NJCAA Wins Landmark Victory as NCAA Approves Eligibility Reforms for Two-Year College Students
CHARLOTTE, NC – The National Junior College Athletic Association has announced a groundbreaking victory as a series of long-advocated academic eligibility and transfer reforms impacting two-year college student-athletes have officially been approved by the NCAA Division I governance structure, marking a major victory for the NJCAA's nationwide #SameGameSameRules campaign.
The approved changes stem from years of advocacy by the NJCAA and its member institutions, with 16 national coaches' associations lending their support to the #SameGameSamerules campaign in March of 2025. Together they championed a more equitable transfer landscape for student-athletes attending two-year colleges. The reforms remove several longstanding, inequitable barriers that NJCAA leaders argued unfairly impacted community college athletes compared to their four-year counterparts.
The changes, adopted by the NCAA Division I Cabinet on June 24, include significant modifications to residency, grade point average (GPA) and transferable credit-hour requirements for two-year college transfers and are expected to immediately impact future transfer pathways for student-athletes nationwide.
"These changes represent one of the most meaningful steps toward transfer equity for two-year college student-athletes in recent history," NJCAA President and CEO, Christopher Parker, said. "The #SameGameSameRules campaign has always centered around fairness, opportunity and student-athlete success. Today's decision validates the voices of thousands of student-athletes, coaches, administrators and supporters who believed the rules governing two-year transfers should reflect the same opportunities afforded elsewhere in higher education athletics."
The NJCAA's #SameGameSameRules initiative was launched to raise awareness about transfer legislation that disproportionately impacted two-year college student-athletes and institutions. The campaign emphasized that student-athletes competing at two-year colleges play the same sports, pursue the same educational goals and deserve the same pathways to opportunity.
Among the most impactful change approved is the reduction of the transferable GPA requirement from 2.5 to 2.0 for two-year transfers. The reforms also restructure transferable credit-hour requirements to better align with actual terms of enrollment and mirror the requirements for four-year college transfers.
Under the new legislation, transfer credit-hour requirements will now be based on enrollment history.
In another key development already approved for the 2025-26 academic year, the NCAA eliminated the previous 3.30 GPA requirement tied to the Academic Progress Rate (APR) transfer exclusion for student-athletes transferring from four-year institutions to two-year colleges. Under the revised rule, student-athletes must now simply leave their previous institution academically eligible.
NJCAA leaders said that previous APR-related concerns had discouraged some four-year institutions from supporting transfers to two-year colleges because of potential APR penalties tied to postseason eligibility and revenue-sharing considerations.
Additional approved reforms modify requirements for four-two-four transfers, aligning those standards with two-four transfer rules based on a student-athlete's original qualifier or nonqualifier status.
No changes were made to existing rules limiting physical education credits applicable toward GPA or degree requirements, and competition while enrolled less than full-time will continue to count as a full-time term for Division I academic eligibility purposes.
"These student-athletes play the same games, put in the same work and pursue the same dreams," Parker said. "These changes are about access, fairness and recognizing the realities of today's student-athlete journey. Two-year colleges remain one of the most important access points in higher education and collegiate athletics. We are proud to continue advocating for policies that support opportunity and student-athlete achievement."
The National Fastpitch Coaches Association led the charge pushing NCAA leadership for meaningful change. More information about the NJCAA's #SameGameSameRules initiative can be found at NJCAA.org/SameGameSameRules.
