Transylvania University is a private liberal arts college of about 1,014 undergraduates in Lexington, Kentucky — and yes, it's older than the state it sits in, founded in 1780 as the first university west of the Alleghenies. The name means "across the woods" in Latin (not a Dracula reference, though students absolutely lean into the vampire branding every Halloween), and the school punches remarkably above its weight: its alumni rolls include two U.S. vice presidents, two Supreme Court justices, and dozens of governors and senators. Transy is built for the student who wants the intimacy of a small school — classes where professors know your name, a tight-knit campus community — with the advantages of living in one of Kentucky's most interesting and walkable cities. If you're a student-athlete who wants a genuine liberal arts education without sacrificing competitive sport, this is a school that deserves serious consideration.
Location & Setting
Transylvania sits on a compact, historic campus right in the heart of Lexington's Gratz Park neighborhood, roughly three blocks from downtown. This isn't a rural retreat or a suburban bubble — step off campus and you're immediately in a walkable urban grid with coffee shops, restaurants, and bars along North Limestone (known locally as "NoLi") and the broader downtown corridor. Lexington itself is Kentucky's second-largest city (roughly 325,000 people), home to the University of Kentucky, and the center of the Bluegrass region's horse country. The surrounding landscape is genuinely beautiful — rolling horse farms, stone fences, bourbon distilleries within easy driving distance. Keeneland Race Course, one of America's most storied tracks, is fifteen minutes away. You get both a real city and easy access to the outdoors: Red River Gorge, one of the best rock climbing destinations in the eastern U.S., is about an hour's drive.
Where Students Live & How They Get Around
Transy is overwhelmingly residential. First- and second-year students are required to live on campus, and the majority of upperclassmen stay as well — the campus is small enough and Lexington's off-campus housing close enough that either option keeps you plugged in. Dorms range from traditional residence halls to newer apartment-style housing. The campus itself is so compact that you can walk from one end to the other in about ten minutes. A car is helpful for weekend trips — bourbon trail, Red River Gorge, Louisville is ninety minutes west — but not necessary for daily life. Lexington's bus system (Lextran) exists but most Transy students walk, bike, or catch rides. Winters are moderate by Midwestern standards — cold and occasionally icy from December through February, but nothing that shuts campus down for long. Springs and falls are gorgeous, and the campus green spaces get heavy use.
Campus Culture & Community
With just over a thousand students, Transy has the feel of a close community where most people know most people. Greek life exists — there are several fraternities and sororities — and it plays a meaningful social role, probably claiming around 40-50% of the student body. That said, it doesn't monopolize social life the way it might at a larger Southern school. Non-Greek students find community through athletics, theater, student government, and the roughly 60+ student organizations on campus. Weekend social life tends to orbit between Greek events, house parties in the neighborhoods adjacent to campus, and Lexington's downtown bars and restaurants (for those 21+). The campus has a genuinely collaborative atmosphere — students aren't competing against each other for limited spots. People share notes, study together, and cheer for each other. Transy leans hard into a few beloved traditions: Raft Debate, where professors argue about whose discipline should survive a sinking raft, is a genuinely entertaining annual event that basically the whole campus attends. And yes, the school fully embraces its name around Halloween — expect vampire-themed events, Halloween parties, and "Transy" merch that plays on the gothic connection.
Mission & Values
Transylvania is affiliated with the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ), but in practice, this is a very lightly religious campus. There are no required theology courses, it's not a dry campus, and the affiliation shows up more as a general ethos of inclusion and service than as anything doctrinal. Students who are deeply religious and students who are not religious at all both report feeling comfortable. The school's mission centers on developing the "whole person" — intellectual curiosity, ethical engagement, and community responsibility — and this isn't just catalog language. The small size means advisors, coaches, and faculty actually track your development. Students consistently report feeling "known" by the institution. There's a meaningful community service and engagement culture, supported by the school's civic engagement programs, though it's not as front-and-center as at explicitly mission-driven schools like the Jesuit institutions.
Student Body
Transy draws heavily from Kentucky and the surrounding states — Ohio, Indiana, Tennessee, West Virginia — though it's been working to expand its geographic reach. The student body tends to skew slightly preppy and relatively affluent, though financial aid packages are generous and the school actively recruits first-generation students. Politically, the campus leans moderate to slightly left of center, which puts it somewhat at odds with the surrounding state but in step with Lexington's relatively progressive local culture. Students tend to be involved — the kind of people who are in three organizations, play a sport, and still make dean's list. Diversity is an area where Transy, like many small liberal arts schools in the Upper South, is still growing; the student body is majority white, but the school has made visible investments in diversifying enrollment and supporting students of color.
Academics
Transy offers 46 majors across the liberal arts and sciences, with a 10:1 student-faculty ratio and an average class size hovering around 15. Nobody is teaching your intro course in a 300-seat lecture hall — this is a school where seminar-style discussion is the default. The sciences are genuinely strong: biology, biochemistry, and neuroscience benefit from well-equipped labs and a deep pipeline to medical and health professional schools. Transy's historical connection to medicine is real — its medical program has graduated over 8,000 physicians since 1859, and pre-med advising is one of the school's signature strengths. Acceptance rates to medical, dental, and law schools consistently run well above national averages. Beyond the sciences, the business administration program, exercise science, and psychology draw strong enrollment. The humanities haven't been neglected — English, history, and political science have devoted faculty who are accessible and serious about mentoring. The school runs a distinctive First Engagements program for incoming students that sets an interdisciplinary, discussion-based tone from the start. Study abroad participation is strong — roughly 40-50% of students study abroad at some point, with programs spanning multiple continents. There are also 3-2 dual-degree engineering partnerships with the University of Kentucky and Vanderbilt, which let you earn both a liberal arts degree and an engineering degree in five years. Faculty are here to teach; they publish and do research (often involving undergraduates), but the classroom is their primary focus.
