Accreditation
How to Verify Wyoming School Accreditation
Wyoming has one public university — the University of Wyoming — and seven community colleges. HLC is the regional accreditor for all degree-granting institutions. Wyoming's small population and business-friendly laws make it attractive for diploma mill incorporations. Always check HLC, not business registrations.
Key takeaway
Wyoming's regional accreditor is HLC (Higher Learning Commission). The University of Wyoming (UW, Laramie) is the only four-year public university in the state — Wyoming is one of only two US states with a single four-year public university. Seven community colleges operate under the Wyoming Community College Commission (WCCC): Casper College, Central Wyoming College, Eastern Wyoming College, Laramie County Community College, Northwest College, Sheridan College, and Western Wyoming Community College. All are HLC-accredited. Wyoming has business-friendly incorporation laws similar to Delaware and South Dakota — diploma mills have used Wyoming LLCs to claim false US-based academic legitimacy.
Wyoming's accreditation landscape
The University of Wyoming (UW) in Laramie is the state's only four-year public university and land-grant institution. UW offers bachelor's through doctoral programs across law, business, engineering, education, agriculture, and liberal arts. It is HLC-accredited. Wyoming does not have a public four-year system with multiple universities — UW is singular.
Wyoming's seven community colleges serve regional populations across the state. Laramie County Community College (LCCC) in Cheyenne is the largest. Sheridan College serves northern Wyoming. Casper College serves central Wyoming. All seven are HLC-accredited and governed by locally elected boards under WCCC oversight.
There are few private four-year institutions in Wyoming. Wyoming Catholic College (Lander) is the most notable private option — it holds NWCCU accreditation. The Wyoming Institute of Technology is a vocational provider, not a degree-granting institution. Verify any unfamiliar Wyoming institution against HLC's directory.
Wyoming diploma mill risk
Wyoming's low regulatory burden for business formation has attracted diploma mills that register Wyoming LLCs to claim a US address. These entities often have no physical campus in Wyoming and no HLC accreditation. A Wyoming business filing is not evidence of academic legitimacy. The Wyoming Professional Teaching Standards Board and the Wyoming Department of Education have authority over some educational providers, but degree-granting authority requires HLC or recognized national accreditation.
The right database for each institution type
| Institution type | Database to use |
|---|---|
| University of Wyoming | UW institutional records + HLC directory |
| Community colleges (WCCC) | WCCC institution list + HLC directory |
| Private institutions | HLC or NWCCU directory + WY DOE authorization |
| Unknown/unfamiliar school | VerifyED search |
Step-by-step verification
Step 1 — Search VerifyED
Start at VerifyED. 912,000 institutions plus 2,592 flagged diploma mills, including Wyoming-registered fraudulent entities.
Step 2 — Check HLC for regional accreditation
HLC (hlcommission.org) accredits all regionally accredited Wyoming degree-granting institutions. Absence from HLC's directory means no regional accreditation.
Step 3 — Verify Wyoming Catholic College separately
Wyoming Catholic College (Lander) is accredited by NWCCU — not HLC. It is a legitimate, accredited institution. Verify against NWCCU's member directory (nwccu.org), not HLC's.
Step 4 — Do not accept Wyoming business registration as proof of legitimacy
If an institution's primary "proof" of legitimacy is a Wyoming LLC or corporation registration, treat it as a red flag. Verify accreditation independently through HLC or another recognized accreditor.
Quick reference
Verify any Wyoming school instantly
912,000 institutions. 2,592 diploma mills flagged — including Wyoming-registered mills.
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