The University of Michigan is one of those rare schools that operates at massive scale — 33,488 undergrads across a Big Ten D1 campus — yet somehow manages to feel like it has something for everyone. What makes Michigan distinctive isn't any single thing; it's the depth of *everything*. Top-five public university academics, a football culture that fills the largest stadium in the Western Hemisphere, 1,600+ student organizations, and a research budget that rivals elite privates. This is a school for students who want to be challenged hard, surrounded by ambitious peers, and given an almost overwhelming number of ways to find their thing.
Location & Setting
Ann Arbor is a genuine college town — one of the best in the country. It sits about 45 minutes west of Detroit, and the university essentially *is* the town. Step off campus onto South University or State Street and you're immediately in blocks of restaurants, coffee shops, bookstores, and bars. Main Street downtown is a 10-minute walk from central campus and has a thriving independent retail and dining scene. The Huron River winds through town and feeds into trails, parks, and the Arboretum — a 123-acre natural area that students use for running, studying, and decompressing. Ann Arbor has a progressive, artsy-intellectual personality that exists somewhat independently of the university, which gives it more texture than a typical college town.
Where Students Live & How They Get Around
Freshmen are required to live on campus, and about 97% of first-years do. After that, most students move off campus — to apartments along South University, houses near campus, or slightly farther out. Only about 30% of all undergrads live in university housing. The campus itself is split into Central Campus (liberal arts, the Diag, most of the iconic buildings) and North Campus (engineering, art & design, music), connected by a free university bus system that runs constantly. Most students don't need cars — Ann Arbor is very walkable and bikeable, and the bus system fills in the gaps. That said, Michigan winters are real. December through March means cold, gray, snowy days, and the walk from North Campus to Central in February wind is character-building. Students adapt: good boots, layers, and the understanding that winter is just part of the deal. When spring finally arrives, the Diag fills up like a festival.
Campus Culture & Community
Michigan's social scene is genuinely pluralistic. Greek life exists and is visible — roughly 20% of undergrads participate — but it's one option among many, not the dominant social force. On fall Saturdays, everything revolves around football: 107,601 seats in Michigan Stadium ("The Big House"), and they're essentially all full. Tailgating starts early, students pack the student section, and even people who don't care about football get swept up in it. Beyond football, the culture is activity-driven — students join things. Michigan has more student organizations than almost any school in the country, covering everything from a capella groups (there are over a dozen) to political activism to entrepreneurship clubs to club sports. Friday and Saturday nights split between house parties, bars on South U, campus events, and just hanging out. The vibe is spirited but not monolithic — there are genuinely different social worlds coexisting on the same campus. The size means you can find your people, but it also means *you have to find your people*. Michigan doesn't hand you a community; you build one.
Mission & Values
Michigan's unofficial motto — "Leaders and Best" — is revealing. The institutional culture is oriented toward achievement, impact, and public contribution. This is a public research university that takes its public mission seriously: strong service-learning programs, significant civic engagement infrastructure, and a campus culture where students care about issues — environmental, social, political. But it would be misleading to call Michigan a warm, nurturing environment in the way a small liberal arts college might be. The scale means you won't feel automatically "known." Support systems exist — residential advisors, academic counselors, the Sweetland Writing Center, CAPS for mental health — but students who thrive here tend to be proactive about seeking those out. Michigan develops independent, resourceful people, partly by design and partly by necessity.
Student Body
Michigan draws broadly. Roughly half the student body comes from Michigan, with strong representation from the Midwest, East Coast, and increasingly national and international enrollment (about 17% international). Students tend to be ambitious, opinionated, and involved. The vibe isn't easily captured in a single word — you'll find preppy Greek life students, engineering grinders, social justice activists, theater kids, and athletes all sharing space. Politically, the campus skews liberal, though there's more ideological range than at many peer universities. Diversity is real but complicated: Michigan has invested heavily in it, and there are strong cultural communities and identity-based organizations, but students from underrepresented backgrounds sometimes describe feeling like they have to seek out their community intentionally.
