Texas families can begin applying for private school vouchers Wednesday, the most significant step yet in a state program set to launch next school year.
Texans have until March 17 to apply for the program, which allows families to receive taxpayer dollars to send children to private school or educate them at home.
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If the number of applicants exceeds the $1 billion lawmakers set aside for the program, the state will prioritize students based on family income and whether they have a disability — though neither guarantee access.
The program, overseen by the comptroller, Texas’ chief financial officer, will launch at the beginning of the 2026-27 school year.
The state can spend no more than $1 billion on the program during the state’s current two-year budget cycle, which ends Aug. 31, 2027. It is unclear how much the program’s costs could rise — lawmakers will make that determination in future legislative sessions — but state budget experts predict the tab could escalate to roughly $4.8 billion by 2030.
Here’s what to know about the applications.
Most Texas families with school-age children can apply.
That includes students already attending private school or in home schooling. Families with children in a public school must plan to unenroll them if they want to participate. Parents must also submit proof of their child’s U.S. citizenship or evidence the child lawfully resides in the country.
If public demand for the program exceeds available funding, the state will prioritize the following applicants:
- Students with disabilities in families with an annual income at or below 500% of the federal poverty level, which includes a four-person household earning less than roughly $165,000 a year.
- Families at or below 200% of the poverty level, which includes any four-person household earning less than roughly $66,000.
- Families between 200% and 500% of the poverty level.
- Families at or above 500% of the poverty level; these families can receive up to $200 million of the program’s total budget.
The priority system does not guarantee access to the program, as students must still find a private school to accept them. No state or federal laws require private schools to make learning accommodations for students with disabilities.
In other states with large-scale voucher programs, participation has skewed toward more affluent and white families with children already in private school.
Families must have several documents prepared.
That includes Social Security numbers for the parent and child; an IRS Form 1040 for 2024 or 2025; and a Texas identification card or utility bill, lease agreement, mortgage statement or voter registration certificate if the state cannot verify a Texas ID number.
Families can also prove their child’s U.S. citizenship or lawful resident status by submitting documents like birth certificates or certificates of naturalization or citizenship.
For private pre-K eligibility, children must be at least 3 years old and meet at least one of the state criteria for public pre-K. That criteria includes being eligible to participate in the free or reduced-price lunch program, being unable to speak or understand English, or being in foster care. Families with children in foster care must submit proof, such as a court order, adoption documents or a placement order.
Some families could receive up to $30,000 each year.
Most participating families with children in private schools will receive about $10,500 annually. Home-schoolers can receive up to $2,000 per year. Children with disabilities can receive up to $30,000 — an amount based on what it would cost to educate that child in a public school.
To apply for the voucher program, families can submit a Social Security determination letter or a physician’s note as proof their child has a disability.
But to qualify for the higher tier of funding, families must submit an Individualized Education Program, a legal document specifying that a child needs special education services. If families do not have that documentation, they can request it from their local public school. Public schools must complete those requests within 45 days of a parent consenting to the evaluation.
Families will receive the money through education savings accounts. Managed by the finance and technology company Odyssey, the digital accounts will let families pay tuition and make education-related expenses, like private tutoring, transportation and school meals.
Students must also find private schools to accept them.
During the application process, families must signal their intent to enroll their child in a private school.
But they do not have to officially have their children enrolled until June 1, nearly three months after the application period closes. Private schools will then confirm enrollment over the summer.
Private schools can apply to join the program if they have operated a campus for at least two years and received accreditation. They must also administer a nationally recognized exam of their choosing in grades 3-12. The schools are not required to administer the same standardized tests issued to public school kids each year — currently the State of Texas Assessments of Academic Readiness, or STAAR.
More than 1,600 private schools have opted in thus far, with most located in the Houston and Dallas-Fort Worth areas.
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton released a January opinion stating his belief that the comptroller can block certain schools from participating in the program if they’re “illegally tied to terrorists or foreign adversaries.”
The opinion came after Acting Comptroller Kelly Hancock requested guidance from Paxton, saying schools associated with the accreditation company Cognia had hosted events organized by the Council on American-Islamic Relations, a Muslim civil rights group that Gov. Greg Abbott recently designated a terrorist organization.
CAIR has sued Abbott over the label, calling it defamatory and false. The U.S. State Department has not designated the organization a terrorist group.
As first reported by the Houston Chronicle, hundreds of Cognia schools have been shut out of the program, including those that primarily serve Muslim students, Christian students and children with disabilities. The comptroller’s office has said it is now inviting groups of Cognia schools that it considers in compliance with the law to participate.
Families will start receiving notifications in April.
Those notifications will let parents know they will receive funding — contingent upon enrolling their children in a private school by June 1.
The first portion of state funding will become available in families’ education savings accounts in July.