The University of British Columbia is one of those rare places where world-class academics meet a setting so stunning it can genuinely distract you from studying. With roughly 61,000 undergraduates at its Vancouver campus, UBC is a major research university — Canada's third-ranked globally — but the experience is defined less by its size than by its geography: a 1,000-acre campus on a forested peninsula jutting into the Pacific, with mountains across the water and old-growth trails minutes from the lecture halls. UBC competes in USports' CWUAA conference and draws students from over 160 countries, making it one of the most internationally diverse universities in North America. This is a school for students who want big-university resources and research opportunities but also crave an outdoor lifestyle and a campus that feels like its own small city removed from the urban grind.
Location & Setting
UBC sits on the western tip of the Point Grey peninsula, about 30 minutes from downtown Vancouver by bus but psychologically a world away. The campus is bordered by Pacific Spirit Regional Park — 750 hectares of temperate rainforest with trails for running, biking, and walking — and by beaches on three sides, including the famous Wreck Beach. Step off campus to the east and you're in the affluent residential neighborhoods of Point Grey and Kitsilano; head downtown and you've got one of the most livable cities in the world, with world-class food (especially Asian cuisine), a waterfront seawall for running and cycling, and Whistler two hours north for skiing. The setting is genuinely spectacular — on clear days, the North Shore mountains are right there across Burrard Inlet — but Vancouver's cost of living is among the highest in Canada, which shapes everything from housing to social life.
Where Students Live & How They Get Around
UBC is a mix of residential and commuter. First-year students are guaranteed on-campus housing, and about 12,000 students live in residence across a range of options — traditional dorms, suite-style buildings, and newer apartment complexes. After first year, many students move to off-campus apartments in Kitsilano, Point Grey, or along the Broadway corridor, though on-campus housing is available for upper years too. A car is unnecessary and honestly a hassle — parking is expensive and limited. Most students rely on the excellent bus system (the 99 B-Line and R4 are lifelines to downtown), and the campus itself is walkable and very bikeable. The new SkyTrain extension to UBC, under construction, will be transformative when it opens. Weather-wise, expect rain — a lot of it — from October through March. Vancouver doesn't get harsh winters (rarely below freezing), but the grey drizzle is relentless, and you'll want good rain gear. When the sun comes out in spring and summer, though, the campus is almost absurdly beautiful, and students flood the beaches and trails.
Campus Culture & Community
UBC's size means there's no single culture — it's more like a collection of overlapping communities. The campus has over 350 student clubs, and that's where most students find their people, whether through cultural organizations (there are dozens, reflecting the diverse student body), outdoor recreation clubs (the UBC Varsity Outdoor Club is legendary and has its own backcountry lodge), or academic societies. Greek life exists — there's a row of fraternity and sorority houses along Wesbrook Mall — but it's a small slice of social life, not a dominant force. Weekends might mean heading downtown to Granville Street, exploring Vancouver's craft brewery scene, hiking the Grouse Grind, or staying on campus for events at the student union building (the Nest). The sheer size of UBC means it can feel anonymous if you don't actively seek out community — this is a genuine challenge, and students who thrive here tend to be self-directed about building their social networks. School spirit exists but is more subdued than at American universities; Storm the Wall (a multi-sport relay race) and Day of the Longboat (a massive canoe race) are the traditions that actually get people fired up, more so than varsity game attendance.
Mission & Values
UBC brands itself around sustainability, global citizenship, and Indigenous engagement — and these aren't just marketing. The campus has significant Indigenous programming, including the Indian Residential School History and Dialogue Centre and the First Nations longhouse. Sustainability initiatives are visible everywhere, from green building standards to the campus farm. The culture leans progressive and globally minded, which tracks with Vancouver broadly. That said, UBC is a large research university, not a small liberal arts college — students won't feel individually "known" by the institution in the same way. Support systems exist (academic advising, wellness resources, peer mentoring), but you have to seek them out. The school invests heavily in undergraduate research opportunities, co-op programs, and career services, reflecting a culture that values both intellectual exploration and practical outcomes.
Student Body
UBC's student body is strikingly international — roughly 30% of undergraduates come from outside Canada, with particularly strong representation from China, India, South Korea, and the broader Asia-Pacific region. Among domestic students, the draw is heavily British Columbian, with a significant contingent from across Canada. The vibe is hard to pin down because it's so varied, but broadly: academically serious, outdoorsy, globally aware, and somewhat pre-professional. You'll find hardcore researchers, aspiring doctors, ski bums who happen to be engineering students, and committed activists, sometimes in the same person. The diversity is real and visible — the food options on campus alone reflect it — but like many large universities, social groups can be somewhat siloed along cultural and program lines.
