tr?id=&ev=PageView&noscript=

Texas News You Can Use

HTX News You Can Use

Dallas-Fort Worth News You Can Use

San Antonio​ News You Can Use

76% of Texas voucher applicants are already enrolled in private schools or home-schooled

76% of Texas voucher applicants are already enrolled in private schools or home-schooled

Private school vouchers were Texas Republican Gov. Greg Abbott's top priority during last year's legislative session. (Photo by Chris Torres/Getty Images)

By Katie Serrano

March 10, 2026

Texas’ new $1 billion voucher program allots about $10,000 per student to be used on private school tuition. It’s paid for by taxpayer dollars. 

When Republican Gov. Greg Abbott’s private school voucher program became law last year, proponents claimed it would give families who wouldn’t normally be able to afford private school tuition more options. That’s not who is applying , according to new data. 

Around three in four of the over 150,000 applicants to the program are already enrolled in private schools or are home-schooled, according to data from the Texas Center for Voucher Transparency.

As of March 4, only around 36,000 families with students enrolled in Texas public schools submitted applications for the program. Texas has approximately 5.5 million students enrolled in public schools, which means that less than 1% of public school families have applied.

Texas is following in the footsteps of other states that have implemented a voucher program. In Arkansas, 95% of participants in the state’s program did not attend public schools in the previous school year. In Arizona, data shows the use of vouchers is highest in affluent school districts, and lowest in poorer school districts.

“Texas public schools are the backbone of our communities,” said Dee Carney, director of the Texas Center for Voucher Transparency, in a statement. “Early voucher application data suggests that the overwhelming majority of families continue to choose and trust their local public schools to educate their children.”

Critics of the program have warned that it will funnel crucial funds away from already struggling public schools across Texas, as public school funding across the state is tied to daily attendance. 

And out of Texas’ 254 counties, 158 don’t have private schools for parents to send their children to in the first place, according to Texas Private School Accreditation Commission, but those families’ tax dollars will still go toward the program.

Voucher program faces first lawsuit

At the end of 2025, Acting Comptroller of Public Accounts Kelly Hancock—who manages the voucher program—requested a legal opinion from Attorney General Ken Paxton, asking if he could exclude schools from the voucher program based on their connections to groups designated as “foreign terrorist organizations” or “foreign adversaries.”

In January, Paxton stated that he “stands ready to vigorously defend legal challenges to any lawful determination by the Comptroller’s Office aimed at preventing terrorists or our Nation’s enemies from abusing the TEFA program.”

Republicans have recently pushed anti-Islam rhetoric, including Abbott, who designated the Council on American-Islamic Relations—a Muslim civil rights group—as a terrorist organization. 

CAIR has sued Abbott over the label, calling it defamatory.

To date, more than 2,000 private schools have been accepted into the program, but no Islamic schools are known to have been accepted. In response, a Muslim parent has filed a federal lawsuit against the state for the exclusion of Islamic private schools from the program, claiming religious discrimination.

The application period to apply for the program closes on March 17. If the number of applicants exceeds the $1 billion lawmakers allotted for it, the state will have to look at  students based on household income and students’ disabilities.

CATEGORIES: EDUCATION

Author

  • Katie Serrano

    Katie Serrano is the DFW Political Correspondent for COURIER Texas. She has lived in Texas for 20 years and received both her Bachelor’s and Master’s Degree from the University of Arkansas in Editorial Journalism and News Narrative Writing. She is passionate about making local journalism accessible and engaging young audiences. Since joining COURIER Texas, she has covered education in North Texas, housing affordability, women’s issues, local politics, and more. She previously worked in editing, content management, newsletter production, social media marketing and data reporting.

Support Our Cause

Thank you for taking the time to read our work. Before you go, we hope you'll consider supporting our values-driven journalism, which has always strived to make clear what's really at stake for Texans and our future.

Since day one, our goal here at COURIER Texas has always been to empower people across the state with fact-based news and information. We believe that when people are armed with knowledge about what's happening in their local, state, and federal governments—including who is working on their behalf and who is actively trying to block efforts aimed at improving the daily lives of Texas families—they will be inspired to become civically engaged.

Texas Editor
Senior Newsletter Editor (DFW) COURIER Texas
Your support keeps us going
Help us continue delivering fact-based news to Texans

Politics

Related Stories
Inside Texas’s controversial social studies overhaul

Inside Texas’s controversial social studies overhaul

The politicization of Texas classrooms continues as the State Board of Education (SBOE) will deliberate rushed social studies teaching standards next week that put a greater emphasis on Western and Texas history at the expense of other cultures.

BLOCKED
BLOCKED