Academics
This is where Michigan truly separates itself from most public universities. The breadth of strong programs is staggering. The Ross School of Business is top-10 nationally for undergrad business. Engineering (Michigan Engineering) is consistently top-five or top-ten in nearly every discipline. The College of Literature, Science, and the Arts (LSA) — where most undergrads start — has exceptional departments in economics, psychology, political science, and English. The School of Music, Theatre & Dance and the Stamps School of Art & Design are nationally competitive. Pre-med culture is strong, and Michigan's hospital system is one of the best in the country, creating unique research and shadowing opportunities. There's a robust study abroad program, with roughly 28% of undergrads participating. The student-to-faculty ratio is about 15:1, which is solid for a school this size. Introductory courses in popular majors will be large lectures (200-400+ students), but upper-level courses shrink significantly, and the quality of faculty is genuinely elite — these are leading researchers who also teach. The academic culture is competitive but more collaborative than cutthroat. Students work hard, and the expectations are high. Michigan doesn't grade inflate, so a 3.5 here means something different than a 3.5 at many peers.
Athletics & Campus Sports Culture
Athletics aren't just part of Michigan's identity — they're central to it. Michigan fields 29 varsity sports, and the maize-and-blue brand is one of the most recognizable in college athletics. Football is king: the Big House on game day is an experience that shapes people's college memories. But basketball, hockey (Yost Ice Arena is legendary for its atmosphere), softball, swimming, and wrestling all have strong followings. Student-athletes are integrated into campus life — you'll see them in your classes and at the same coffee shops. The athletic facilities are world-class, and the support infrastructure for student-athletes (academic advising, sports medicine, nutrition) is extensive. For a recruit, Michigan offers the full D1 experience at the highest level of college athletics, within a conference (Big Ten) that is among the most competitive in the country.
What Else Should You Know
The alumni network is absurdly powerful — over 630,000 living alumni worldwide, with particularly strong connections in business, law, medicine, and tech. This matters for internships, jobs, and career opportunities in ways that are hard to overstate. Financial aid for in-state students is strong, and Michigan has the Go Blue Guarantee covering tuition and fees for in-state families earning under $75,000. For out-of-state students, the sticker price is steep (around $57,000 total cost), and merit aid for OOS is limited — worth running the numbers carefully. One honest challenge: the size can be overwhelming, especially early on. Students who struggle at Michigan often describe feeling anonymous or adrift before they found their niche. The ones who love it found a smaller community within the larger one — a dorm floor, a club, a lab, a team. If you're the kind of person who will show up, introduce yourself, and try things, Michigan will reward that energy tenfold.

| High | Low | |
|---|---|---|
| January | 32° | 16° |
| April | 58° | 34° |
| July | 84° | 59° |
| October | 62° | 39° |
