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Cost-of-Living Crisis Deters College Enrollment: 67% of High School Graduates Opt Out Citing Concerns

New Poll Reveals Sharp Rise in Economic Barriers to Higher Education

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Understanding the Surge in Cost-of-Living Pressures on Recent Graduates

The escalating cost-of-living crisis has become a defining factor in the decisions of high school graduates contemplating their next steps after graduation. Rent prices have soared in major cities, grocery bills have climbed steadily, and everyday essentials feel increasingly out of reach for young adults stepping into independence. This financial strain is not just anecdotal; it directly influences whether these graduates pursue higher education or pivot to immediate workforce entry. For many families, the prospect of adding college tuition, even with aid, to already stretched household budgets proves overwhelming. In urban areas like New York or San Francisco, where average one-bedroom rents exceed $3,000 monthly, the math simply does not add up for entry-level wages post-high school.

This reality underscores a broader economic shift where immediate earning potential trumps long-term educational investment. Graduates weigh the four-year commitment against starting salaries in trades or service industries, which can reach $50,000 annually without debt. Universities, traditionally seen as gateways to prosperity, now face scrutiny over their net value amid these pressures.

Key Insights from the Latest National Survey on Non-Enrollment Decisions

A comprehensive survey of over 9,500 recent high school graduates from the class of 2025 reveals stark trends in college-going rates. Conducted between February and March 2026, the study highlights that while 89% ultimately enrolled, the 11% who opted out—approximately 1,022 respondents—provided clear reasons rooted in economics. Among these non-enrollees, 67% pinpointed cost-of-living expenses as their top concern, a significant jump from 51% the previous year. This group includes everyday costs like housing, food, and transportation that accumulate rapidly outside the family home.

Other factors trailed: 25% stated they simply could not afford college outright, 26% desired time off before committing (down from 39% prior year), and 18% lacked clarity on career paths. Notably, direct workforce needs affected 12%, up slightly, reflecting robust job markets in sectors like healthcare aides and logistics. First-generation students and those from households earning under $60,000 were disproportionately represented among non-enrollees, amplifying equity concerns in access to higher education.

  • Cost-of-living as primary barrier: 67% (up 16 points year-over-year)
  • Inability to afford tuition/fees: 25%
  • Need to work immediately: 12%
  • Perceived low ROI: 11%

Demographic Breakdowns: Who Is Most Affected?

Income levels play a pivotal role in these choices. Students from households over $120,000 annually prioritize career outcomes and experiential learning, applying to more schools and holding multiple deposits longer. In contrast, lower-income and first-generation graduates (26% of sample) emphasize financial aid packages and scholarships, with 35% of all enrollees citing these as key value indicators.

Racial and ethnic diversity adds layers: Hispanic/Latine (23%) and Black/African American (15%) respondents showed higher non-enrollment rates tied to affordability. Regional variations emerge too—Southeast and Midwest students face steeper living costs relative to wages, pushing more toward community colleges or trades. Gender splits minimally, though females (55% of sample) value strong career services slightly more.

These patterns signal universities must tailor messaging: wealthier families seek prestige and networks, while underserved groups demand transparent aid calculators and work-study guarantees.

National Enrollment Landscape: Growth Amid Looming Challenges

Despite these barriers, fall 2025 postsecondary enrollment ticked up 1.0% to 19.4 million students, per National Student Clearinghouse data covering 97% of institutions. Undergraduates drove this with +1.2%, led by community colleges (+3.0%) and public four-year schools (+1.4%). Private nonprofits dipped -1.6%, highlighting sector vulnerabilities.

First-year enrollment held steady at 2.5 million, with public four-years gaining 1.9%. Certificate programs surged 2.2%, appealing for quick, low-cost credentials. Yet, experts warn of the 'enrollment cliff' starting 2026: birth rates from the 2008 recession mean 15% fewer high school graduates by 2041, per Western Interstate Commission for Higher Education projections.

a man in sunglasses and a graduation cap

Photo by Harati Project on Unsplash

Line graph depicting U.S. postsecondary enrollment trends from 2020 to 2025, showing recent uptick amid projected cliff.

University Responses: Innovating for Affordability and Value

Higher education leaders are adapting aggressively. Public universities like the University of California system have expanded need-based grants covering living stipends, while privates like Northeastern emphasize co-op programs blending paid work with classes—35% of surveyed students value such active learning. Community colleges report booming dual-enrollment with high schools, easing transitions without full costs.

