Current:Home > ScamsA college closes every week. How to know if yours is in danger of shutting down. -InfinityFinance
A college closes every week. How to know if yours is in danger of shutting down.
View
Date:2025-04-15 21:10:20
As if finding a suitable, affordable college isn’t hard enough, students must also find one that isn’t likely to close on them, experts say.
Every week, on average, a college or university closes, according to an analysis by the State Higher Education Executive Officers Association (SHEEO). That’s up from about two a month last year and could worsen this fall as college enrollment dwindles further, experts said.
When schools close, fewer than half of the students transfer to another school, the executive officers association said. Of those who do, less than half graduate, it said. The others who reenrolled and didn’t finish, just added to their student debt and “added to the population of students who have some college but no credential,” the association said.
That means choosing a school that’s the right fit for you and affordable isn’t enough. You also need to research the school’s financials to ensure its solvency, said Jack Wallace, director of governmental and lender relations at Yrefy, a private student-loan company.
“You’ve got to look at the school’s financials, liquidity and endowments,” he said, noting the work is like researching a company to decide whether to buy its stock.
Learn more: Best personal loans
Why are so many schools closing?
Many small private schools, both for-profit and nonprofit, depend on tuition to operate. With enrollments trending lower for more than a decade, smaller schools with little to no endowments are having trouble staying afloat, experts said.
Undergraduate enrollment in 2023 was 15% below peak levels from fall 2010, “with no meaningful growth expectation on the horizon,” Fitch Ratings said. “Eroding consumer sentiment on the affordability of a higher education degree and unfavorable longer-term demographic trends for high school graduate totals together could translate into demand pressure well into the next decade for the sector.”
New federal rules are also squeezing budgets, Fitch said. Overtime pay is required for salaried employees earning less than about $55,000 a year, up from the $35,568 threshold. “For colleges already managing extremely tight or deficit operations, any additional mandated costs will compound budgetary stress,” Fitch said.
And “what may be a final nail in the coffin is the FAFSA debacle,” said Shannon Vasconcelos, financial aid consultant at Bright Horizons College Coach. “There’s a decrease in the number (of FAFSAs) submitted, and that leads to enrollment decreases.”
The number of high school seniors who submitted the Free Application for Federal Student Aid through June had dropped 11.6% from a year ago, according to National College Attainment Network.
What red flags should students look for in a school?
It’s not a perfect science, Vasconcelos said, but some steps students and families can follow to get a sense of how well capitalized a school is include:
- ProPublica Nonprofit Explorer allows you to search the financials of any nonprofit organization, including schools. “Look at the net income over several years and see if it consistently has huge profits each year, whether it’s positive net income or negative, or in a downward trend,” Vasconcelos said. “If it’s losing money or if net income’s trending down, that can be a real red flag the finances are not working well at this college, and you might want to give it a little extra thought about enrolling.”
- Search the school on the internet “and throw in words like 'finances' and 'layoffs' to see if there’s any news about the school’s financial issues,” she said. “A closure usually doesn’t happen totally out of the blue. Usually, you’ll see some news about layoffs and budget cuts for a number of years before closure happens.”
- Take a tour and ask yourself, “How are the physical state of buildings?” she said. “Are there improvements or decrepit buildings? Are there signs of innovations or status quo? Are they adding new programs or not? These can give you an idea of whether they have money to invest in new things.”
- Common Data Set is standardized data every school collects and publishes. “It will be on the school’s website but sometimes it’s buried,” Vasconcelos said. “So, you may want to Google the college’s name and ‘common data sets’ to find it. It will have numerous years of data, and it’s in a consistent format from school to school so it’s easy to compare.”
Within the common data set, she said, the two biggest things to examine are:
Enrollment data in Section B. “If enrollment’s consistently declining, the school could be struggling,” she said. “It can be a strategy to cut back enrollment to keep afloat, but you need to consider if it’s a bad sign.”
Amount of institution non-need-based scholarships and grants in Section H2A, line O. “This sounds counterintuitive, but these are recruitment scholarships. If these are increasing, it could be seen as a measure of desperation,” Vasconcelos said. “They could be trying to draw in more students that pay tuition.”
Education costs:Can I afford to send my children to college? This question helped me see other options.
Don't go broke:How to pay for college without going broke? Let us count the ways
Taking these steps doesn’t guarantee your school won’t close, but they can minimize your risk of it happening and your dropping out as a result.
“In the best situations, colleges that close have prepared and worked out mergers with other colleges or transfer agreements with other colleges they’ve partnered with so students can get automatic admission as a transfer student,” Vasconcelos said. “They’ll try to ease the path for existing students, but it’s always major disruption and not every student will take that. The new school may be far away, social adjustment may be hard, credits may not transfer. It can be major disruption, and the school may not be a right fit anymore.”
Medora Lee is a money, markets, and personal finance reporter at USA TODAY. You can reach her at mjlee@usatoday.com and subscribe to our free Daily Money newsletter for personal finance tips and business news every Monday through Friday morning.
veryGood! (677)
Related
- Head of the Federal Aviation Administration to resign, allowing Trump to pick his successor
- Yes, nearsightedness is common, but can it be prevented?
- Truck crashes into New Mexico gas station causing fiery explosion: Watch dramatic video
- CDC is investigating gastrointestinal sickness on luxury cruise ship Queen Victoria
- Residents worried after ceiling cracks appear following reroofing works at Jalan Tenaga HDB blocks
- An Ohio officer says he didn’t see a deputy shoot a Black man but he heard the shots ring out
- Inside a Gaza hospital as U.S. doctors help carry out a small miracle to save a young life shattered by war
- It's the Year of the Dragon. Here's your guide to the Lunar New Year
- Arkansas State Police probe death of woman found after officer
- 'Nipplegate' was 20 years ago — but has the treatment of female stars improved?
Ranking
- Travis Hunter, the 2
- Prince William thanks public for 'kind messages' following King Charles III's cancer diagnosis
- What to know about South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem’s banishment from the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation
- Controversy over the Black national anthem at the Super Bowl is a made up problem
- Arkansas State Police probe death of woman found after officer
- Jury Finds Michigan Mom Guilty of Involuntary Manslaughter in Connection to Son’s School Shooting
- 33 people arrested after Gaza-related protest in suburban Chicago
- Senegal opposition cries coup as presidential election delayed 10 months and violent protests grip Dakar
Recommendation
Could your smelly farts help science?
Taylor Swift's 'Eras Tour' movie will stream on Disney+ with an extended setlist
Beyoncé hair care line is just latest chapter in her long history of celebrating Black hair
Taylor Swift, fans overjoyed as Eras Tour resumes in Tokyo
Warm inflation data keep S&P 500, Dow, Nasdaq under wraps before Fed meeting next week
Prince William thanks public for 'kind messages' following King Charles III's cancer diagnosis
DEA reverses decision stripping drug distributor of licenses for fueling opioid crisis
Sébastien Haller fires Ivory Coast into Africa Cup final against Nigeria. Hosts beat Congo 1-0