January 14, 2025

Growth Rate of Florida’s Private School Vouchers Cause for Alarm, Groups Say

New Report Shows That Think Tanks Were Correct in Predicting $4-Billion Price Tag for School Vouchers

STATEWIDE, Fla. - With Florida’s regular legislative session approaching and committee weeks already in full swing, Florida Policy Institute (FPI) and Education Law Center (ELC) are cautioning that their earlier predictions about the massive price tag for universal vouchers have come to fruition.

In a new report, FPI and ELC point out that private school vouchers cost $3.9 billion in the current fiscal year. When a universal voucher system was proposed in 2023 via House Bill (HB) 1, the think tanks had warned that such a program would cost $4 billion. Over a four year period, the share of state education formula dollars (Florida Education Finance Program, or FEFP) going to private education vouchers has nearly doubled, from 12 percent in FY 2021-22 to 23 percent in FY 2024-25. FPI and ELC’s report also includes local-level data showing the proportion of state aid by county being diverted to FES vouchers.

The groups also note that the current cap on PEP (home-school) students will be lifted completely in FY 2027.

Sadaf Knight, CEO of FPI, said: “While funding going to public schools is carefully scrutinized through the budget process, Florida lawmakers have failed to ensure accountability in the state’s universal voucher program. Without the proper guardrails, we will see the cost of private school vouchers continue to balloon to the detriment of public schools.”

Norin Dollard, PhD, senior policy analyst and KIDS COUNT director, said: “Florida is and has been a chronically underfunded state with respect to K-12 education. The continued and increasing drain on public schools severely undercuts our ability to provide quality education for all of Florida’s students.”

Mary McKillip, senior researcher at ELC, said: “We take no pride in being right about the amount of public money Florida’s universal voucher programs now cost the state. And we are deeply concerned about how much these numbers will continue to increase year after year and further impact public school district funding across the state.”

The state’s universal voucher program (HB 1) went into effect on July 1, 2023. The measure expanded the state’s voucher program by removing the income cap — previously 375 percent of the federal poverty level — and opening up eligibility to all K-12 students, regardless of household income.

The most recent comprehensive data made public by Step Up for Students, Florida’s primary scholarship funding organization, shows that 69 percent of newly enrolled students since the passage of HB 1 were already attending private schools. Florida’s Department of Education has not made available to the public any comprehensive demographic data on vouchers for the current fiscal year, despite calls from FPI and others for more transparency.

FPI is an independent, nonpartisan and nonprofit organization dedicated to advancing state policies and budgets that improve the economic mobility and quality of life for all Floridians.

Education Law Center, founded in 1973, pursues education justice and equity to ensure that all students receive a high quality public education effectively preparing them to participate as citizens in a democratic society and as valued contributors to a robust economy.

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