Cal State Approves 3-Year Bachelor’s Degrees Across All 22 Campuses
California State University, the largest public college system in the U.S., just voted to allow (PDF File) the creation of bachelor’s degrees that can be completed in as little as three years. This is a massive shift that could reshape how working adults and community college transfers earn a credential.
The first shortened degrees could launch as early as fall 2027, though 2028 is more likely.
CSU trustees voted unanimously last week to authorize three new shortened degree types across the 22-campus system:
The new degrees require a minimum of 90 units, compared to 120 for a traditional bachelor’s. They sit alongside (not in place of) existing four-year offerings, and individual campuses choose whether to launch them.
What’s next: Faculty at CSU’s 22 campuses can begin building the curriculums this fall. The first shortened degrees could debut in fall 2027, though 2028 is more likely. Trustees also dropped the rule requiring students to earn at least 30 units at the campus issuing their degree, a change aimed at returning students who started elsewhere in the system.
How This Connects: Cal State is now the largest public system to formally adopt the model The College Investor tracked earlier this year, when nearly 60 colleges were already developing or offering three-year bachelor’s programs at roughly 90 credit hours. That earlier wave was driven by accreditor changes (every major regional accreditor has now reversed its opposition to the shorter programs) and state action, including Indiana’s law requiring public bachelor’s-granting institutions to build at least one three-year program. Utah created a new “bachelor’s of applied studies” category in the same 90–120 credit range CSU just adopted.
The financial case for students is straightforward: cutting a year off the degree can reduce total cost by roughly 25%. With one in three college students never earning a degree, faster completion paths may matter as much for finishing as for saving.
The catch, as our earlier reporting noted, is that almost all approved three-year programs to date sit in professional and technical fields (criminal justice, cybersecurity, hospitality, applied studies) not the humanities or hard sciences. CSU’s new categories follow that same pattern by design.
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