The University of Iowa is a large public research university in Iowa City with about 21,691 undergraduates, and it punches well above what you might expect from a school in the middle of the heartland. Its defining feature is an unusual combination: it's a Big Ten powerhouse with serious athletic culture *and* home to arguably the most celebrated creative writing program in the world — the Iowa Writers' Workshop, which has produced 17 Pulitzer Prize winners. Iowa is for the student-athlete who wants a big-school gameday experience, legitimate academic depth (especially in writing, healthcare, and the liberal arts), and a college town that genuinely revolves around the university. If you thrive in a place where 70,000 people show up on Saturdays and your Tuesday night poetry reading is also packed, this is your school.
Location & Setting
Iowa City is a textbook college town — one of the best in the country, and residents will tell you that without hesitation. The city of about 75,000 people (swelling past 100,000 with students) sits in eastern Iowa, roughly equidistant from Chicago, Minneapolis, and Kansas City, none of which is exactly close. The campus spreads across 1,880 acres on both sides of the Iowa River, giving it a natural dividing line between east campus (liberal arts, downtown) and west campus (hospitals, athletics, engineering). Step off campus to the east and you're immediately on the Pedestrian Mall — "the Ped Mall" — a car-free downtown strip of restaurants, bookstores, bars, and coffee shops that feels like it was designed specifically for college students. Iowa City was named a UNESCO City of Literature, and you can feel it: independent bookstores like Prairie Lights are cultural landmarks, not afterthoughts. The surrounding area is flat farmland, but Iowa City itself has a surprisingly cosmopolitan, progressive feel for a small midwestern city.
Where Students Live & How They Get Around
Freshmen are required to live on campus, and most do in the residence halls clustered on the east side — Burge, Catlett, and Petersen are the big ones. After freshman year, the vast majority move off campus into apartments or houses in neighborhoods near downtown, especially around the Iowa Avenue and Burlington Street corridors. There's a strong off-campus housing culture, and rent is affordable compared to most college towns. You don't need a car — campus is walkable, the Cambus system (free buses running continuous loops) is heavily used, and biking is common. A car is helpful if you want to get out of Iowa City on weekends, but for daily life it's unnecessary. Weather shapes everything here: winters are genuinely cold (below zero is not unusual in January), and students adapt with tunnels between buildings, layers, and a general midwestern stoicism about it. Falls are gorgeous, and the walk along the river in October is one of those college memories people carry with them.
Campus Culture & Community
Iowa's social scene is anchored by two pillars: sports and the downtown bar scene. The Ped Mall and surrounding blocks are packed on Thursday, Friday, and Saturday nights, and the bar culture is real — Iowa has a well-earned reputation as a party school, though that label undersells everything else going on. Greek life exists (roughly 15-18% of undergrads participate), but it's one option among many, not the dominant social force. Plenty of students build their social lives around dorm floors, athletic teams, club sports, or the nearly 500 student organizations on campus. The culture is generally friendly and unpretentious — midwestern warmth is a real thing here, and students tend to be approachable and community-oriented rather than cutthroat. The tradition students care most about is Hawkeye football: Kinnick Stadium on a Saturday is an experience that genuinely bonds the campus. The newer tradition of "The Wave" — where the entire stadium turns to wave at children in the adjacent University of Iowa Stead Family Children's Hospital — has become one of the most emotionally powerful moments in college sports. It happens at the end of the first quarter of every home game, and it will wreck you every single time.
Mission & Values
Iowa was a pioneer in inclusion long before it was fashionable — it was the first public university to admit men and women on an equal basis (1855) and one of the first to award law degrees to African Americans. That historical commitment to access and equity still runs through the institution's identity. As a large state research university, Iowa's mission leans toward breadth: producing well-rounded citizens, advancing research, and serving the state. The sheer size means you won't automatically feel "known" — you have to seek out smaller communities within the larger institution, whether that's an honors program, a research lab, a student org, or your athletic team. Student-athletes often find that their team becomes their primary community and support system, which can be a real strength.