| Season | Record | GF/G | GA/G | GD | SO | OT | Last Game |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2025 | 10-7 | 2.5 | 1.5 | +17 | 3 | 1 | L 3-5 vs Northwestern (B1G Semifinals at Indiana) |
| 2024 | 15-5 | 3.4 | 1.1 | +45 | 9 | 3 | L 1-2 vs Virginia (NCAA First Round at Northwestern) |
| 2023 | 9-8 | 2.2 | 1.1 | +19 | 6 | 3 | L 0-1 vs Rutgers (B1G Quarterfinals at Michigan) |
| 2022 | 14-6 | 2.6 | 0.9 | +34 | 8 | 3 | L 1-2 (OT) vs Ualbany (NCAA 1st round at Michigan) |
| 2021 | 16-5 | 3.1 | 1.3 | +39 | 5 | 5 | L 0-1 (3 OT) vs Harvard (NCAA Quarterfinals) |
| 2020 * | 15-3 | 2.1 | 0.7 | +25 | 10 | 4 | L 3-4 (OT) vs North Carolina (NCAA Final) |
| 2019 | 13-7 | 2.5 | 1.2 | +27 | 8 | 4 | L 1-2 (OT) vs Louisville (NCAA First round at Louisville) |
| 2018 | 14-7 | 2.8 | 1.6 | +24 | 5 | 3 | L 2-5 vs North Carolina (NCAA Quarterfinals) |
| 2017 | 21-3 | 3.1 | 0.8 | +54 | 16 | 3 | L 1-5 vs Maryland (NCAA Semifinal at Louisville) |
| 2016 | 12-8 | 2.3 | 1.4 | +18 | 5 | 4 | L 1-2 vs Virginia (NCAA Second Round at PSU) |
| 2015 | 18-5 | 2.4 | 1.0 | +33 | 10 | 3 | L 0-1 vs North Carolina (NCAA Quarterfinals) |
| # | Name | Position | Year | Height | Hometown | High School |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Caylie McMahon | GK | Gr. | 5' 7'' | Stow, Mass. | Nashoba Regional |
| 2 | Emmy Tran | M | R-Sr. | 5' 4'' | Harrisburg, Pa. | Central Dauphin |
| 3 | Abby Burnett | M | Jr. | 5' 6'' | Zionsville, Pa. | Emmaus |
| 4 | Abby Tamer | F/M | Gr. | 5' 7'' | Whitmore Lake, Mich. | Dexter |
| 5 | Grace Hunter | F | Fr. | 5' 2'' | Mickleton, N.J. | Kingsway Regional |
| 6 | Lexi Patterson | M | Fr. | 5' 0'' | Malvern, Pa. | Conestoga |
| 7 | Adair Patterson | B | Fr. | 5' 9'' | Houston, Texas | St. John's School |
| 8 | Kelsey Reviello | M | R-So. | 5' 7'' | Colonial Beach, Va. | James Monroe |
| 9 | Esmée de Willigen | F | Jr. | 5' 5'' | Rotterdam, Netherlands | Erasmiaans Gymnasium |
| 10 | Maxine Rogge | B | Fr. | 5' 8'' | Ghent, Belgium | Don Boscocollege Zwijnaarde |
| 11 | Payton Maloney | F | R-So. | 5' 8'' | Saline, Mich. | Saline |
| 12 | Maddie Grand | GK | R-Fr. | 5' 5'' | Ann Arbor, Mich. | Pioneer |
| 13 | Dru Moffett | F | So. | 5' 3'' | Townsend, Del. | Smyrna |
| 14 | Natalie Millman | F | Jr. | 5' 4'' | Ann Arbor, Mich. | Pioneer |
| 15 | Eva Bernardy | B | So. | 5' 7'' | Utrecht, Netherlands | Leidsche Rijn College |
| 16 | Sofia Ghanbari | F | Fr. | 5' 3'' | Novi, Mich. | Novi |
| 17 | Aurora Gery | M | R-Fr. | 5' 5'' | Allentown, Pa. | Parkland |
| 18 | Hala Silverstein | GK | R-So. | 5' 2'' | Glenwood, Md. | The Hill School |
| 19 | Sofia Abraham | B | R-Fr. | 5' 7'' | San Diego, Calif. | Canyon Hills |
| 20 | Claire Taylor | B/M | Gr. | 5' 7'' | West Simsbury, Conn. | Westminster School |
| 21 | Cami Wiseman | F | So. | 5' 6'' | Ann Arbor, Mich. | Skyline |
| 22 | Zoë Bormet | M | R-Jr. | 5' 7'' | Ann Arbor, Mich. | Pioneer |
| 23 | Zoe Martin | F | R-Fr. | 5' 5'' | Denver, Colo. | Colorado Academy |
| 24 | Juliette Manzur | F | Jr. | 5' 4'' | Mareil-Marly, France | Lycée International de Saint-Germain-en-Laye |
| 25 | Beatrice Ottsen | B | Fr. | 5' 9'' | Kenilworth, Ill. | New Trier |
| 26 | Brooke Alexander | B | Fr. | 5' 6'' | Saline, Mich. | Dexter |
| 27 | Natalie Machiran | M | So. | 5' 5'' | Ellicott City, Md. | Mt. Hebron |
| 28 | Anjolie Norton | B | So. | 5' 4'' | Poway, Calif. | Poway |
| 29 | Manouk Saal | M | Fr. | 5' 6'' | Oegstgeest, Netherlands | Da Vinci College Kagerstraat |