Academics
UBC is genuinely strong across an unusually wide range of fields. The Sauder School of Business is one of Canada's best. The sciences are formidable — biology, chemistry, computer science, and earth sciences all benefit from the university's massive research funding (over $900 million annually). Engineering is highly ranked, and the Faculty of Forestry is world-leading, which makes sense given the setting. The humanities and social sciences are excellent too — English, philosophy, political science, and Asian studies all have strong reputations. For pre-health students, UBC has its own medical school and strong pathways into health professions. The Faculty of Land and Food Systems is distinctive, and the School of Kinesiology is directly relevant for student-athletes interested in sports science. Class sizes vary enormously: first-year lectures can have 200-400 students (organic chemistry in a 300-seat hall is a rite of passage), but upper-year seminars shrink to 20-30. The student-faculty ratio is about 18:1. Co-op programs are robust and well-established, with placements across industries. Study abroad participation is solid, with exchange agreements at over 200 partner universities worldwide. The academic culture is more collaborative than cutthroat, though pre-med and commerce can feel competitive.
Athletics & Campus Sports Culture
UBC Thunderbirds compete in USports' CWUAA conference across roughly 25 varsity sports, and the field hockey program has been one of the most successful in Canadian university athletics — multiple national championships. The Doug Mitchell Thunderbird Sports Centre and the new aquatic centre are excellent facilities. That said, varsity athletics at UBC don't carry the same cultural weight as at American NCAA schools — you won't see 50,000 fans at football games. Student-athletes are respected but don't occupy the celebrity tier they might at a big D1 school. Intramural and recreational sports are massive — UBC's rec program is one of the largest in Canada, and the facilities (gym, pool, fields) are top-notch. For a field hockey player, the combination of a strong varsity program, excellent training facilities, and a mild climate that allows outdoor training nearly year-round is a real draw.
What Else Should You Know
Housing costs are the elephant in the room — Vancouver is one of the most expensive cities in North America, and off-campus rent can be punishing. Budget carefully. UBC's co-op and work-study programs help, but it's still a financial reality to plan for. The campus can feel isolated despite being in a major city — that peninsula location means you're not casually walking to urban amenities, and the bus ride downtown adds up. On the flip side, that isolation creates a self-contained campus community with its own restaurants, shops, and even a movie theatre. For American students, UBC offers world-class education at tuition rates that, even at international student levels (~$45,000–55,000 CAD depending on program), can be competitive with US private universities. The campus itself is undergoing massive development — new student housing, academic buildings, and eventually the SkyTrain — so the UBC of four years from now will look different from today. Finally, if you love the outdoors, it's hard to imagine a better university setting: skiing, hiking, kayaking, surfing (yes, surfing — Tofino is a drive away), and trail running are all part of the lifestyle here.
| High | Low | |
|---|---|---|
| January | 45° | 34° |
| April | 58° | 42° |
| July | 73° | 55° |
| October | 57° | 44° |
| # | Name | Position | Year | Height | Hometown | High School |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Alessandra Uy | Goalkeeper | 1 | 5-4 | Richmond, B.C. | - |
| 2 | Rayna Dhaliwal | Defender | 1 | 5-7 | Vancouver, B.C. | - |
| 3 | Wynn Brown | Defender | 2 | 5-8 | Vancouver, B.C. | - |
| 4 | Thora Rae | Forward | 5 | 5-7 | Vancouver, B.C. | Sir Winston Churchill Secondary |
| 5 | Hazel Taylor | Midfielder | 4 | 5-4 | Calgary, Alta. | Sir Winston Churchill High School |
| 6 | Laurien Bruijning | Midfielder | 1 | 5-5 | Hilversum, Netherlands | - |
| 8 | Kenzie Girgis | Midfielder | 4 | 5-2 | Ottawa, Ont. | Glebe Collegiate Institute |
| 9 | Birkley Anderson | Defender | 5 | 5-4 | Duncan, B.C. | Shawnigan Lake |
| 10 | Sydney Le | Forward | 2 | 5-6 | North Vancouver, B.C. | - |
| 11 | Riley Brown | Forward | 4 | 5-8 | North Vancouver, B.C. | Handsworth Secondary |
| 12 | Shyana Ringma | Defender | 4 | 5-5 | Victoria, B.C. | Mount Douglas Secondary |
| 13 | Kaia Cooper | Forward | 5 | 5-7 | North Vancouver, B.C. | Handsworth Secondary |
| 14 | Russem Thind | Forward | 2 | 5-3 | Surrey, B.C. | Fraser Heights Secondary |
| 15 | Shannon Stelling | Midfielder | 2 | 5-7 | Vancouver, B.C. | - |
| 16 | Prabnoor Hundal | Midfielder | 2 | 5-7 | White Rock, B.C. | - |
| 17 | Kaitlyn Pennefather | Defender | 3 | 5-9 | North Vancouver, B.C. | Handsworth Secondary School |
| 18 | Mikayla Stelling | Midfielder | 5 | 5-5 | Vancouver, B.C. | Little Flower Academy |
| 20 | Maia Lawrence | Forward | 1 | 5-6 | Victoria, B.C. | - |
| 21 | Olivia Okano | Defender | 1 | 5-4 | North Vancouver, B.C. | - |
| 22 | Sukhman Hundal | Defender | 2 | 5-5 | Surrey, B.C. | - |
| 28 | Pascale Pottier | Goalkeeper | 1 | 5-6 | Sevenoaks, England | - |
| 30 | Robyn Goh | Goalkeeper | 3 | 5-4 | North Vancouver, B.C. | École Windsor Secondary School |