Accessibility Notice

CU ºù«ÍÞÊÓƵ is committed to making information and resources available for all users. SomeÌýdata and reports are provided via tools that are currently not fully accessible, so assistive technologies may not properly interact with the information.Ìý We are working to improve the accessibility of our website and the resources we provide. If you have trouble accessing or using any of the data or reports, please contact data accessibility supportÌýor call 303-735-4357 to request assistance.

Graduation rate calculations start with a cohort of entering freshmen and follows them forward in time, asking what percent earned degrees in a given time period.ÌýThis information is updated mid-fall semester.

Fall 2024ÌýHighlights

Single page print out for those wanting an "at a glance" view of the data.

Student Success ProfileÌý(±Ê¶Ù¹ó)

Overall

The overall 6-year graduation rate was 74% for full-time freshmen entering in 2018, the most recent class to have had a full 6 years to graduate. ÌýThis is one percentage point below the rates for theprevious two cohorts, which were the highest ever.

By Residency

The 6-year graduation rate for Colorado residents also dropped a point below the previous cohort’s all time high, to 78%.Ìý

The rate for non-residents was again 71%, equaling the all-time high set by the previous two cohorts.

By Gender

The graduation rate for female students was 77%, a 2-point drop from the all-time high from last year. Males graduated at a 71% rate, a 1-point decrease after the three previous cohorts each set all-time highs.

Black, Indigenous, and People of Color (BIPOC)

The 6-year graduation rate for BIPOC students in the entering class of 2018 was 71%, a 2-point decrease from last year’s 6-year cohort. This follows 3 consecutive years of increases; the high point before those 3 cohorts was 66%. The gap between BIPOC students and white students increased to 4 percentage points, one more than last year.Ìý

Pell Grant recipients

The 6-year graduation rate for recipients of federal Pell Grants (a proxy for lower income students) entering in 2018 was 67%, a 2-point drop after 3 consecutive years setting all-time highs.Ìý

First-Generation Students

The six-year graduation rate for first-generation college students in the 2018 cohort was 65%, a 2-percentage-point drop from 2017, but equal to the former high attained in 3 prior years.Ìý

Overall

The 4-year graduation rate for the class entering in 2020 was 59%, an all-time high, and 2 points higher than last year. Ìý Ìý

By Residency

The 4-year grad rate for Colorado residents entering in 2020 was 60%, 2 points higher than last year, and 1 point below the all-time highs set by the 2017 and 2018 cohorts. Non-residents also showed a 2-point increase over last year, to 59%, and set an all-time high for the second consecutive year.Ìý

Black, Indigenous, and People of Color (BIPOC)

The 4-year rate for BIPOC students was 52%, a 1-point drop from the prior two cohorts. ÌýThe record high is 55%, achieved by the 2017 cohort.Ìý

Pell Grant Recipients & First-Generation Students

The 4-year rate for Pell recipients increased 3 points to 49%, equaling the rate from 2 years ago and 2 points off the record 51% set by the 2017 cohort. The rate for first-generation students remained at 46% for the third consecutive year. The record for first-generation students is 50%, set by the 2017 cohort.Ìý

One-Year Retention Rates

The one-year (2nd fall) retention rate for freshmen entering in 2023 was 90%, an all-time high for the second consecutive year. Ìý

The resident 2nd-fall retention rate remained at 90%, equaling the all-time high from last year and several earlier cohorts.Ìý

Non-residents also retained at a rate of 90%, a record high and 2 points higher than the prior two cohorts, who had set the previous high.Ìý

BIPOC students also set a record high at 88%, 1 point higher than last year’s previous record.Ìý

Pell recipients’ 2nd-fall retention rate was 85%, a one-point increase from last year, and equaling the record high set 9 years ago. ÌýFirst-generation students also gained one point, to 85%, a record high. ÌýÌý

Two-Year retention rates

The two-year (3rd fall) retention rate for freshmen entering in 2022 was 84%, an all-time high for the second consecutive year.ÌýÌý

The 3rd-fall rate for residents was 84%, a point higher than last year but still 1 point below the record high set 6 years ago. Non-residents retained at 83%, an all-time high, and 3 points higher than the previous record set by the previous two cohorts. ÌýÌý

The two-year retention rate for BIPOC students increased 3 points, to 80%, one point shy of the record set 5 years ago.ÌýÌý

The two-year retention rate of Pell recipients gained 2 points, to 76%, equaling the 2nd highest ever but 2 points below the all-time high set 5 years ago. The 3rd-fall retention of first-generation students jumped 6 points, to 76%, equaling the record.Ìý

Ìý

Detailed Reports and Data

Retention andÌýGraduation Rates

  • by entry college and ethnicity, gender, first-generation status and other various groupsÌý
  • - student tracking tool (the WEDGE file)

Graduation Rates

  • by full/part-time status, entry term and other various groups