Academic Planning
- Planning Resources
- Create Your Plan
- Study Abroad Plans
The Quarter Limit Policy allows students admitted to UC San Diego as new first-year students to enroll for 12 quarters (excluding summer terms). Students admitted as Transfers have 6 quarters of enrollment. If students need additional quarters, they are required to submit a completion plan to be reviewed by advisors.
To create a personalized academic plan, use the Academic Planning worksheet and save a copy.
When you create a personalized academic plan, it is a tentative plan since it could change depending on course availability, or adding or dropping courses. It is also a live document, so you can change it anytime you enroll in courses. The plan will automatically calculate units that you enter to ensure that you are meeting university requirements for minimum units.
Please make sure that you also count any units that you have transferred in. This includes community college units as well as credits earned from AP, IB, and A-Level exams.
At UC San Diego, the Colleges and academic departments have developed quarter-by-quarter academic plans for every path.
Please visit the Academic Plans website to view available plans. Select your entering year and major.
There are many things to see on the plans such as overlapping courses (marked by a double arrow) and extra notes (such as asterisks). Overlapping courses means that the course counts towards GE and major requirements. There may also be elective courses included in these plans. Elective courses count towards your overall university unit requirements.
Special Notes
You can access your degree audit through TritonLink. We strongly suggest that you download a new degree audit every time you plan to look at it. This ensures that you are looking at the most updated information in case there have been any academic changes to your record since you last downloaded your degree audit.
This is a living document and will be updated anytime you add or drop a course, change the grading option of a course, when transfer courses are posted, or when a final grade is entered. Your degree audit is split into sections by requirements:
If you need additional assistance learning how to read your degree audit, please refer to the TritonLink Degree Audit page.
If you think there is an error in your degree audit or something is not displaying correctly, contact your academic advisor via the VAC.
Using your degree audit and sample plans, you can now begin building your unique academic plan.
Use the following resources to create your plan:
To ensure your academic plan is accurate, you should schedule an appointment with your major advisor first.
Then contact your College advisor to have them review your plan as well.
To find their availability, go to VAC.ucsd.edu - Meet with Advisor tab, or visit their website.
If you are currently taking a course at UC San Diego that is a prerequisite for a course in a future quarter, the system will recognize that and allow you to enroll (the system is assuming you will pass the course).
If you do not pass the prerequisite course, at the start of the following quarter you will be dropped from the subsequent course during the prerequisite check process. So, if you do not pass the prerequisite course, you will need to update your plan accordingly.
It's never too early to start planning to study abroad! Study Abroad Advisors are available to help you plan. Visit their Advising Services.
If you plan to apply to medical or health professional schools, you need to ensure you meet appropriate program prerequisites. Visit the Health Beat Advising website for a list of prerequisites by health profession type.
Some graduate programs may require certain courses be completed for admission. Make sure to research graduate program admission requirements and take extra courses into account.
Some academic departments and programs offer minors. The requirements must include at least 28 units, including at least 20 upper-division units.
On your academic plan, include the requirements for both majors, including 10 upper-division courses (40 units) unique to each major.