Texas

This forum made possible through the generous support of SDN members, donors, and sponsors. Thank you.

muirite

Full Member
7+ Year Member
Joined
Dec 7, 2015
Messages
20
Reaction score
4
Points
4,601
  1. Pre-Medical
Advertisement - Members don't see this ad
Is it harder to get in to med school in texas?

I am not a Texas res. I would like to end up there. I worked for a company that had locations in texas and i spent about 20 months there split over 40 months and LOVED it. I tried to get placed full time at one of the Texas locations but it did not work out. I am not concerned about out of state cost I am from CA so the cost would be about the same.
 
Search the forum here about Texas and residence. We have 11 schools, low tuition rates, and low cost of living. It's only hard if you're applying out-of-state, because Texas requires a high percentage of medical school spots to be designated to in-state applicants. I think the exception is Baylor, because they are private.

What city are you thinking of relocating to? 🙂
 
The TX schools are required to give 90% of their seats to instate applicants. Even Baylor is required to give 70-80% of their seats to instate applicants. Texas is a great state if you are a resident.
 
What city are you thinking of relocating to? 🙂

I liked Galveston a LOT and Ft Worth, Houston was not so bad. My love was far west texas near big bend.
 
If you do become a resident of Texas prior to applying to medical school it is A LOT easier to get in. If you're set on Texas, it may be worth it to find a new job and relocate. You would need much higher stats than the school medians to get into Texas schools as OOS.
 
I was accepted to some TX schools as an OOS applicant, but it was certainly unexpected as a maximum of 10% of the incoming class can be OOS. They don't necessarily have to fulfill that 10%, it's just the absolute max. Do the math. That means with a class size of 200, only 20 can be OOS. Which means they'll accept limited OOS-ers so they don't accidentally surpass that (even OOS tuition is cheaper than most IS schools for IS residents).

Move there and work for a couple years if you're serious about it.
 
I liked Galveston a LOT and Ft Worth, Houston was not so bad. My love was far west texas near big bend.

Ahh, Galveston has been just a tourist spot for me due to the beaches. I travel to Fort Worth often and enjoy it much more than commuting around Dallas. UNT is a great school and will prepare you well, that's for sure.
 
It is only possible if you fill out TMDSAS. I was accepted to multiple Texas schools this cycle as a CA resident with no ties to the state. I have had some of my most positive experiences this cycle in Texas! 🙂
 
Top Bottom