Campus Overview

The University of Richmond is a private liberal arts university of about 3,002 undergraduates tucked into 350 wooded acres on the western edge of Richmond, Virginia — a campus so self-contained and striking that it consistently ranks among the most beautiful in the country. What sets Richmond apart is a rare combination: the intimate, discussion-based academics of a small liberal arts college paired with the resources, research opportunities, and Division I athletics of a much larger university, all backed by one of the largest per-student endowments in the nation. This is a school for students who want to be challenged intellectually, known by name by their professors, and surrounded by driven peers — without disappearing into a crowd.


Location & Setting

Richmond's campus sits in a quiet, suburban-residential pocket about six miles west of downtown Richmond, Virginia's capital city. The campus itself is built around a picturesque lake (Westhampton Lake), with red-brick collegiate Gothic buildings, walking paths, and enough green space that it can feel like its own world. But Richmond the city is a genuine asset — a mid-sized metro with a strong food scene, craft breweries along the James River, street art in the Fan District, and outdoor recreation that punches well above its weight. The James River runs right through the city, offering kayaking, tubing, and riverside trails. Carytown, a walkable strip of shops and restaurants, is a quick drive away and a popular student hangout. You're about two hours from D.C., an hour from Charlottesville, and three hours from the coast.

Where Students Live & How They Get Around

Richmond is a deeply residential campus — around 90% of students live on campus all four years, and there's a housing guarantee. First-years live together, and upperclassmen move into apartment-style housing, suites, or themed living-learning communities. The campus is compact and entirely walkable; you can get from your dorm to any classroom in under ten minutes. A car is nice for off-campus errands and exploring Richmond's neighborhoods, but it's far from necessary, especially underclassmen years. The UR shuttle runs to nearby shopping and dining. Virginia's climate gives you four distinct seasons — warm, humid falls and springs that are great for being outside, mild winters with occasional snow, and summers that clear out. The weather supports year-round outdoor activity, and students take advantage of the campus green spaces and nearby river trails.

Campus Culture & Community

Social life at Richmond has a real split personality, and it's worth understanding. Greek life is a significant presence — roughly 40% of students are in fraternities or sororities, and on weekend nights, Greek parties and lodge events are the dominant social scene, especially for underclassmen. The lodges (Greek houses built along a row near campus) are the center of gravity on Friday and Saturday nights. That said, it's not the only option — student organizations, club sports, and friend-group gatherings fill in the picture, and students who opt out of Greek life still find community, though it takes more intentional effort. Richmond's size means you'll see familiar faces constantly, which creates a tight-knit feeling but also means social circles can feel small. Pig Roast in the fall and Ring Dance are beloved traditions. School spirit is moderate — students show up for certain athletic events (especially basketball and football), but it's not a rah-rah sports culture. The vibe is more "we care, but we're cool about it."

Mission & Values

Richmond puts genuine investment into developing well-rounded people, not just résumé-builders. The school emphasizes leadership, ethical engagement, and global awareness — and backs it up with programs like the Bonner Scholars (a service-focused scholarship community) and robust support for civic engagement. Faculty and staff generally know students as individuals; the advising culture is personal, and students report feeling seen and supported. Richmond's wealth shows up in tangible ways: generous financial aid, funded research and internship opportunities, and resources that rival schools three times its size. The institution doesn't have a religious affiliation — it was historically Baptist-affiliated but is now fully secular. There's a chapel on campus, but religion plays no meaningful role in daily student life or curriculum.

Student Body

Richmond draws from a national pool, though the Mid-Atlantic and Southeast are overrepresented — you'll meet a lot of students from Virginia, the D.C. suburbs, New Jersey, Connecticut, and the Carolinas. The stereotype (which has some truth) is that Richmond skews preppy, affluent, and socially polished. Students tend to be well-dressed, career-oriented, and involved in multiple activities. The school has made real strides in socioeconomic and racial diversity in recent years, particularly through its strong financial aid, but the campus culture still leans toward an upper-middle-class, Greek-adjacent norm. Politically, the campus is moderate — not the activist energy of a Wesleyan or the conservatism of a southern state school, but somewhere in between. Students are generally driven, social, and involved, with a pre-professional streak balanced by genuine intellectual curiosity.

Academics

Richmond's academic structure is distinctive: the university comprises five schools, including the undergraduate School of Arts and Sciences and the Robins School of Business, which means undergrads can pursue a full business degree within a liberal arts setting — a combination that's relatively rare and genuinely strong. The Jepson School of Leadership Studies is the first of its kind in the country, offering a unique interdisciplinary major in leadership. Sciences are well-resourced (the Gottwald Center for the Sciences is impressive for a school this size), and the pre-med track is rigorous and well-supported. The student-faculty ratio is 8:1, and average class sizes hover around 16 students. Professors teach their own classes — not graduate students — and most hold office hours that students actually use. About 60% of students study abroad, which is exceptionally high, and the school funds it generously. The academic culture is demanding but collaborative; students work hard but aren't cutthroat. Humanities departments — particularly English, history, and political science — are strong, and the proximity to Richmond and D.C. fuels internship pipelines in government, finance, and law.

