The Ohio State University is a massive, flagship public research university in Columbus, Ohio, with roughly 44,617 undergraduates and a total enrollment exceeding 60,000 — making it one of the largest campuses in the country. But size here isn't just a statistic; it's the experience. Ohio State is a place where football Saturdays in a 100,000-seat stadium define the fall calendar, where you can find a club or research lab for virtually any interest, and where the sheer scale of resources — from a $1.58 billion research budget to over 1,000 student organizations — means you'll never run out of things to pursue. This is a school for students who want a big stage, who thrive on energy and options, and who are willing to be proactive about carving out their own path within a university that can feel like a small city.
Location & Setting
Ohio State's main campus sits just north of downtown Columbus, Ohio's state capital and its largest city (metro population around 2.1 million). This is not a sleepy college town — Columbus is a legitimate mid-major American city with a growing food scene, professional sports (the NHL's Blue Jackets, MLS's Columbus Crew), a lively Short North arts district, and a cost of living that's noticeably lower than coastal cities. The campus itself is enormous — over 1,600 acres — and borders the University District and neighborhoods like Clintonville and Italian Village. Step off campus heading south on High Street and you're immediately in a strip of bars, restaurants, and shops that cater to the student population. The Wexner Center for the Arts, one of the country's premier university art centers, sits right on campus. Columbus offers real internship and job opportunities in finance, insurance, healthcare, tech, and state government, which is a genuine advantage over more isolated flagship campuses.
Where Students Live & How They Get Around
Ohio State requires first-year students to live on campus, and the university has invested heavily in its residence halls — many were renovated or rebuilt in the last decade. After freshman year, most students move into apartments or houses in the surrounding University District or nearby neighborhoods. About 25% of undergraduates live on campus overall. You don't need a car. Campus is walkable, the COTA bus system serves the area well, and the university runs its own Campus Area Bus Service (CABS) for free. Many students bike, especially in warmer months. That said, this is central Ohio: winters are gray, cold, and sometimes snowy, with temperatures regularly in the 20s and 30s from December through February. Fall is glorious — football weather — and spring eventually arrives, usually by April. Weather absolutely shapes daily life; the Oval (the main campus green) goes from packed blanket-to-blanket on sunny days to windswept and empty in January.
Campus Culture & Community
The social fabric at Ohio State revolves around a few poles: athletics, Greek life, and the sheer diversity of student organizations. Football is the gravitational center of campus culture in the fall. On game days, the campus transforms — scarlet and gray everywhere, tailgates in every direction, Ohio Stadium ("the Horseshoe") rocking with over 100,000 fans. It's not an exaggeration to say that "O-H-I-O" is a genuine shared language among students and alumni. Greek life is present and visible — roughly 10-12% of students participate — but it's absolutely not the only social option at a school this big. There are over 1,000 registered student organizations covering everything from cultural groups to club sports to entrepreneurship. Friday and Saturday nights, students scatter: some head to bars on High Street (fake IDs are a rite of passage, for better or worse), some to house parties, some to campus events or the South Campus Gateway area. The culture is generally friendly and Midwestern-warm, but you have to seek out your people. At a school of this size, community doesn't just happen to you — you have to build it. The students who thrive here are the ones who join things early and show up consistently.
Mission & Values
Ohio State is a land-grant institution, and that public mission — access, research for the public good, service to the state of Ohio — is baked into its DNA. In practice, this means the university invests heavily in outreach, community engagement, and first-generation student support. The Ohio State Wexner Medical Center is both a teaching hospital and a major regional healthcare provider. There's a genuine ethic of service, though it coexists with a strong pre-professional, career-oriented culture. Students have access to robust career services and an alumni network that's famously loyal and enormous (over 600,000 living alumni worldwide). Do students feel "known" as individuals? That depends entirely on what you do. In a 300-person lecture, no. In a 20-person honors seminar, a research lab, or your team, absolutely. The honors program (now called Honors & Scholars) and the various Living-Learning Communities are specifically designed to create smaller, more personal experiences within the big university.