Student Body
Iowa draws heavily from in-state (roughly 55-60% of undergrads are Iowans), with significant numbers from Illinois, Minnesota, Wisconsin, and other neighboring states. Out-of-state and international enrollment has grown. The typical Iowa student is friendly, down-to-earth, and not flashy — think jeans-and-Hawkeye-gear more than designer labels. Politically, the campus leans moderate-to-liberal within a state that has trended conservative, which creates an interesting dynamic. Racial and ethnic diversity is improving but still limited — Iowa City itself is more diverse than the surrounding area, and the university has invested in recruitment and support programs. You'll find a mix of pre-professional students grinding toward med school, creative types drawn by the writing and arts programs, and a large contingent of students who are simply proud to be Hawkeyes.
Academics
Iowa's standout program is the Iowa Writers' Workshop, the first and most prestigious MFA program in creative writing in the country — it's graduate-level, but its presence elevates the entire English and creative writing ecosystem for undergrads too. The undergraduate creative writing program, Nonfiction Writing Program, and literary translation are all exceptional. Beyond writing, Iowa's strongest areas include healthcare-related fields: the Carver College of Medicine, College of Nursing, College of Pharmacy, and College of Public Health are all well-regarded, and the University of Iowa Hospitals & Clinics — one of the largest university-owned teaching hospitals in the country — means pre-med and health science students have unparalleled clinical exposure right on campus. Engineering (especially biomedical and industrial), psychology, communication studies, business (Tippie College), and education are also solid. The general education requirements follow a distribution model across natural sciences, social sciences, humanities, and diversity/inclusion courses. With a student-to-faculty ratio of about 16:1, large introductory lectures (200-400 students) are common in the first two years, but upper-level courses shrink significantly, and Iowa's faculty are genuinely accessible during office hours. Research opportunities are available — Iowa spent $818 million on research in fiscal year 2021 — and undergrads can get involved, especially in STEM and health sciences. Study abroad participation is decent, with programs in 60+ countries.
Athletics & Campus Sports Culture
Athletics are central to identity at Iowa — this is not a school where sports are a sideshow. Football is king: Kinnick Stadium seats about 69,000, and it sells out regularly. The atmosphere is among the best in the Big Ten, with the black-and-gold "swarm" visible across campus on gameday mornings. Wrestling is Iowa's other crown jewel — the Hawkeyes are one of the most decorated programs in NCAA history, with 24 team national championships, and dual meets at Carver-Hawkeye Arena routinely draw 13,000+ fans, which is unheard of for collegiate wrestling. Men's and women's basketball have loyal followings, and women's athletics have seen a surge in visibility (women's basketball under Lisa Bluder built a national contender). Iowa fields 22 varsity sports, and student-athletes are well-integrated into campus life — you'll see them in class, at the Ped Mall, and at campus events. The athletic facilities are elite: the Hansen Football Performance Center, the Hawkeye Tennis and Recreation Complex, and the newly upgraded swimming facilities are all Big Ten caliber. Support for student-athletes includes dedicated academic advising, nutrition, and mental health resources through the athletics department. Athletes are generally respected on campus, and the Hawkeye community embraces them as part of the broader university family.
What Else Should You Know
A few things a well-informed friend would flag: Iowa's in-state tuition is a genuine value for Iowa residents; out-of-state tuition is moderate for a Big Ten school but adds up, and merit scholarships for out-of-state students can make a real difference — ask about them. The Honors Program is worth looking into for students who want smaller classes and priority registration. Mental health services have been expanded but can still involve wait times, which is common at large universities. The RAGBRAI cycling culture and Iowa City's food scene (including the growing number of international restaurants) are underrated perks. One honest challenge: Iowa City is geographically isolated, and if you need a major metro nearby, that's a trade-off. But most students find that the self-contained nature of the town is actually a strength — everything you need is within walking distance, and the community wraps tightly around the university. Finally, note that total university enrollment (including graduate and professional students) is about 32,000, so the campus feels bigger than the 21,691 undergraduate count alone might suggest.