Athletics & Campus Sports Culture

Richmond competes in Division I as a member of the Atlantic 10 Conference, fielding 17 varsity sports. The football program plays in the FCS and has won a national championship (2008), which remains a point of pride. Men's and women's basketball draw the most consistent fan energy — A-10 basketball games in the Robins Center can get genuinely loud. Field hockey competes in the A-10 and plays on a dedicated turf facility. Student-athletes are well-integrated into the broader campus community — the school is small enough that athletes aren't siloed, and you'll have teammates in your classes and friend groups. Athletic facilities are strong for a school this size, with recent investments in training and competition spaces. Club and intramural sports also have solid participation, giving non-varsity athletes plenty of options.

What Else Should You Know

Richmond's endowment — roughly $3 billion for 3,000 undergrads — is one of the highest per-student figures in the country, and it shows in everything from campus upkeep to research funding to financial aid. The school meets 100% of demonstrated financial need, and many students receive significant aid packages. The alumni network is tight and loyal, particularly in finance, consulting, and law, with strong pipelines to firms in Richmond, D.C., and New York. One honest caveat: the social scene's reliance on Greek life can feel limiting, especially if that's not your thing — it's the most common critique from students who otherwise love the school. The campus can also feel like a bubble; it takes some initiative to connect with the broader city of Richmond, though the students who do are glad they made the effort.

Field Hockey

  • Head Coach Martu Loncarica won 2023 A10 Coach of the Year at La Salle, leading them to 13 wins and first A10 Championship since 2011.
  • 2025 roster is 83% out-of-state and 35% international; program just reached A10 Final.

About the School

  • 350 wooded acres with one of the largest per-student endowments in the nation; 7:1 student-faculty ratio.
  • Richmond, Virginia capital city offers James River kayaking, Carytown dining strip, and two hours to D.C.

Field Hockey (2025)

Level
D1 High
FHC Rank
#39 of 83 (D1)
Massey Score
77.5 *
2025 Record
Overall: 12-8
Conference
Atlantic 10 Conference
Coach
Martu Loncarica
Trajectory
→ Stable
Season Results
'25: L 0-2 vs Saint Joseph'S (A10 Final)
'24: L 1-6 vs Saint Joseph'S (A10 Semifinals)
'23: L 0-3 vs William & Mary

Programs

Popular Majors

Business (44%) (D1 avg: 21%)
Business Administration, Management and Operations (64%)
• Human Resources Management and Services (23%)
• Accounting and Related Services (13%)
Social Sciences (11%)
Political Science and Government (43%)
Economics (35%)
• Sociology (12%)
• Geography and Cartography (6%)
• Anthropology (4%)
Biology (8%)
Interdisciplinary (7%)
Psychology (5%)

My Programs

Environmental Science (1.1%)
Psychology (4.6%)
Biology (8.2%)
Sports Med / Kinesiology (3.3%)
French (0.7%)
Popular (top 25%) Available Not found

Study Abroad
91%

School Profile

Type
Private
Classification
Baccalaureate: Arts & Sciences

Student Body

Total
3,724
Undergrad
81%
Demographics
54% women
Freshmen
13% in-state
Student:Faculty
7:1

Academics

Admission Rate
23%
SAT Median
1,470
SAT Range
1,410-1,530
ACT Median
33
Retention
93%
Graduation
88%

Events & Clinics

Recruiting Events:
Super Sixty June 2026Jun '26
Upcoming Clinics:
Apr 25 2026 Jamboree ($450/team or $90/individual) Register →
Jun 24 2026 Spider Hockey Day Camp I ($300) Register →
Jul 1 2026 Spider Hockey Day Camp II ($300) Register →

Costs

Total Cost
$77,290
Tuition
$62,600
Room & Board
$16,210

Avg Net Price
$33,417
Net Price ($110k+)
$47,669

Financial Aid

Freshmen Getting Aid
49%

Merit Aid

Avg Merit Grant
$51,205
Freshmen Merit Only
13%

Need-Based Aid

Freshmen w/ Need
36%
Avg % Need Met
100%
% Need Fully Met
95%
Avg Aid Package
$63,291
Grants / Loans
$56,896 / $2,683

