Idaho’s State Board of Education approved tuition increases of 4.4% to 4.7% across the state’s four-year public universities on April 28 — the largest hikes in three years and a likely preview of broader public-system increases for fall 2026.
Why It Matters: After a three-year tuition freeze and two years of smaller hikes, Idaho schools are restoring price growth to address inflation, salaries, and benefits. Boise State will collect roughly $8.3 million of the additional $17.6 million in revenue. The increases come even as state officials warn that price hikes could discourage enrollment.
The Numbers
- Boise State University: 4.5% increase to $9,789 tuition
- Idaho State University: 4.7% increase to $9,339 tuition
- University of Idaho: 4.5% increase to $9,825 tuition
- Lewis-Clark State College: 4.4% increase to $8,226 tuition
Nationally, colleges are projected to increase tuition by 3.25% on average.
Broader Pattern: Nevada has approved hikes of up to 12% at four-year institutions and 9% at two-year colleges, citing budget shortfalls. Georgia raised in-state tuition 1%, with a 3% hike for out-of-state and international students.
A Deloitte report flagged growing financial stress at U.S. colleges driven by declining enrollment, demographic shifts, and federal aid changes.
Why Colleges Are Raising Prices: Three forces are converging:
- Pandemic-era flat tuition has compressed budgets
- Inflation has hit operating costs
- Federal aid policy under OBBBA is reshaping revenue assumptions
State boards that protected students during Covid are now releasing pent-up cost pressure.
What Families Should Know: For families with a student starting college in fall 2026, the sticker price they saw at admission may not match the bill. Run a refreshed cost of attendance estimate against current 529 balances, expected aid, and the new Parent PLUS caps that take effect this summer.
How This Connects: The College Investor’s analysis of why college is so expensive points to five forces behind rising costs — including reduced state appropriations, higher cost of student services, and labor pressure. Idaho’s hike is consistent with the national trend the College Board’s Education Pays 2026 (PDF File) report earlier this year, which still shows a college degree paying off but at higher upfront costs.
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Editor: Colin Graves
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