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by sachinag 5628 days ago
OK, this really helps; thanks! Let's say that you really wanted to study CS at Oxford; if you pick the wrong college to apply to, are you shut out from the university entirely? Or can you apply to multiple colleges at the same university at once?
3 comments

If a college thinks you're good at your subject but doesn't want to accept you for other reasons (they have too many candidates, don't think you'd be a good fit) they can "pool" you, which means that other colleges that are interested can interview you.

You can also make an "open application" which is similar to pooling where you say you don't mind which college you get into.

Generally applicants tend to put too much emphasis on the "right" college, the academic differences aren't that great, and a lot of it is just candidates wanting to get into the more prestigious colleges for prestige's sake.

It's different for postgraduates. Undergrads can only apply to one college and to one uni at a time, as @andrew1 mentions. Postgrads can apply to both unis. As for college selection, I had to apply to my department first (ComLab) and then I listed four colleges in order of preference. Once the department accepted my application, it was up to one of the colleges to accept me, though I did get my first choice.
Nope, you can only apply to one college at either Oxford or Cambridge per year (you can't apply to both universities, which probably makes sense as almost everyone who applied to one would probably apply to the other). There is a clearing system I think where if the college you apply to doesn't want you then other colleges can look at your application and choose to interview you, but I think that's fairly rare.
Whilst you're discouraged at all levels from applying to both Ox and Cam, I don't think it's true that you can't. But you're correct about the second interviews (at other colleges). This was actually pretty standard (for Biochem, at Oxford) when I applied and you went for the alternative interview (at a college you're assigned to, you don't get a second choice) before the first has made any sort of decision on you. There is a second safety net, whereby you can be 'pooled' (which is basically what you describe); if you don't have a college preference from the outset, you can apply directly to the pool (again, this is Oxford, not necessarily Cambridge)
You can't, UCAS won't accept your application. There are a few exceptions where you are allowed to apply for both, but in general you can't.