Yet thousands of students who qualify never use it.
What TAP actually is
TAP is a priority admission review program run jointly by UCLA Undergraduate Admission, the UCLA College, and the Center for Community College Partnerships. It launched in 1985 as a pilot between UCLA and Santa Monica College and has grown to 56 member community colleges today.
TAP-certified applicants receive priority consideration for admission to majors within three specific UCLA schools:
- UCLA College of Letters and Science (the largest — absorbs 85-90% of transfer admits)
- UCLA Luskin School of Public Affairs (Public Affairs pre-major)
- UCLA Fielding School of Public Health
- UCLA School of Education & Social Transformation
TAP does not apply to Samueli School of Engineering, School of Nursing, School of Theater Film & TV, School of Arts & Architecture, or Herb Alpert School of Music. If you're applying to one of those, TAP can't help you.
The killer feature: the alternate major benefit
This is what makes TAP worth caring about. Non-TAP applicants to UCLA can list a primary and alternate major, but UCLA does not review the alternate. If you're denied from your primary, you're just denied.
TAP-certified applicants get actual two-track review. If you're denied from your primary major, UCLA automatically reviews you for your alternate major. That means:
- Two real shots at admission, not one
- You can apply to an impacted major (like Psychology or Cognitive Science) with a safer fallback (like Anthropology or Geography)
- You must complete major prep for both majors by spring
- Alternate major can be changed until January 31 by contacting UCLA directly
Not every UCLA major can be listed as an alternate. These majors are too impacted to serve as a TAP alternate: Biology, Business Economics, Communication, Economics, Education & Social Transformation, Global Studies, Human Biology & Society, Math/Economics, Math Financial Actuarial, Political Science, Psychology, Public Health, Sociology, and Statistics & Data Science.
The smartest TAP alternates are less-impacted College majors where a TAP-boosted file genuinely moves the needle: Linguistics, Cognitive Science (itself), Anthropology, History, English, Philosophy, Art History, Geography, Gender Studies, MCDB, Applied Linguistics.
Other TAP benefits
- Priority admission review for the eligible schools
- $5,000 renewable TAP Scholarship ($10,000 total over two years) for admitted, financially eligible students
- Auto-entry to UCLA College Honors — no separate application scrutiny if TAP-certified
- UCLA library access while still at your community college — 8 libraries, 10-item checkout
- Pre-admission advising from the Center for Community College Partnerships
How to qualify for TAP certification
TAP certification requirements vary slightly by community college, but the general bar looks like this:
- Enrollment at a TAP member CC. There are 56. If your CC isn't on the list, you can't get TAP.
- Honors program completion. ~15 units of honors/scholars coursework (typically 5-6 classes)
- Grades of A or B in all honors courses
- Courses across multiple departments, completed over at least 2 semesters
- 9 honors units by end of fall before transfer (typical)
- GPA threshold varies by college, typically 3.2-3.5
- TAP Applicant Agreement Form filed in February or early March through your CC's honors coordinator
Certification itself is handled by your CC's honors coordinator, not by you. You don't apply to TAP the way you apply to TAG. You complete your CC's honors program, and your honors coordinator certifies you to UCLA.
The 56 TAP member community colleges
If your CC is on this list, TAP is available to you. If it's not, TAP is not available — this is a hard requirement:
American River, Antelope Valley, Cabrillo, Cañada, Cerritos, Cerro Coso, Chaffey, Citrus, City College of San Francisco, Clovis, College of San Mateo, College of the Canyons, Cosumnes River, Crafton Hills, Cypress, De Anza, East Los Angeles, El Camino, Foothill, Fullerton, Glendale, Irvine Valley, Las Positas, Long Beach City, Los Angeles City, Los Angeles Harbor, Los Angeles Mission, Los Angeles Pierce, Los Angeles Southwest, Los Angeles Valley, Los Medanos, MiraCosta, Mission, Moorpark, Moreno Valley, Mt. San Antonio, Mt. San Jacinto, Norco, Orange Coast, Pasadena City, Reedley, Rio Hondo, Riverside City, Sacramento City, Saddleback, San Bernardino Valley, San Diego City, San Diego Mesa, San Diego Miramar, Santa Ana, Santa Barbara City, Santa Monica, Santiago Canyon, Skyline, West Los Angeles, West Valley.
Diablo Valley, College of Marin, Berkeley City College, Ohlone, Grossmont, and Palomar are NOT TAP members. If you attend one of these and your goal is UCLA, TAP is off the table.
Admit rates with TAP
| Community College | TAP Admit Rate | General Admit Rate |
|---|---|---|
| Santa Monica College (Fall 2023) | 93% | ~23% |
| Pasadena City College (typical) | ~78% | ~32% |
| De Anza College (typical) | ~70% | ~21% |
| El Camino College (typical) | ~75% | ~35% |
| Mt. San Antonio College (typical) | ~67% | ~30% |
These are averaged estimates from publicly available UCLA data. Your specific TAP rate depends on your GPA, your major choice, your honors program performance, and the broader competitiveness of your cycle. But the pattern is clear — TAP is transformative.
The most common TAP mistakes
- Listing a restricted major as alternate. Wasting the entire benefit. Check the restricted list before submitting.
- Not completing major prep for BOTH majors. If your alternate major review requires courses you haven't taken, TAP can't help you there either.
- Missing the TAP Applicant Agreement Form deadline in February — this is different from the UC app deadline.
- Starting the honors program too late. 2-semester minimum means you can't start honors in your last semester and get certified.
- Earning a C in an honors course. You need A or B grades.
- Assuming TAP protects Engineering or CS applicants. It doesn't. TAP is for the College, Public Affairs, Public Health, and Ed & Social Transformation only.
- Falling short of 15 honors units by end of spring. Plan backwards from your transfer term.
TAP strategy: the playbook
- Confirm your CC is TAP-member. If not, stop reading and look at your other options.
- Enroll in your CC's honors program your first semester. Not later. You need two full semesters minimum.
- Plan your honors coursework strategically. Work with your honors coordinator to make sure your honors courses also serve your major prep or IGETC where possible.
- Maintain A/B grades in every honors course. One C disqualifies you from certification.
- Pick a primary and alternate major wisely. Check the restricted list. Complete major prep for both.
- File the TAP Applicant Agreement Form through your honors coordinator in February.
- Don't slack in spring. Your TAU (Transfer Academic Update) reports spring grades that get factored in.
The bottom line
TAP is one of the most valuable tools available to California community college students, and it's criminally underused. If your community college is on the TAP member list, your target school is UCLA, and you're pursuing a College, Public Affairs, Public Health, or Ed & Social Transformation major — TAP should be your plan A. The honors program adds work, but it also pays off in nearly every direction: better preparation, TAP certification, scholarship eligibility, and an admit rate that can be 3-4x higher than the general pool.
Plan it from your first semester at CC, not your last.