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UChicago to offer free tuition for family income <$250K

https://news.uchicago.edu/story/uchicago-will-offer-free-tui...
richard clock
  05/14/26
so all these top schools are doing this now, i have to wonde...
UhOh
  05/14/26
Once they factor in the help abroad the kid did in the summe...
me mum died in the holly (TT6)
  05/14/26
...
UhOh
  05/14/26
Can you repeat this in English this time?
imagine if the races were reversed
  05/14/26
sorry chink, no way
me mum died in the holly (TT6)
  05/14/26
chicago might be too big for this but... Princeton spared...
zarathustra
  05/14/26
I think they are happy to forgo a couple hundred thousand in...
David Poaster Wallace
  05/14/26
sure but that's not the issue i raised, which is that based ...
UhOh
  05/14/26
These schools claim to be need blind in admissions decisions...
Nazca Redlines
  05/14/26
"guarantee free tuition starting in Autumn Quarter 2027...
Nazca Redlines
  05/14/26
i told my parents to get divorced when i was like 14 for faf...
UhOh
  05/14/26
Tuition and fees at Chicago are about $75k, with no room and...
Nazca Redlines
  05/14/26


Poast new message in this thread



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Date: May 14th, 2026 9:06 AM
Author: richard clock

https://news.uchicago.edu/story/uchicago-will-offer-free-tuition-families-incomes-below-250000-greatly-expanding

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5866571&forum_id=2#49884954)



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Date: May 14th, 2026 9:08 AM
Author: UhOh

so all these top schools are doing this now, i have to wonder if they are throttling admissions for these people. surely there are enough qualified people under $250k to fill these places up, no? but then they wouldn't have anyone paying for it, so they have to restrict the free riders. and if they can't fill it with qualified people under $250k, that's a pretty damning indictment of the whole thing. which wouldn't be that surprising really - isn't the average harvard hhi like $500k? maybe there aren't as many qualified middle classmos and as i'd like there to be, but damn that's a lot of people.

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5866571&forum_id=2#49884957)



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Date: May 14th, 2026 9:11 AM
Author: me mum died in the holly (TT6)

Once they factor in the help abroad the kid did in the summer of high school, its easy to exclude enough sub $250k people.

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5866571&forum_id=2#49884961)



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Date: May 14th, 2026 9:12 AM
Author: UhOh



(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5866571&forum_id=2#49884965)



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Date: May 14th, 2026 9:51 AM
Author: imagine if the races were reversed

Can you repeat this in English this time?

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5866571&forum_id=2#49885053)



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Date: May 14th, 2026 10:03 AM
Author: me mum died in the holly (TT6)

sorry chink, no way

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5866571&forum_id=2#49885076)



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Date: May 14th, 2026 9:23 AM
Author: zarathustra

chicago might be too big for this but...

Princeton spared from endowment tax, PRINCO executive says, saving hundreds of millions

Nico David-Fox and Gray Collins

May 8, 2026 | 10:52pm EDT

Princeton will not have to pay any net investment income tax on returns from its $36.4 billion endowment, a University investment official said at a private event in January, after a recent expansion of its undergraduate financial aid program left the University below a 3,000 tuition-paying student threshold to qualify for taxation. Experts had projected that the new tax on wealthy university endowments — enacted under H.R. 1, the omnibus tax and spending bill passed by congressional Republicans in July 2025 — would have cost Princeton roughly $180 million annually.

The 8 percent endowment tax was predicted to impose one of the country’s highest university tax burdens on Princeton, which currently enrolls 9,100 undergraduate and graduate students. According to University President Christopher Eisgruber ’83, recent widespread budget cuts have been driven by decreased long-term endowment projections — growth estimates that likely would have been further eroded if the University were required to pay the tax.

The University currently pays out about 5.35 percent every year of its $36.4 billion endowment — the fourth-largest in the country — which accounts for 64 percent of annual revenue and supports key University priorities such as financial aid. The revised tax modified a provision enacted in 2017 that imposed a 1.4 percent excise tax on investment income at wealthy private colleges with over 500 students, which the University has since paid annually.

