Discover your full potential in The University of Texas at San Antonio Honors College. The Honors College is home to the brightest, most academically driven students across all majors at UTSA. Whether you are quirky, compassionate, generous, shy, outgoing, focused, wicked smart or a combination, we know you’ll find your fit within our close-knit honors family. We focus on creating a small elite college experience at a fraction of the elite price.
Students
Residential College Beds
First-Year Scholarship
Scholarship Funding
The Honors Residential Community, located on campus in the brand-new Guadalupe Hall, is home to our first-year Honors students from across all of our programs. This community, with students of all majors, fosters an intellectually diverse and rich environment. It also allows our students to build friendships and network across majors that will serve to help them develop as individuals and professionals.
The Honors College academic counseling team provides students with advice for Honors curriculum requirements and professional coaching for experiences and opportunities. Honors Counselors are available in the Experiential Learning Lab, located in GSR 1.204. Visit our Staff page or Counselor page.
Members of the Honors College have the benefit of priority registration, which allows them to register for classes with seniors on the first day of the enrollment period, regardless of grade level.
Admission to the Honors College is offered to a select number of highly motivated and successful students who wish to take charge of their education and achieve their highest potential at UTSA.
All students accepted and in good standing within the Honors College may apply each semester for Honors College scholarships. Each year, 80 students are awarded a $1,500 Honors College Dean's Scholarship. Additionally, 40-50 other students receive awards/scholarships worth $250 - $2,500. In addition to tuition-based scholarships, students can apply for developmental awards each month that fund outside experiences such as presenting work at an academic conference, pursuing professional certifications, funding an unpaid internship, or carrying out a volunteer project.
The Honors College is the home of two scholar groups, the Top Scholar and Terry Scholar programs. These programs are designed for high-caliber students interested in academics, service, and leadership. Our students are routinely making an impact at the state and national levels. These scholarships last for 4 years, covering tuition and board, and have the additional benefit of scholars working closely together in cohorts of talented students.
The Honors College is home to the Office of Nationally Competitive Awards and Fellowships, which assists students to identify and apply for prestigious programs. From first-year to senior, Honors College students are encouraged to apply to national awards that further their career plans as well as earn students full academic scholarships to graduate school. UTSA Honors students are routinely named recipients of the National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship, the Goldwater Fellowship for undergraduate research, as well as Fulbright awards. See our list of past winners.
The Honors College offers special programs such as Citymester, Legislative Scholars in Austin, and the Archer Fellowship in Washington, D.C., which matches students with internships related to their field in government institutions, non-profits, and other organizations. Honors College study abroad programs see students learn about sustainability in Costa Rica, explore the topic of migration in Mexico, and spend the month of May in Tokyo and Kyoto. These program costs are all subsidized by scholarships for participating students.
Honors courses are taught by distinguished faculty from across UTSA’s colleges as well as by prominent members of the San Antonio community including authors, filmmakers, and industry experts. Small classes ensure that students can collaborate with renowned faculty, with examples including Dr. John Phillip Santos, the first Mexican-American Rhodes Scholar and Emmy-nominated documentary filmmaker, to Rene Zenteno, the Under Secretary in the Ministry of the Interior in Mexico.
Honors seminars see students demonstrating experience-based learning outside of the classroom, which is often done in collaboration with community partners. Students’ classes include visits to local organizations, such as blood donation centers, state prisons, and art galleries. Faculty embrace experiential teaching pedagogies which have students actively learning by doing.
The Honors College offers students the opportunity to participate in a number of different programs to further expand knowledge, especially in the realms of professional development, leadership development, and public service. Special programs are fully integrated into the Honors College curriculum, making credit transfer simple and ensuring that students are working toward Honors requirements.