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The Credit Hours Trap: Why 3-Year European Degrees Get Rejected by US Grad Schools

FastGPACalc Editorial Team

The Missing Year

You are an international student from the United Kingdom (or India, or Australia). In your country, a standard Bachelor's degree is completed in 3 years.

You graduate with Honors. You apply for a Master's degree at an Ivy League university in the United States. You receive an immediate, automated rejection email: "Applicant does not possess the equivalent of a U.S. Bachelor's Degree."

You are holding a literal Bachelor's degree in your hand. How can they say you don't have one?

The 120-Credit Rule

In the United States, a Bachelor's degree is strictly defined by time and volume. A standard US degree requires 4 years and exactly 120 Credit Hours.

When you send your 3-year European transcript to an evaluator like WES (World Education Services), they count the hours you spent in the classroom. A 3-year degree usually tops out around 90 US Credit Hours.

WES generates a report and sends it to the Ivy League school. The report says: "The applicant has the equivalent of three years of undergraduate study." Because you are missing 30 credits (the 4th year), the US university legally cannot classify you as a college graduate. You are technically considered a college senior.

How to Fix the 3-Year Trap

If you have a 3-year degree, you have two options:
  • The Master's Bridge: Complete a 1-year Master's degree (or Post-Graduate Diploma) in your home country before applying to the US. WES will combine your 3-year Bachelor's + 1-year Master's = 4 Years (120 Credits). You will now be eligible for US Graduate programs.
  • Target Specific Universities: Not all US universities are strict. While Harvard and Stanford demand 4 years, many excellent state universities (and business schools) have updated their policies to explicitly accept 3-year degrees from the UK, India, and Australia. You must comb through the admissions website to find their exact policy on "3-Year International Degrees" before paying the application fee.
  • Check Degree Equivalency

    Are you applying from Europe or India? See if your degree translates to a 4-year US equivalent.

    Check Equivalency