Strategies include tuition freezes (e.g., several state systems holding 2025-26 rates steady), micro-credentials for stackable skills, and AI-resistant curricula in trades like electrical engineering. Fitch Ratings notes a 'deteriorating' 2026 outlook, urging diversified revenue via online programs and adult learners. Fitch's analysis stresses state funding uncertainty exacerbates pressures.

Intersecting Factors: AI Uncertainty Compounds Economic Woes

Layered on costs, 42% of enrollees expect AI to shape their careers, with 10% already switching majors—from computer science to engineering, fearing automation. Half feel uncertain about AI's workforce impact, 33% anxious. Quotes from students reveal fears: "AI will have my job by graduation." Universities counter by highlighting 'durable skills' like critical thinking via internships (44% top value).

Case Studies: Institutions Thriving Despite Headwinds

Arizona State University (ASU) exemplifies success, growing enrollment 2% via affordable online degrees and employer partnerships guaranteeing jobs. Their 'Earn and Learn' model subsidizes living costs through paid apprenticeships. Similarly, Southern New Hampshire University (SNHU) serves 200,000+ mostly online, focusing on working adults with flat-rate tuition.

Community college consortia in Texas offer free tuition plus stipends, boosting completion rates 15%. These models prove value articulation—job placement stats prominently displayed—retains students amid crises.

Stakeholder Perspectives: Students, Parents, and Administrators Weigh In

Parents influence budgets (rated 3.40/5) more than majors (2.40/5). Administrators like EAB's Pam Royall note: "Cost-of-living increases make entering college harder; prove value through experiential learning." Students seek moderate tuition (24%) alongside aid. Policymakers debate free community college expansions to stem declines.

EAB's full survey report details these views, urging targeted communications.

Future Outlook: Navigating the Enrollment Cliff

By 2030, 12-point drops in 18-year-olds loom, per Nathan Grawe's models. Combined with costs, 13% national decline projected through 2041. Optimists point to rising adult/transfer enrollment; pessimists foresee 25% college closures. Balanced view: agile institutions emphasizing ROI will thrive.

Actionable Solutions for Prospective Students and Institutions

  • Utilize net price calculators early for realistic budgeting.
  • Prioritize community colleges or scholarships—35% value them highly.
  • Seek co-ops/internships for paid experience.
  • Universities: Enhance late-cycle yield via personalized aid offers.
  • Expand micro-credentials for quick workforce entry.

These steps bridge immediate needs with long-term gains, ensuring higher education remains viable.

Infographic outlining university strategies to combat enrollment declines due to cost-of-living pressures.
Portrait of Dr. Sophia Langford

Dr. Sophia LangfordView full profile

Contributing Writer

Empowering academic careers through faculty development and strategic career guidance.

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Frequently Asked Questions

📊What does the 67% statistic mean for college enrollment?

The figure comes from EAB's 2026 First-Year Experience Survey of 9,516 high school graduates, where 67% of the 11% non-enrollees cited cost-of-living expenses like rent and food as their primary barrier, up from 51% last year.

💸Why has cost-of-living become the top concern?

Inflation in housing (up 20% in many cities since 2020) and essentials outpaces wages for entry-level jobs, making immediate work appealing over deferred college ROI amid student debt fears.

👥How do demographics influence these decisions?

Lower-income (<$60k households, 26%) and first-gen students (26%) are hit hardest, prioritizing aid over prestige, while higher-income focus on career outcomes.

📈Is overall enrollment declining?

Fall 2025 saw +1% to 19.4M students (Clearinghouse), but private schools dropped, and demographic cliff projects 13-15% decline by 2041.

🎓What do enrolling students value most?

Job placement (44%), internships (35%), scholarships (35%), financial aid (30%), career services (29%)—emphasizing practical, affordable outcomes.

🤖How is AI factoring into choices?

42% expect AI career impact; 10% switched majors (e.g., CS to engineering). Half uncertain, 33% anxious about job displacement.

🏛️What strategies are universities using?

Aid expansions, co-ops, tuition freezes, online/micro-credentials, late-cycle personalization to prove value and affordability.

📚Are community colleges gaining?

Yes, +3% enrollment, +28% certificates since 2021—affordable entry to degrees or jobs.

What is the enrollment cliff?

Post-2008 recession birth decline means fewer 18-year-olds from 2026, hitting colleges hard without adaptation.

💡Advice for high school grads facing costs?

Use net price calculators, target aid-heavy schools, consider community college transfers, seek paid internships for real-world experience.

👨‍👩‍👧How can parents help?

Discuss budgets early, explore scholarships via AcademicJobs resources, weigh ROI with career data.