In interviews with The Daily Princetonian, several attendees of the Princeton Class Leadership Conference in January confirmed that Princeton University Investment Company Managing Director Susan Ciniglio ’09 said the University’s endowment was exempt from the tax, set to kick in for the fiscal year starting on July 1, 2026.

According to the attendees, who were granted anonymity to speak about the closed-door event, Ciniglio stated that the number of tuition-paying students at the University was under the 3,000 threshold to qualify for the tax, in response to an audience question. This comes after a $44 million expansion of the financial aid program for the 2025–2026 academic year, which eliminated tuition for most families making less than $250,000 and followed previous aid increases.

The University has previously declined to share the number of tuition-paying students it enrolls.

In a statement to the ‘Prince,’ University spokesperson Michael Hotchkiss wrote that “Princeton University fully complies with all its tax obligations. Our payments under the revised tax will be calculated and disclosed in 2028, as required by the government.”

PRINCO and Ciniglio did not respond to requests for comment.

In July, amid several Trump administration attacks on higher education, Congress set the 8 percent tax rate for universities with over $2 million in endowment funds per student and over 3,000 tuition-paying students. At around $3.9 million in endowment funds per student, Princeton was expected to be subject to the tax, and many of its peer institutions are still likely to pay hundreds of millions annually.

“The endowment tax is a serious threat to Princeton and other top research universities which it targets,” Hotchkiss wrote. “It reduces the higher education sector’s ability to provide student financial aid and to make investments in research and teaching that support U.S. prosperity, innovation, and security. We continue to advocate against it.”

Republicans argued the new tax increase was intended to ensure elite universities with massive endowments contributed more federal revenue, arguing that the schools had benefited from favorable tax treatment. House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Jason Smith wrote after the tax was enacted that the measure would “hold woke, elite universities that operate more like major corporations accountable.”

The new endowment tax emerged in 2025 as one of Princeton’s federal lobbying priorities. In the first quarter of 2026, it spent its second-highest quarterly total ever on lobbying, $240,000, part of which was focused on the endowment tax.

In a September 2025 interview with the ‘Prince,’ Eisgruber briefly discussed a lobbying group he organized, which included about two-dozen peer institutions and discouraged the implementation of an increased endowment tax. One of the group’s proposals was reportedly to implement a mechanism to spare universities that increased spending on financial aid.

Emeritus Professor of Economics Burton Malkiel GS ’64, who has publicly written about how universities benefit from the illiquid assets of endowments, called the University’s endowment tax strategy a “brilliant response to a punitive and discriminatory tax.”

The expansion of financial aid “increases our income and produces much-needed student support,” he wrote to the ‘Prince.’

However, not all experts on the matter shared Malkiel’s view.

Economics and public affairs professor Owen Zidar took fault with what he saw as a lack of transparency in the University’s financial operations.

“It’s remarkable how little input faculty have had in this process despite the material implications for research and teaching,” Zidar wrote.

Professor Edward Zelinsky of Cardozo Law School, a legal scholar and expert in tax policy, believes that some funds from all endowments — including those of universities, private and community foundations, and donor-advised funds — should be directed to the federal government.

“I really think that the appropriate law, which is far from where we are today, is a flat tax, where every such institution pays the same amount to help the federal government,” Zelinsky said in an interview with the ‘Prince.’ “So from that vantage, I would say it’s not a good thing that Princeton is able to avoid the tax.”

However, he affirmed the legality of Princeton’s expansion of financial aid as a mechanism to avoid the tax.

“Assuming that Princeton has been able to adopt policies so that it is below the 3,000 student threshold, then that strikes me as a legally appropriate position for Princeton to take,” Zelinsky said.

He argued that the endowment tax should not function as a regulatory tool to influence university behavior. He noted that some supporters of the law — including Senator Chuck Grassley, an early advocate of the original endowment tax — viewed wealthy university endowments as underutilized and wanted institutions to direct more resources toward students.

University administrators have consistently pushed back on this notion, pointing to the nationally recognized financial aid program and robust academic opportunities made possible by the previously tax-free status of the endowment.

