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States with and without universal school choice programs

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This article provides an overview ofuniversal school choice programs across the 50 states. It highlights which states offer at least one of the following types of programs for which all students in the state are eligible:

  • voucher systems,
  • education savings accounts (ESAs), or
  • education tax credit programs.
HIGHLIGHTS
  • Eighteen (18) states have universal private school choice programs. Of the 24 universal school choice programs the states run, 10 areeducation savings account (ESA) programs, 10 areeducational tax credit programs, and four arevoucher programs. Some states run limited school choice programs in addition to universal programs.[1]
  • Fifteen (15) states have limited but not universal private school choice programs, and another 17 states do not have any private school choice programs.
  • Of the states with universal school choice, 15 are Republican trifectas and three have divided governments.
  • Six (6) Republican trifecta states do not have universal private school choice programs; two Republican trifecta states do not have any private school choice programs.
  • What is universal school choice?
    Private school choice refers to policies and programs that provide public funds for alternatives to public schools, such as private schools and homeschooling. These policies include education savings accounts (ESAs), school vouchers, and education tax credit systems. Auniversal school choice program is one for which all students are eligible, regardless of family income, location, demographic, or disability. In contrast, non-universal school choice programs are available to a subset of qualifying students, such as students in families with income below a certain threshold, students with disabilities or special needs, or students zoned for certain schools or living in certain districts.

    Types of programs

    This page covers the following policies:

    • Education savings account (ESA) programs provide public funding for eligible students that families can use on approved educational alternatives to assigned public schools. Qualifying alternatives often include private school tuition, tutoring services, transportation to school, or homeschooling supplies.[2]
    • Voucher programs pay for eligible students to attend private schools. The funds typically transfer directly from the government to the school.[3]
    • Education tax-credit programs provide tax incentives to individuals and businesses for supporting education and usually take one of the following forms:[4]
    • Tax-credit scholarships allow individuals and businesses to lower their tax burden by donating to scholarship funds, which provide private school tuition assistance.
    • Individual tax credits/deductions allow families to reduce their state tax liability for approved education expenses, such as tuition, textbooks, or tutoring.
    • Tax-credit ESAs allow tax credits for donations to fund Education Savings Accounts, which families can use for a range of educational expenses.

    To see a breakdown of these programs by state,click here.

    Universal school choice by state

    The following map shows which states had universal, restricted, or no school choice programs by trifecta status as of December 2025.

    • 18 states haveuniversal school choice programs.
    • 15 in Republican trifectas.
    • Zero in a Democratic trifecta.
    • Three in divided governments.
    • 15 states havelimited school choice programs.
    • Six in Republican trifectas.[5]
    • Four in Democratic trifectas.
    • Five states in divided governments.
    • 17 states have no school choice programs.
    • Two in Republican trifectas.
    • 12 in Democratic trifectas.
    • Three states in divided governments.

    Private school choice programs are categorized as universal when any student in the state can qualify for benefits. Universal programs, however, vary widely regarding the benefit amount and the funding available, the type of program, the number of students using the program, and the accessibility of the funding. For example, Minnesota's education tax deduction program provided an average benefit of a $1,307 tax deduction per student as of 2024, while Arizona's ESA program provided an average benefit of $9,782 in an ESA account.

    The following map shows which states do not have universal school choice programs. It highlights states that do not have any private school choice programs and states that have private school choice programs for which a subset, but not all, students qualify.

    Universal school choice programs by state

    This section contains information about the 18 states with universal school choice and their universal programs.