Debt at Graduation

Avg Debt
$32,965
Grads w/ Loans
35%
Source: CDS 2024

Location & Weather

Setting
City (City: Midsize)
Nearest City
Richmond, VA (6 mi)
Major Metro
Washington, DC (96 mi)

HighLow
January47°28°
April70°45°
July89°68°
October70°48°

Admissions


Early Application

ED Accept Rate
34%

Class Size

Under 20
76%
20–29
23%
30–39
0%
40+
0%
Source: CDS 2024

Season History

Season Record GF/G GA/G GD SO OT Last Game
2025 12-8 2.4 1.7 +14 5 4 L 0-2 vs Saint Joseph'S (A10 Final)
2024 11-8 2.1 2.2 -3 2 3 L 1-6 vs Saint Joseph'S (A10 Semifinals at SJU)
2023 7-11 2.0 2.6 -10 3 4 L 0-3 vs William & Mary
2022 6-12 2.0 2.6 -11 1 0 L 1-2 vs Virginia Commonwealth
2021 5-14 1.3 2.5 -23 3 1 L 1-8 vs Saint Joseph's (A10 Semifinals at SJU)
2020 * 4-3 2.7 1.1 +11 2 1 L 0-1 vs Virginia Commonwealth (A10 Semifinals at VCU)
2019 11-10 1.8 1.9 -2 1 4 L 0-1 vs Saint Joseph'S (A10 Final)
2018 7-12 1.7 2.7 -18 3 1 L 1-3 vs Saint Joseph's (A10 Semifinals at SJU)
2017 8-11 2.3 3.3 -19 1 2 L 2-7 vs Saint Joseph's (A10 Semifinals at UMass)
2016 8-11 1.9 2.5 -10 2 1 L 1-3 vs Massachusetts (Atlantic 10 Semifinal at VCU)
2015 12-9 1.8 2.0 -4 6 3 L 0-3 vs Massachusetts (A10 Final at SJU)
* Shortened COVID season
Click any season to view full schedule

Coaching Staff

Name Position Contact Bio
Martu Loncarica Head Coach martu.loncarica@richmond.edu View Bio
Erin Menges Assistant Coach View Bio
Joe Chomet Assistant Coach View Bio
Sierra Espeland View Bio
Christie van de Kamp View Bio

Roster Breakdown

23 players

Geographic Recruiting

In-State: 17% (4 players)
US Out-of-State: 48% (11 players)
International: 35% (8 players)
Virginia: 17% (4 players)
Pennsylvania: 17% (4 players)

Position Breakdown

Forward: 2 (8.7%)
Forward/Midfielder: 4 (17.4%)
Midfielder: 7 (30.4%)
Midfielder/Defender: 6 (26.1%)
Defender: 2 (8.7%)
Goalkeeper: 2 (8.7%)

Roster Composition

Graduating '27: 7 players (30%)
Forward: 1
Forward/Midfielder: 2
Midfielder: 1
Defender: 1
Goalkeeper: 2
Class of 2026: 6 (26%)
Class of 2028: 5 (22%)
Class of 2029: 5 (22%)

Full Roster (23 players)

# Name Position Year Height Hometown High School
1 Reese Miller F/M Fr. - Gloucester, Va. -
4 Victoria Stockdale M/D So. - Darien, Conn. -
5 Caroline Simmons M/D Fr. - Austin, Texas -
6 Emme Hinson-Hasty M/D So. - Louisville, Ky. -
7 Sarah Ellis M So. - Virginia Beach, Va. -
8 Jess McMeeking M Sr. - Canterbury, England -
9 Camila Daud M R-So. - Buenos Aires, Argentina -
10 Lainey Nichols M Sr. - Powhatan, Va. -
11 Emma Williams M/D Sr. - Glasgow, Scotland -
12 Charly Faherty M Jr. - Invercargill, New Zealand -
14 Avery Russell F/M Jr. - Palmyra, Pa. -
15 Freya MacKay D Jr. - Edinburgh, Scotland -
16 Remy Phan F Fr. - Houston, Texas -
17 Madelyn Curtis M/D Sr. - Richmond, Va. -
18 Alexa Derr M Sr. - Palmyra, Pa. -
19 Amy Stripling M/D Fr. - Darwin, Australia -
20 Clara Larripa F/M Jr. - Buenos Aires, Argentina -
22 Olivia Eusanio F/M Fr. - Centerport, NY -
24 Grace Wiggins M So. - Milton, Del. -
25 Lillian Buckwalter D Sr. - Lancaster, Pa. -
30 Valen Luna Paratore F Jr. - Buenos Aires, Argentina -
33 Thea Conomikes G Jr. - Pittsburgh, PA -
70 Amanda Cimillo GK Jr. - Pleasant Valley, N.Y. -