"Did you know you can transfer up to 75% of your undergraduate degree? For an associate degree, you can transfer up to 45 credits, and up to 90 credits for a bachelor’s degree….90 credits! UoPeople even accepts transfer credits toward master’s programs (about 15 credits depending on the program)." https://www.uopeople.edu/blog/transferring-your-credits-is-easier-with-uopeople/
This is good policy, for some it can be a finishing school toward a degree. Many DEAC accredited schools have similar policy.
Transferring up to 90 s.h. to a bachelor's degree is unremarkable. It is more rare to see 15 s.h. transferrable to a master's, but not unheard of.
Taft would accept 9 graduate transfer credits into a Masters program but accepted to 44 J.D. credits. About half, in other words. ABA approved law schools accept at least one third.
Not only that, but they're now accepting NCCRS, plus they have partnerships that covers the cost of the first 60 credits (20 classes) of transfers, and for those who got in on the deal, $15 for applications! Link from the sister board: https://www.degreeforum.net/mybb/Thread-Free-Transfer-Credit-Evaluation-at-UoPeople