Student Body
Ohio State draws heavily from Ohio — roughly 75% of undergraduates are in-state — but it also pulls significant numbers from the Midwest, the coasts, and internationally. The campus is genuinely diverse: about 20% of students identify as underrepresented minorities, and the international student population is substantial, particularly in engineering and business. Politically, the campus leans moderate to liberal, but there's a real ideological range, and you'll find conservative, progressive, and everything-in-between voices. The typical Ohio State student is hard to pin down because there are so many of them, but the prevailing energy is ambitious, social, and school-spirit-forward. You'll find pre-med grinders, business majors in suits heading to career fairs, art students, engineers, activists, and athletes all on the same campus.
Academics
Ohio State offers over 200 undergraduate majors across 16 colleges. Its genuinely strong programs include engineering (especially biomedical, computer science, and mechanical), business (Fisher College of Business is well-regarded and has excellent recruiting pipelines), political science (one of the most influential departments in the country), nursing, food science, and the health sciences broadly. The arts and sciences college is enormous and offers depth in everything from linguistics to astronomy. Pre-med advising is solid, and students benefit from proximity to the Wexner Medical Center. There's a robust study abroad program with participation rates around 25-30%. General education requirements are structured and meaningful — you'll take courses across natural sciences, social sciences, humanities, and writing, which gives breadth but can feel like a box-checking exercise to some. Class sizes vary wildly: introductory courses in biology, economics, or psychology might have 300-500 students in a lecture hall, while upper-division courses and seminars shrink to 20-40. The student-to-faculty ratio is about 19:1. This is a research university first, and many of your professors are leading scholars — which means incredible access to cutting-edge work if you pursue undergraduate research, but also means some faculty prioritize their research over teaching. TAs lead many discussion sections in lower-level courses. The honors program offers smaller classes, priority scheduling, and a tighter academic community that helps offset the bigness.
Athletics & Campus Sports Culture
Athletics are not a background element at Ohio State — they are central to the identity of the university. Ohio State fields 36 varsity sports in NCAA Division I as a member of the Big Ten Conference, one of the most competitive athletic conferences in the country. Football is king; the Buckeyes are perennial national championship contenders and the program is among the most storied in college football history. Men's and women's basketball, wrestling, women's volleyball, men's hockey, track and field, and swimming are also nationally competitive. The athletic facilities are world-class — the Woody Hayes Athletic Center, the Covelli Center, and the recently renovated Schumaker Complex for Olympic sports are all top-tier. As a student-athlete, you'll have access to elite training, academic support through the Younkin Success Center, nutrition services, and sports medicine. Athletes are visible and respected on campus, and the broader student body genuinely cares about Buckeye sports. Gameday at the Horseshoe — with "Script Ohio," "Carmen Ohio," and "Hang on Sloopy" — is one of the great experiences in American college sports.
What Else Should You Know
The "THE" matters. Students and alumni will correct you — it's *The* Ohio State University. It's playful but it's real, and it reflects the pride (and slight chip-on-the-shoulder confidence) that defines the Buckeye culture. The rivalry with Michigan is intense, all-consuming during rivalry week, and a genuine part of campus identity. Housing in the University District can be hit-or-miss in quality, so do your research before signing a lease. Columbus is one of the fastest-growing cities in the Midwest, which means the job market and internship pipeline are better than many peer flagship campuses. Financial aid for out-of-state students can be less generous than in-state — the in-state tuition value is excellent, but out-of-state students should run the numbers carefully. Finally, a note on enrollment: the university reports total undergraduate enrollment figures that can vary by source and year; 44,617 is the verified figure used here, though some institutional reports cite slightly different numbers depending on the count methodology. The bottom line: Ohio State is enormous, and that's both its greatest asset and its biggest challenge. If you want resources, energy, school spirit, and the chance to build something uniquely yours, it's hard to beat.