| High | Low | |
|---|---|---|
| January | 31° | 15° |
| April | 63° | 40° |
| July | 86° | 66° |
| October | 64° | 42° |
| Season | Record | GF/G | GA/G | GD | SO | OT | Last Game |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2025 | 14-6 | 3.0 | 1.6 | +29 | 4 | 3 | L 1-2 vs Duke (NCAA First Round at UNC) |
| 2024 | 9-9 | 1.6 | 1.4 | +3 | 8 | 6 | L 0-1 (3 OT) vs Maryland (B1G Quarterfinals at Maryland) |
| 2023 | 13-6 | 3.1 | 1.1 | +38 | 8 | 2 | L 1-2 (2 OT) vs Louisville (NCAA First Round at Northwestern) |
| 2022 | 12-8 | 2.0 | 1.1 | +18 | 6 | 6 | L 1-2 (4 OT) vs Northwestern (NCAA Quarterfinals) |
| 2021 | 17-3 | 3.4 | 0.8 | +52 | 11 | 1 | L 0-1 vs Northwestern (NCAA Quarterfinals) |
| 2020 * | 12-6 | 1.5 | 0.8 | +13 | 8 | 1 | L 0-3 vs North Carolina (NCAA Semifinals at UNC) |
| 2019 | 17-5 | 3.0 | 1.2 | +38 | 4 | 3 | L 1-2 vs North Carolina (NCAA Second round at UNC) |
| 2018 | 14-7 | 2.4 | 1.1 | +28 | 7 | 3 | L 2-3 vs Wake Forest (NCAA Second round at Duke) |
| 2017 | 7-11 | 2.5 | 2.3 | +3 | 3 | 2 | L 1-5 vs Penn State (Big Ten Quarterfinal) |
| 2016 | 12-7 | 3.4 | 1.6 | +33 | 5 | 3 | L 1-3 vs Northwestern (B1G Quarterfinals at Maryland) |
| 2015 | 9-10 | 2.6 | 2.0 | +11 | 2 | 3 | L 0-1 (2 OT) vs Michigan (Big Ten Quarterfinal at Indiana) |
| # | Name | Position | Year | Height | Hometown | High School |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Sabrina McGroarty | M | So. | - | Mickleton, NJ | - |
| 2 | Rachel Herbine | F/M | Jr. | - | Macungie, PA | - |
| 4 | Niamh de Jong | M | Fr. | - | Brisbane, Australia | - |
| 5 | Lieve van Kessel | M | Jr. | - | Geertruidenberg, Netherlands | - |
| 6 | Tess Reed | F | Jr. | - | St. Louis, MO | - |
| 7 | Gia Whalen | M | Jr. | - | Paoli, PA | - |
| 8 | Miranda Jackson | F | Jr. | - | Wellingborough, England | - |
| 9 | Alexa Knott | M/D | Fr. | - | Cape Town, South Africa | - |
| 10 | Dionne van Aalsum | M | Jr. | - | Castricum, Netherlands | - |
| 11 | Peyton Shellaway | D | Fr. | - | Gilbertsville, PA | - |
| 12 | Milly Short | M/D | Sr. | - | Worcester, England | - |
| 14 | Lauren DeRose | D | R-So. | - | Collegeville, PA | - |
| 15 | Fiene ten Seldam | D | So. | - | Utrecht, Netherlands | - |
| 16 | Lexie Haig | M | So. | - | Newcastle Upon Tyne, England | - |
| 17 | Hannah Maney | F | So. | - | Lewes, DE | - |
| 18 | Felicia Zonnenberg | M | Fr. | - | Maarn, Netherlands | - |
| 19 | Mae van Aalsum | D | Gr. | - | Castricum, Netherlands | - |
| 20 | Jordan Byers | M | Fr. | - | Landisburg, PA | - |
| 21 | Rylie Novak | D | So. | - | Vancouver, BC | - |
| 22 | Mack Panko | GK | So. | - | Virginia Beach, VA | - |
| 23 | Téa Fortpied | D | Fr. | - | Chaumont-Gistoux, Belgium | - |
| 24 | Fréderique van Cleef | F | Gr. | - | Asten, Netherlands | - |
| 25 | Kaia Beaudoin | M | Fr. | - | Fairfax, VA | - |
| 27 | Anyia Woods | D | Fr. | - | Suffolk, VA | - |
| 44 | Allie Curry | GK | R-So. | - | Antioch, IL | - |
| 61 | Mia Magnotta | GK | R-Sr. | - | Forty-Fort, PA | - |