Despite the often gloomy forecasts about unprecedented challenges in higher education, Minnesota saw small gains in college enrollment in fall 2025 compared with 2024, marking two consecutive years of increases and signaling that students have returned after plummeting pandemic-era enrollment.
According to newly released data, total enrollment across the state of all postsecondary students was up about 2%, with undergraduate numbers alone rising more than 2%. Graduate student enrollment, however, declined by 2%.
Minnesota fared slightly better than the nation and the region; total national enrollment increased by 1% overall and about 1% among undergraduates, though graduate enrollment remained about the same. Enrollment across the Midwest was basically flat, too. That’s according to data from the National Student Clearinghouse Research Center, a nonprofit that released its final fall numbers earlier this month.
“It’s some pretty encouraging indicators that Minnesota, when you’re looking at undergraduate students, is both tracking higher than the national average and higher than our regional average,” said Wendy Robinson, the Office of Higher Education’s assistant commissioner of program, policy and grants. “That feels true given what we’ve seen in terms of increased demand on our state financial aid programs.”
It also follows what colleges’ own data have shown, she said, adding that her office doesn’t release its enrollment report until summer.
Minnesota colleges face several challenges
The state and national upticks are notable at a time when parents and students are increasingly weighing the value of a college education and its price tag as student debt and tuition continue to rise.
Colleges are facing other major headwinds, from the growing influence of artificial intelligence to President Donald Trump’s ongoing war on higher education, which has included cutting billions of dollars in research funding, axing various diversity, equity and integration efforts and restricting the number of international students who come here to study.
Minnesota historically exports more high school students to other states for college than it brings in, Robinson said, but that trend is “starting to pull back a little bit” this year. She credits the state’s North Star Promise program, which provides free tuition to any Minnesota public college or university for students whose families make $80,000 or less, and the Direct Admissions program, which tells high school seniors which colleges they are already eligible to attend without even applying.