JUCO · Updated 2026-05-20

NWAC: The Pacific Northwest JUCO System

The Northwest Athletic Conference runs roughly 36 women's soccer programs across Washington, Oregon, and Idaho. It is not part of the NJCAA and not part of California's 3C2A. NWAC schools allow partial athletic scholarships, charge $3,000–$8,000 a year in tuition, and feed players into Pac-12, Big Sky, and Pacific Northwest Division II programs every transfer cycle.

What is the NWAC?

The Northwest Athletic Conference (NWAC) is a regional community-college athletic conference covering Washington State, Oregon, and a slice of northern Idaho. It governs its own eligibility, recruiting calendar, and championship structure independent of the NJCAA. A player on an NWAC women's soccer roster is a community-college athlete — but she is not an NJCAA athlete, and NJCAA rules do not apply.

The conference fields roughly 36 women's soccer programs and runs a single fall regular season followed by a championship tournament at a host site each November. Unlike the NJCAA, the NWAC does not split soccer into Division I, II, and III tiers; every program competes at one level and follows one scholarship rulebook.

How does NWAC compare to NJCAA and 3C2A?

The three junior-college systems behave differently in three places that matter for a recruit: scholarship availability, cost of attendance, and transfer geography.

SystemFootprintAthletic aid?Typical tuitionPrograms
NJCAA D1National (TX, FL, IA, OK heavy)Yes — up to 18 full$5K–15K~120
NJCAA D2NationalYes — ~12 equivalents$4K–12K~100
3C2ACalifornia onlyNo~$1.4K~90
NWACWA · OR · IDYes — partial only$3K–8K~36

The headline distinction: NWAC allows athletic scholarships but caps them at partial awards. There is no "18 full rides" structure like NJCAA Division I. Coaches divide a smaller pool across the roster, which means a strong recruit can absolutely earn money — but a full ride at an NWAC school is uncommon.

The pricing offsets that. In-state tuition at an NWAC college runs $3,000–$5,000 a year for Washington and Oregon residents; out-of-state and international tuition lands closer to $8,000. Even an unfunded NWAC player typically pays less out of pocket than an NJCAA D1 athlete attending out of state without a full scholarship.

Which NWAC programs matter for women's soccer?

A handful of programs anchor the conference and routinely produce four-year transfers. Roster turnover and coaching staffs change, but these are the names that recur on NWAC championship brackets and on D1 and D2 transfer announcements:

ProgramStateNotable for
Tacoma CCWAFrequent championship contender; Seattle U pipeline
Spokane CCWAEastern Washington pipeline; Big Sky transfers
Walla Walla CCWAStrong recruiting reach into Idaho and Oregon
Pierce CollegeWALakewood campus; regular semifinalist
Highline CCWASeattle-area access; international recruits
Lower Columbia CCWALongview; long-running program
Clackamas CCORPortland-area top Oregon program
Lane CCOREugene; University of Oregon walk-on pipeline

Where do NWAC players transfer?

The NWAC's transfer market is regional. Most outbound transfers stay inside the Pacific Northwest, which is a feature, not a bug — recruits who pick NWAC are typically families who can't or won't relocate cross-country, and the conference's regional D1 and D2 connections are the entire reason it works.

Common four-year destinations break into three buckets:

Pac-12 / Mountain West / Big Sky D1
Oregon, Oregon State, Washington, Washington State, Boise State, Idaho, Portland State, Eastern Washington, Sacramento State. These transfers are competitive — usually one to three NWAC alumnae per Pac-12 roster, often as walk-ons or partial-scholarship adds.
Pacific Northwest D2
Seattle Pacific, Western Washington, Saint Martin's, Central Washington, Northwest Nazarene, Western Oregon, Concordia (OR). This is the highest-volume transfer lane and the most realistic target for most NWAC players. D2 transfers from JUCO rarely require sitting out a year.
NAIA and regional private D3
Multnomah, Northwest University, Warner Pacific, George Fox, Pacific Lutheran, Whitworth. NAIA programs can offer aid; D3s offer academic merit only.

How does NWAC eligibility work?

NWAC athletes complete a conference-administered eligibility form before each season. The NWAC does not require NCAA Eligibility Center registration to play in the conference. But a player who plans to transfer to an NCAA D1 or D2 program after her two years should still register with the NCAA Eligibility Center before her first NWAC term — the registration preserves NCAA core-course evaluation from high school transcripts, which becomes hard to reconstruct later.

NWAC eligibility allows two seasons of competition. A player has five calendar years from her first NWAC term to complete those two seasons. Hardship waivers exist for documented injury, illness, or family emergency. The conference grade requirement is a 2.0 cumulative GPA with 12 credit-hours per term enrolled.

What does NWAC cost compared to NCAA?

The cost gap is the structural reason NWAC exists as a recruiting option. A two-year stint at an NWAC school followed by two years at a Pacific Northwest D2 is dramatically cheaper than four years at a partial-scholarship D1 — even when the D1 offer looks attractive on paper.

PathYear 1–2 costYear 3–4 cost4-yr family contribution
NWAC (in-state) → PNW D2 (50% scholarship)~$8K~$30K$38K
NCAA D1 (in-state public, 30% scholarship)~$35K~$35K$70K
NCAA D2 (private, 50% scholarship)~$30K~$30K$60K

These are list-price estimates and ignore Pell Grants, state aid (the Washington College Grant is meaningful here), and the academic merit aid available at most four-year destinations. The directional gap holds: NWAC routinely lands $20K–$30K below an equivalent NCAA path for in-region families. See our scholarships overview for how the math compounds across four years.

When does NWAC make sense versus NJCAA?

Use NJCAA Division I if you want maximum scholarship leverage and are willing to leave the region — Tyler JC, Iowa Western, Eastern Florida State, and the Texas Region XIV programs run on full-ride economics. Use NWAC when geography is a hard constraint, in-region transfer destinations are your target, or you want the cheapest realistic path to a four-year degree.

A separate consideration: NWAC's competitive level sits between NJCAA D2 and NJCAA D1. A strong NWAC program plays comparable soccer to a mid-tier NJCAA D2 program, but coaches at major D1 programs scout NJCAA D1 more aggressively than they scout NWAC. If your stated goal is "I want to transfer to a top-25 D1," NJCAA D1 in Texas or Florida puts you in front of more eyes.

What we see at intake

Roughly 8% of Brava's JUCO-bound class identifies an NWAC program as their target — almost exclusively Washington and Oregon residents. Of those, about 70% list a Pacific Northwest D2 (Seattle Pacific, Western Washington, Saint Martin's) as their post-JUCO destination rather than a D1. The NWAC families we work with prioritize cost-of-attendance math first and conference prestige second; the partial-scholarship structure rarely changes their decision once they price the four-year total.

Targeting NWAC programs?

A coach-verified Brava profile gives NWAC head coaches the same evaluation signal they would get at a regional showcase — without the airfare. We publish your verified film, position assessment, and academic record on a single page they can forward to their assistants.

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