    Universal school choice programs
    StateType of programProgram nameYear enacted
    ArizonaEducation Savings Account (ESA)Empowerment Scholarship Accounts2011[6]
    ArizonaTax-Credit ScholarshipOriginal Individual Income Tax Credit Scholarship Program1997
    ArkansasEducation Savings Account (ESA)Arkansas Children’s Educational Freedom Account Program[7]2023
    FloridaEducation Savings Account (ESA)Family Empowerment Scholarship for Educational Options Program2019[8]
    FloridaTax-Credit Education Savings AccountFlorida Tax Credit Scholarship Program2001
    IdahoIndividual credit/deductionIdaho Parental Choice Tax Credit2025
    IndianaVoucherIndiana Choice Scholarship Program2025
    IowaIndividual Tax Credit/DeductionEducation Savings Account Program[9]2023
    IowaIndividual Tax Credit/DeductionTuition and Textbook Tax Credit1987[10]
    LouisianaEducation Savings Account (ESA)Louisiana Giving All True Opportunity to Rise (LA GATOR) Scholarship Program[11]2024
    MinnesotaIndividual Tax Credit/DeductionEducation Deduction1955
    MontanaTax-Credit ScholarshipTax Credits for Contributions to Student Scholarship Organizations2015
    New HampshireEducation Savings Account (ESA)Education Freedom Account Program2021[12]
    North CarolinaVoucherOpportunity Scholarships2013
    OhioIndividual Tax Credit/DeductionOhio Tax-Credit Scholarship Program2021
    OhioIndividual Tax Credit/DeductionK–12 Nonchartered Private School Tax Credit2021
    OhioIndividual Tax Credit/DeductionK–12 Home Education Tax Credit2021
    Ohio[13]VoucherEducational Choice Scholarship Program2005
    OklahomaIndividual Tax Credit/DeductionOklahoma Parental Choice Tax Credit Act2023
    TennesseeVoucherEducation Freedom Scholarship Program2025
    TexasEducation Savings Account (ESA)Education Savings Account Program2025
    Utah[14]Education Savings Account (ESA)Utah Fits All Scholarship Program2023
    West VirginiaEducation Savings Account (ESA)Hope Scholarship Program[15]2021
    Wyoming[16]Education Savings Account (ESA)Steamboat Legacy Scholarship2025

    History of universal school choice policies

    This section provides an overview of the history of universal school choice programs in the United States.

    The history of universal school choice in the U.S. began with Minnesota's education tax deduction in 1955, followed by Arizona's Tax-Credit Scholarship Program in 1997. In 2021, West Virginia launched the first universal Education Savings Account (ESA), which has since become the most common type of universal school choice program. As of March 2025, nine Republican trifecta states had enacted universal ESAs since 2021. In 2025, Idaho, Indiana, New Hampshire, Tennessee, Texas, and Wyoming passed universal private school choice legislation.[17]

    Latest news

    This timeline shows the three most recent updates. This page is updated when school choice-related bills become law or courts issue rulings that affect school choice programs.

    • February 5, 2026: TheIdaho Supreme Court unanimously upheld the constitutionality of the Idaho Parental Choice Tax Credit. The plaintiffs, who included the Committee to Protect and Preserve the Idaho Constitution, Inc., Mormon Women for Ethical Government, School District No. 281, Latah County, and the Idaho Education Association, Inc., among others, argued that it violated the Idaho Constitution and the public purpose doctrine. The court found that the petitioners did not adequately show that the program violated either of them.[18]
    • December 8, 2025: Lewis and Clark County District Court JudgeMike Menahan blocked Montana's education savings account program for students with disabilities on December 8, 2025, ruling that it was improperly funded by the legislature and, therefore, unconstitutional. Menahan said it lacked a valid statutory appropriation.[19]
    • July 15, 2025: A Laramie County District Court judge instituted a preliminary injunction on Wyoming's universal Steamboat Legacy private school choice program, preventing payouts to families during litigation over the legality of the program. The program was enacted by the state legislature in March 2025 and set to begin on July 1, 2025, but was delayed on June 27, 2025, then temporarily blocked on July 15.[20]


    Universal school choice policies enacted from 2023 through 2024

    Listed here are the universal school choice policies enacted in 2023 and 2024.

    2024

    One state adopted a new universal school choice law in 2024.

    One state's universal school choice law expired in 2024.

    • Illinois (Democratic trifecta): Illinois became the first state to roll back its school voucher program when its tax-credit scholarship program, known as "Invest in Kids," expired on January 1, 2024. The Illinois legislature declined to extend the program during its 2023 session, citing concerns over public school funding and accountability for private schools receiving public funds.[23]

    2023

    Four states created new universal school choice programs in 2023.