| High | Low | |
|---|---|---|
| January | 36° | 21° |
| April | 64° | 41° |
| July | 85° | 65° |
| October | 66° | 43° |
| Season | Record | GF/G | GA/G | GD | SO | OT | Last Game |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2025 | 8-10 | 2.3 | 1.9 | +7 | 5 | 6 | L 1-3 vs Iowa (B1G Semifinals at Indiana) |
| 2024 | 14-5 | 3.0 | 1.1 | +37 | 6 | 2 | L 1-2 vs Rutgers (B1G Quarterfinals at Maryland) |
| 2023 | 14-6 | 3.1 | 1.4 | +35 | 5 | 3 | L 1-3 vs Northwestern (B1G Semifinals at Michigan) |
| 2022 | 11-8 | 2.6 | 1.3 | +25 | 6 | 2 | L 2-5 vs Maryland (B1G Quarterfinals at OSU) |
| 2021 | 7-11 | 1.4 | 2.4 | -18 | 3 | 2 | L 3-4 vs Saint Joseph's |
| 2020 * | 7-9 | 2.4 | 1.9 | +8 | 3 | 6 | L 0-4 vs Michigan (B1G Final at Iowa) |
| 2019 | 9-9 | 3.1 | 1.8 | +23 | 5 | 1 | L 1-4 vs Iowa (B1G Quarterfinals at Penn State) |
| 2018 | 12-8 | 2.8 | 1.8 | +20 | 6 | 6 | L 1-9 vs Maryland (B1G Semifinals at Northwestern) |
| 2017 | 10-9 | 1.7 | 1.6 | +2 | 4 | 6 | L 0-3 vs Michigan (Big Ten Quarterfinal) |
| 2016 | 6-11 | 1.7 | 2.4 | -12 | 3 | 2 | L 2-3 vs Iowa |
| 2015 | 9-10 | 2.0 | 2.2 | -4 | 3 | 2 | L 0-4 vs Northwestern (Big Ten Quarterfinal at Indiana) |
| # | Name | Position | Year | Height | Hometown | High School |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 00 | Maddie Stevens | Goalkeeper | So. | - | Morgantown, Pa. | - |
| 2 | Autum Kernechel | Midfield/Back | Fr. | - | Emmaus, Pa. | - |
| 3 | Mary Davis | Midfield | So. | - | Midlothian, Va. | - |
| 4 | Zella Bailey | Midfield | Sr. | - | Virginia Beach, Va. | - |
| 5 | Emily Barker | Forward/Midfield | Jr. | - | Columbus, Ohio | - |
| 6 | Raleigh Kerst | Forward | Fr. | - | Arnold, Md. | - |
| 7 | Loryn Jordon | Forward | Sr. | - | Owings Mills, Md. | - |
| 8 | Makenna Webster | Forward | Gr. | - | St. Louis, Mo. | - |
| 9 | Carmela Maro | Forward | Fr. | - | Collegeville, Pa. | - |
| 10 | Olivia Wallace | Forward | Sr. | - | Virginia Beach, Va. | - |
| 11 | Lindsey Roberts | Forward | Sr. | - | Dowingtown, Pa. | - |
| 14 | MaKayla Carahaly | Forward | Sr. | - | Morgantown, Pa. | - |
| 15 | Riley Hudson | Midfield | Sr. | - | Medford, N.J. | - |
| 16 | Cece Tomaszewski | Back | Fr. | - | Leesburg, Va. | - |
| 17 | Philippa Schipper | Back | So. | - | Rotterdam, Netherlands | - |
| 19 | Victoria Kutz | Back | So. | - | Hummelstown, Pa. | - |
| 20 | Katie Crump | Midfield | Fr. | - | St. Louis, OH | - |
| 21 | Reagan Eickhoff | Forward | Jr. | - | Boiling Springs, Pa. | - |
| 22 | Grace Dixon | Back/Midfield | So. | - | Virginia Beach, Va. | - |
| 23 | Lucy Curtis | Goalkeeper | Fr. | - | Charlotte, OH | - |
| 24 | Cam Standish | Midfield | Jr. | - | Mechanicsburg, PA. | - |
| 25 | Anne Marie Krebs | Midfield | Jr. | - | Louisville, Ky. | - |
| 28 | Sienna Golden | Forward | So. | - | Berwyn, Pa. | - |
| 32 | Katie Fichtner | Back | Sr. | - | Harwood, Md. | - |
| 33 | Madeline Bogle | Back | So. | - | Lansdale, Pa. | - |