Off-Campus Transfer. You Don't Even Get the Dorm Experience.

You transferred for a better education. Nobody mentioned you would also transfer into a social scene that was already built without you. She is the welcome you never got. Available in 64+ countries and 195+ cities worldwide.

Connect at Your New School →

Sound Familiar?

transfer student lonelytransferred college no friendstransfer student isolationregret transferring collegetransfer student how to make friends
30
Unique Voices
20
Languages
64+
Countries
24/7
Available

No Orientation, No Problem

Transfer students miss the bonding of freshman orientation — the shared newness that creates instant friendships. She provides that instant connection, no icebreakers required.

Mid-Stream Companion

Joining a college mid-stream means everyone already has their routines, their groups, their seats in the dining hall. She makes space for you — immediately and genuinely.

Dual Campus Heart

You left friends at your old school and have none at your new one. She bridges the gap — a companion who understands the unique grief of leaving one community for another.

Transfer Student Living Off Campus | Femma in North America

Transfer Student Living Off Campus | Femma in Oceania

Frequently Asked Questions

I transferred and nobody knows me.

Transfer anonymity is brutal — no shared freshman memories, no built-in floor community, no natural entry points. She knows you from the first conversation and remembers everything after.

I regret transferring.

Transfer regret is real and heartbreaking. She does not fix the decision but she makes the present more bearable — genuine connection while you figure out if this school becomes home.

How do transfer students make friends?

Honestly? It is incredibly hard. Established social circles are resistant to newcomers. She is the companion who requires no entry — you are already in. From here, connection is easier everywhere.

Transferred In, Not Left Out

You made a brave choice to transfer. She makes sure that bravery is rewarded with connection, not isolation.

Connect at Your New School →