Texas public schools lost more than 76,000 students in a single year — the second-largest single-year enrollment decline in modern state history, and the largest outside of COVID-19. To understand what’s behind the shift and what it means for Texas’ future, Texas 2036 examined enrollment data across grades, regions and district types in our latest report, “Texas Public School Enrollment Trends.”
School Enrollment
What’s the problem?
- 76,000+ students vanished from Texas public schools in a single year, marking the first non-pandemic enrollment decline in nearly four decades.
- Hispanic students accounted for roughly 4 in 5 of the students lost statewide.
- 18 of 20 Education Service Center regions lost students, with the steepest declines in the Rio Grande Valley, Amarillo and Midland.
- Public schools’ share of Texas school-age children has fallen by roughly 3.5 percentage points over the past decade, pointing to more than just lower birth rates.
What does this mean for Texas?

A Pipeline Problem
Nearly 60% of the current decline is concentrated in grades K–5, meaning today’s elementary shrinkage is on track to move through middle and high schools over the next decade.

Beyond population growth
In many parts of the state, population gains are no longer translating into public school enrollment growth. Forty-three percent of traditional ISDs are located in a county where the population is growing, while district enrollment is not.

A redistribution underway
Major urban districts are steadily contracting while charter schools and rural districts are expanding their share of enrollment, reshaping where Texas educates its students.