    • Arkansas (Republican trifecta): Gov.Sarah Huckabee Sanders (R) signed the Arkansas LEARNS Act on March 9, 2023, creating Education Freedom Accounts, among other provisions. The accounts provide eligible students with around $6,600 for eligible expenses. In the 2025-26 school year, eligibility will expand to include all students.[24][25][26] 
    • Iowa (Republican trifecta): Gov.Kim Reynolds (R) in January 2023 signed a bill creating the Education Savings Account program. The program provides about $7,500 for approved educational expenses and will be available to all students in 2025 or 2026.[27]
    • Oklahoma (Republican trifecta): Gov.Kevin Stitt (R) signed the Oklahoma Parental Choice Tax Credit program in December 2023, providing refundable tax credits of $5,000 to $7,500 per child for private school tuition and $1,000 for homeschool educational expenses.[28]
    • Utah (Republican trifecta): Gov.Spencer Cox (R) signed HB 215 in January 2023, creating the Utah Fits All Scholarship, among other provisions. All students are eligible for the accounts, which will receive about $8,000 for approved educational expenses per year.[29][30]

    One state expanded an existing ESA program to cover all students in 2023.

    See also

    Other school choice-related content:

    Other education policy content


    External links

    Footnotes

    1. Lewis and Clark County District Court JudgeMike Menahanblocked Montana's education savings account program for students with disabilities on December 8, 2025, ruling that it was improperly funded by the legislature and, therefore, unconstitutional. Menahan said it lacked a valid statutory appropriation. Montana also runs a universal school choice program.
    2. Education Next, "What Is an Education Savings Account, and Why Does It Matter?" May 11, 2023
    3. American Experiment, "No, Education Savings Accounts are not the same as vouchers," April 28, 2021
    4. USA Facts, "From charter schools to tax credit scholarships: School choice explained," October 26, 2021
    5. Lewis and Clark County District Court JudgeMike Menahanblocked Montana's education savings account program for students with disabilities on December 8, 2025, ruling that it was improperly funded by the legislature and, therefore, unconstitutional. Menahan said it lacked a valid statutory appropriation.
    6. Expanded in 2022
    7. Eligibility to be universal by 2025
    8. Expanded in 2023
    9. Eligibility to be universal by 2025-26
    10. Expanded in 2021
    11. Eligibility to be universal by 2025
    12. Expanded in 2025
    13. A judge in Franklin County, Ohio, ruled on June 24, 2025, that Ohio's EdChoice Scholarship, a universal school choice voucher program, violated theOhio Constitution by funding private schools at the expense of public schools. The case is expected to be appealed inOhio's Tenth District Court of Appeals.
    14. Utah Third Judicial District Judge Laura Scott ruled that Utah's universal school choice program, titled Utah Fits All, violated theUtah Constitution. The court held that the state Constitution charges theUtah Legislature with establishing and maintaining free and public education, but but they cannot establish schools and programs that are not open to all the children of Utah or free from sectarian control. The program will continue to run until theUtah Supreme Court rules on its constitutionality.
    15. Eligibility to be universal by 2026
    16. A Laramie County District Court judge instituted a preliminary injunction on Wyoming's universal Steamboat Legacy private school choice program, preventing payouts to families during litigation over the legality of the program. The program was enacted by the state legislature in March 2025 and set to begin on July 1, 2025, but was delayed on June 27, 2025, then temporarily blocked on July 15.
    17. EdChoice, "School Choice In America," accessed January 6, 2025
    18. Idaho Supreme Court, "IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF IDAHO - Docket No. 53264-2025," accessed February 12, 2026
    19. Montana Free Press, "Montana judge blocks education savings accounts for students with special needs," accessed December 11, 2025
    20. KGAB, "Judge Blocks Wyoming’s School Choice Scholarship Program," accessed July 17, 2025
    21. The Lion, "Universal school choice bill signed into law by Louisiana governor," June 19, 2024
    22. Office of the Governor Jeff Landry, "Governor Landry Signs “Dream Big” Education Plan into Law," June 19, 2024
    23. Forbes, "Illinois Becomes First State To Roll Back School Voucher Program," November 10, 2023
    24. Arkansas Democrat Gazette, "Sanders signs Arkansas LEARNS, her education overhaul, into law," March 9, 2023
    25. Division of Elementary & Secondary Education," accessed October 20, 2023
    26. KATV, "School choice vouchers: LEARNS Act Education Freedom Accounts a class act or lesson in uncertainty?" September 10, 2023
    27. IPR, "Reynolds signs law creating tax-funded accounts, expanding school choice in Iowa," January 24, 2023
    28. "Oklahoma.gov,"Governor Stitt Celebrates Launch of Oklahoma Parental Choice Tax Credit," December 7, 2023
    29. Washington Examiner, "'School choice revolution': Utah becomes third state to enact universal program," January 30, 2023
    30. Utah State Board of Education, "Utah Fits All Scholarship Program," accessed October 20, 2023
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