Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The most expensive schools will be even less diverse as only the wealthy will be able to afford the tuition and annual tuition increases. Not that that is a bad thing for most wealthy families or, by extension, the schools. That’s where they are already headed.
It's this. Our small private has not been impacted over the past couple years with impacts via Trump/DOGE etc and in fact our wait list has increased. There will always be those who can afford it, but the impacts will be less diversity.
Anonymous wrote:My spouse and I are both private school educators. For the last 15 years, as birth rates decline, and now with out-migration of tbe wealthy, we notice the families choosing private are those with special needs. Sometimes documented, sometimes not, but it’s clear they want something very specific from their school. Parents usually say it in a veiled way like:
-we just wanted a better fit for our child socially
-we prefer smaller class sizes
-my kid needs more time to run around and burn their energy
-we want our kid to get all of their HW done in study halls during the day so they can be in multiple travel sports
-we are willing to donate money for this cause that benefits my kid specifically
Ahh, I see you now…Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, either you are playing chess and trying to eliminate your child’s competition next admissions season or you are the type that seeks pleasure in other people’s downfall. Which one is it?
Or they could just be curious because they don't want their kid to go to a school that may fold quickly...
Anonymous wrote:Small, non-selective, independent private K-8 schools are more likely to be impacted. I saw a few of these close in 2008-2009 in a different metro. That said, several similar privates in NoVA are still thriving in 2026. So it will vary from one metro to another.
The top 15-20 privates in metro DC are very unlikely to be affected. Catholic schools in metro DC are more affordable than many other privates and have solid demand, so they should be fine. Ditto for the other religiously affiliated schools.
Anonymous wrote:Smaller privates will start to close.
Small religious ones will close for sure.
The wealth disparity will become greater.
By 2028 people will be lucky to have food.
Anonymous wrote:OP, either you are playing chess and trying to eliminate your child’s competition next admissions season or you are the type that seeks pleasure in other people’s downfall. Which one is it?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know about this area, but the Great Financial Crisis killed private schools in the Philadelphia Area, where I grew up, and which historically has very high rates of private school attendance. Whereas in many areas, private schools are reserved for the affluent, lower cost independent schools were much more common around there. Schools went from four classes per grade down to one, and enrollment tanked. Many schools closed.
Because of the k-shaped economy, my guess is the schools hardest hit will be the lower cost ones more populated by the middle to upper-middle class or those that have extremely high percentages of students on aid (50%+).
The Great Recession impacted enrollment numbers at the Baltimore privates and some still haven't returned to their old sizes. No school closed, all are doing fine. But enrollment numbers did drop, and noticeably at some schools (down by 200 for example). Most of the bleeding was elementary and middle schools. It was less people withdrawing students but stopping enrolling their kids. At the same time, inflation in school fees was still going up substantially and outpacing income growth and that is the real reason for why some schools haven't returned to their pre 2008 sizes.
My observation of the private school world today is that most private schools now cater entirely to the top 1-2% (compared to the top 10% 20 years ago) and they are in a position to weather any localized recessions better. To see the real impact of recessions you need to look at parochial schools. DOGE in DC isn't impacting most of the privates because most parents aren't government employees and that's been the case for a long time.
Anonymous wrote:I know the economy hasn't fallen off a cliff yet but in the past when we've gone into a recession is there a marked drop in private school enrollment or applications? Or are the families sending their kids to these schools insulated enough that they can keep their kids in school through bumpy economic patches?
Anonymous wrote:I don't know about this area, but the Great Financial Crisis killed private schools in the Philadelphia Area, where I grew up, and which historically has very high rates of private school attendance. Whereas in many areas, private schools are reserved for the affluent, lower cost independent schools were much more common around there. Schools went from four classes per grade down to one, and enrollment tanked. Many schools closed.
Because of the k-shaped economy, my guess is the schools hardest hit will be the lower cost ones more populated by the middle to upper-middle class or those that have extremely high percentages of students on aid (50%+).