
The School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS) hosts morning information sessions and tours for prospective undergraduates on select dates throughout the year. Each program includes a brief presentation describing available academic programs, popular experiential learning and academic support options, and admissions information. Sessions will begin at 9:00 a.m. and end around 11:30 a.m.
We also encourage you to attend a university-wide UB Admissions tour. If an afternoon tour is offered on the same day as your SEAS tour, you would be able to attend both. You can find available UB Admissions tour dates and sign up online or call 1-888-UB-ADMIT (1-888-822-3648).
Monday tours will include stops at Electrical Engineering, Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, Civil Engineering, Chemical Engineering, Machine Shop, Computer Science and Engineering, and the Office of Undergraduate Advising.
Friday tours will include stops at Digital Manufacturing Lab/DREAM, Materials Science and Engineering, Industrial Engineering, Environmental Engineering, Biomedical Engineering, Office of Undergraduate Advising, and the Machine Shop.
Please note that our tours are capped at 30 people due to fire code and space restrictions in labs featured on the tour. We request that you limit your party to 3 people (1 student + 2 guests) when possible in order to help us host the maximum amount of interested students in each session. If you have questions about this, please email Baylee Snodgrass (bayleeri@buffalo.edu).
Select an available date from the calendar below, then click on the tour you would like to register for.
To visit one of our departments or meet with faculty, contact the department you're interested in or contact the Office of Graduate Education at gradeng@buffalo.edu.
If you are a faculty or staff member who would like to bring a group of prospective graduate students to campus, let us know! Contact us for more information.
Visitors to UB are required to abide by its health guidelines. Masks are now optional on its campuses in most settings but may be required in some clinical health care settings and in the Student Health Services Shuttle.

