Former Clemson quarterback Kelly Bryant has set his final visits, as well as when he plans to announce his transfer destination, according to multiple reports.

Bryant, who helped guide Clemson to an ACC title and a College Football Playoff berth last season, will take official visits to Mississippi State and Miami, with a midweek unofficial visit to Auburn sandwiched in between, according to the reports by The State, Rivals and 247Sports. The Bulldogs will receive a visit from Bryant this weekend, and then he will take a trip to the Plains next week before visiting UM.

Bryant previously took an unofficial midweek visit to Auburn on Oct. 30.

The former Clemson quarterback will then announce his transfer decision Dec. 4, according to the reports, which cite sources close to Bryant.

The 6-foot-3, 235-pounder previously took visits to North Carolina, Arkansas and Missouri. He announced in September that he would be leaving Clemson to take advantage of the NCAA’s new redshirt rule and seek a graduate transfer after he was supplanted as the team’s starter by freshman sensation Trevor Lawrence.

Bryant played in 30 games at Clemson, with 18 starts, passing for 3,333 yards, 16 touchdowns and 10 interceptions while completing 310-of-469 passes (66.1 percent). He also rushed for 987 yards and 16 touchdowns during his time at Clemson, averaging 3.8 yards per run.

Auburn is expected to break in a new starting quarterback next season, as two-year starter Jarrett Stidham is widely expected to declare for the NFL Draft after this season. Stidham, who has had an underwhelming year compared to his first season on the Plains, had an opportunity to leave early after 2017 but decided to come back for another season and attempt to compete for an SEC title and CFP berth.

If Stidham leaves, as many anticipate, Auburn is set to have four quarterbacks on scholarship next season: current backup Malik Willis, Cord Sandberg, Joey Gatewood and incoming freshman Bo Nix, the nation’s top-rated dual-threat quarterback. None of those four has much experience at the college level, as Willis has been a seldom-used backup this season, Sandberg has appeared in just one game after a lengthy minor league baseball career, while Gatewood has yet to see the field as a true freshman and is set to redshirt this season, and Nix is currently a high school senior but is rated as a top-50 prospect in the 2019 class.

Bryant would be the most experienced of the group, and Auburn coach Gus Malzahn has a track record of succeeding with transfer quarterbacks. As offensive coordinator, Malzahn guided Auburn to a national championship in 2010 with JUCO transfer Cam Newton at quarterback. The Tigers won the SEC championship and came within 13 seconds of a BCS national title in 2013 with JUCO transfer Nick Marshall at quarterback, and Stidham helped Auburn win the SEC West and come within one win of the CFP last season.

Tom Green is an Auburn beat reporter for Alabama Media Group. Follow him on Twitter @Tomas_Verde.