Best college with UNLIMITED ap credit policy?

<p>A lot of 'em have very sneaky asterisks that limit you to gaining x amount of credits from AP. What’re some of the best with unlimited (or close to) policies?</p>

<p>any examples of these sneaky schools? some schools dont even give you credit, only placement.</p>

<p>The University of Washington allows unlimited credit.</p>

<p>[Advanced</a> Placement (AP) Policies | University of Washington](<a href=“http://admit.washington.edu/Admission/Freshmen/College/AP]Advanced”>http://admit.washington.edu/Admission/Freshmen/College/AP)</p>

<p>However… the credit you enter with cannot be used in lieu of graduation requirements.</p>

<p>University of Maryland College Park is really generous with their credit-giving and has no limit. I’m going in with 50 credits and have a friend going in with 57 (one class short of junior status).
[University</a> of Maryland Undergraduate Catalog 2011-2012](<a href=“The University of Maryland | A Preeminent Public Research University”>The University of Maryland | A Preeminent Public Research University)</p>

<p>For a very competitive school, Rice University is generous with its AP credit. There is no ceiling on credit that can be extended and quite a few courses can count toward distribution credits, not just elective credits.</p>

<p>[AP</a> Credit | Office of the Registrar | Rice University](<a href=“http://registrar.rice.edu/students/ap_credit/]AP”>Advanced Placement (AP) Credit | Office of the Registrar | Rice University)</p>

<p>Public universities in California seem to be quite generous with AP credit for credit units, but they may be substantially less generous with AP credit for specific subject requirements (e.g. at Berkeley, the physics, chemistry, and history majors do not accept AP physics, chemistry, and history credit to fulfill major requirements).</p>

<p>University of Michigan is quite generous. I worked it out the other day, and given that I don’t get below a 3 on any of my exams, I’d have 58 credits if I went there. including dual enrollment however, I’d have about 80, but I’m not sure about their policies on community college credit.</p>

<p>Colorado State University is quite generous with amount of credit per test, and at least according to their website, there’s no cap on how much you can have.</p>