“For better or worse, we have the social overhead of the federal government, and an income tax ideally should be a tax that is economically neutral … that tries to impose its obligations similarly on similar institutions,” Zelinsky added.

Princeton’s total enrollment falls well below that of peer institutions such as Harvard, Stanford, and Yale, which remain likely to pay hundreds of millions due to the 8 percent tax.

Subscribe Get the best of the ‘Prince’ delivered to your doorstep or inbox. Subscribe now »

These institutions have responded to the expanded endowment tax with austerity measures. In June 2025, Stanford University announced plans to reduce its operating budget by $140 million, citing “federal policy changes” including increased taxes on university endowments, while also extending a staff hiring freeze and delaying some capital spending.

Harvard extended a university-wide hiring freeze as administrators warned that federal actions, including the higher endowment tax, could place as much as $1 billion in annual revenue at risk. Yale, meanwhile, announced spending cuts and hiring slowdowns while emphasizing that most of its endowment consists of donor-restricted funds dedicated to financial aid, research, and academic programs.

A July Opinion column by Isaac Barsoum in the ‘Prince’ argued that Princeton could potentially avoid the expanded federal endowment tax by increasing financial aid enough to reduce the number of tuition-paying students counted under the law.

Barsoum noted that the University was uniquely positioned to avoid the tax because, unlike many peer institutions, it lacked large tuition-paying law and medical schools and had a comparatively small student body already receiving strong financial support.

After aid expansions in August, subsequent reporting by the ‘Prince’ estimated that the share of students paying tuition had declined to around 3,000 as more undergraduates qualified for substantial aid.

https://www.dailyprincetonian.com/article/2026/05/princeton-news-adpol-university-spared-endowment-tax-financial-aid-millions-princo

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5866571&forum_id=2#49884986)



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Date: May 14th, 2026 9:31 AM
Author: David Poaster Wallace

I think they are happy to forgo a couple hundred thousand in tuition now for the possibility one of these kids maeks it and donates $100M in 20 years.

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5866571&forum_id=2#49885007)



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Date: May 14th, 2026 9:38 AM
Author: UhOh

sure but that's not the issue i raised, which is that based on the sheer amount of students under $250k, these schools must be limiting the amount of them they take lest they give up nearly every tuition-paying spot to a free rider. i.e., giving full rides to middle classmos makes it even harder for them to get accepted. small price to pay in exchange for a full ride i guess, but there must be some kind of economic discrimination going on behind the scenes. if they blind reviewed everyone and then applied the scholly after admission they'd be overrun with free riders.

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5866571&forum_id=2#49885022)



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Date: May 14th, 2026 9:46 AM
Author: Nazca Redlines

These schools claim to be need blind in admissions decisions. They have plenty of money coming in from uc and umc families paying full freight, rich foreign students' families, donations, endowments, and foolish law students whose tuition (funded by 6 figure loans) goes to support other departments.

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5866571&forum_id=2#49885041)



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Date: May 14th, 2026 9:43 AM
Author: Nazca Redlines

"guarantee free tuition starting in Autumn Quarter 2027 for undergraduate students from families that have annual income less than $250,000, with typical assets."

What are typical assets? Will a lawyer bro with a chill couple million invested qualify? It would be worth it for some wagies to toggle income down to $249k per year if it means $70k in free tuition per kid per year when they're college age.

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5866571&forum_id=2#49885032)



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Date: May 14th, 2026 9:44 AM
Author: UhOh

i told my parents to get divorced when i was like 14 for fafsa purposes. they didn't do it. i'm sure plenty of UMCmos have this all figured out.

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5866571&forum_id=2#49885036)



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Date: May 14th, 2026 9:53 AM
Author: Nazca Redlines

Tuition and fees at Chicago are about $75k, with no room and board.

For a UMC wagie with a 40% marginal tax rate and two kids in college, you'd need $250k in pre tax income for tuition alone. And many xo bros have 5 or 6 kids or more.

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5866571&forum_id=2#49885056)