Athletics & Campus Sports Culture
Transy competes in NCAA Division III as a member of the North Coast Athletic Conference, fielding around 22 varsity sports. D3 means no athletic scholarships, but the flip side is that student-athletes are genuinely students first — you won't be choosing between a lab section and practice. The athletic culture is participatory: a significant percentage of the student body (sometimes cited near 40%) plays a varsity sport, and many others engage in intramurals or club sports. Athletes are integrated into every corner of campus life rather than siloed into a jock culture. Soccer, basketball, swimming, and tennis tend to be competitive within the conference. The school's Beck Center provides solid athletic facilities for a school this size, and recent investments have upgraded training and competition spaces. Game days matter more than they would at a random D3 school, partly because the campus is so small that athletes are your classmates, lab partners, and friends. Don't expect a stadium atmosphere — but do expect genuine support.
What Else Should You Know
Financial aid is worth highlighting: Transy's sticker price is in the range of many private liberal arts colleges, but the school meets a significant portion of demonstrated need and merit scholarships can be substantial. Ask specifically about their merit and need-based packages — net price often comes in well below the posted tuition. The alumni network, for a school of 1,000, is disproportionately powerful, particularly in Kentucky legal, medical, and political circles. The campus itself is attractive — Georgian architecture, old trees, and a compact footprint that feels curated without feeling sterile. One honest challenge: the small size means limited anonymity. If you want to reinvent yourself every semester or disappear into a crowd, this isn't your school. But if you want a place where your professors write you recommendation letters that actually mean something, where your coach knows your academic goals, and where you graduate with a network that will follow you through your career — Transy delivers that in a way very few schools of any size can match.

| High | Low | |
|---|---|---|
| January | 42° | 25° |
| April | 67° | 45° |
| July | 87° | 66° |
| October | 69° | 47° |
| Season | Record | GF/G | GA/G | GD | SO | OT | Last Game |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2025 | 0-15 | 0.5 | 6.6 | -91 | 0 | 0 | L 0-15 vs Denison |
| 2024 | 7-9 | 1.1 | 1.2 | -1 | 5 | 0 | L 0-1 vs DePauw |
| 2023 | 5-13 | 1.3 | 2.1 | -14 | 4 | 3 | L 1-2 (OT) vs Depauw |
| 2022 | 7-12 | 1.6 | 2.6 | -20 | 2 | 0 | L 0-4 vs Rhodes (SAA Semifinals at Centre) |
| 2021 | 0-18 | 0.2 | 3.9 | -67 | 0 | 0 | L 1-2 vs Sewanee (SAA Quarterfinal at CUW) |
| 2019 | 2-14 | 0.9 | 3.5 | -41 | 1 | 2 | L 1-2 (2 OT) vs Sewanee (SAA Quarterfinals at Transy) |
| 2018 | 2-14 | 0.6 | 4.9 | -68 | 1 | 0 | L 0-12 vs Rhodes (SAA Semifinals at Hendrix) |
| 2017 | 7-11 | 1.5 | 1.9 | -7 | 4 | 1 | L 0-1 vs Ferrum (SAA Quarterfinals at Rhodes) |
| 2016 | 6-12 | 1.8 | 2.5 | -13 | 4 | 2 | L 0-1 vs Centre (SAA Semifinals at Rhodes) |
| 2015 | 2-13 | 0.9 | 4.3 | -51 | 0 | 1 | W 2-1 vs Hendrix (SAA Quarterfinal) |
| # | Name | Position | Year | Height | Hometown | High School |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Avery Hoover | M | Jr. | 5-5 | Louisville, Kentucky | Eastern High School |
| 2 | Hannah Waterson | - | Fr. | - | / | - |
| 3 | Lucy Cohen | M | So. | - | Louisville, KY | Assumption High School |
| 5 | Sofie Garrett | - | Fr. | - | Stone Mountain, Georgia | Parkview High School |
| 6 | Ellie Falk | F | Jr. | - | Bowling Green, KY | South Warren High School |
| 9 | Aidan Keegan | M | Fr. | - | Louisville, KY | Francis Parker School of Louisville |
| 10 | Audrey Greenberg | F | So. | - | Lexington, KY | Bryan Station High School |
| 12 | Kailey McClure | F | So. | - | Louisville, KY | Louisville Collegiate High School |
| 13 | Charlotte Thompson | - | Fr. | - | / | - |
| 18 | Caroline Seaward | F | Sr. | 5-4 | Sun Valley, Idaho | Wood Valley High School |
| 21 | Anna Donadio | D | Jr. | 5-4 | Fredericksburg, Virginia | Massaponax High School |
| 22 | Maddie Livers | D | So. | - | Louisville, KY | Butler Traditional High School |
| 42 | Ruby Himes | - | Fr. | - | / | - |
| 95 | Peyton Steinriede | GK | So. | - | Cincinnati, OH | Oak Hills High School |