Indiana public school funding was mostly spared from cuts in the state’s new two-year budget, even as lawmakers expanded private school vouchers.
Legislative leaders moved forward with the expansion despite a revenue forecast showing a $2 billion drop in expected funding across the biennium.
K-12 schools will receive a 2% increase each year of the budget, with the voucher expansion taking effect in the second year.
The budget also follows a new property tax relief law signed April 15, which could cost school districts $744.4 million over the next few years.
In Marion County, Indianapolis Public Schools will receive $284.7 million in 2026 and $290.2 million in 2027 in state tuition support. The Metropolitan School District of Washington Township will receive $98.8 million in 2026 and $100.9 million in 2027.
Indiana’s state tuition support includes several funding components for student needs. The foundation grant provides a base amount per student, while the complexity grant adds funding for supports to help low-income students. Districts also receive extra support through the special education, career and technical education, and honors diploma grants, which help serve specific student populations and academic programs.
Rep. Jeff Thompson (R-Lizton), the budget architect, said expanding school choice was “very, very important,” as was maintaining support for public schools. Republican leaders highlighted a $640 million increase in tuition support — about 5% over the biennium.
Here’s how much funding each of Marion County’s school districts will receive.
Rachel Fradette is the WFYI Statehouse education reporter. Contact Rachel at rfradette@wfyi.org.