The University of Minnesota is proposing dramatic tuition increases for next year, including a 6.5% tuition jump for undergraduate, in-state students on the Twin Cities and Rochester campuses — amid what U leaders call an “existential crisis” in American higher education.
The tuition hike announced Friday would be the biggest increase in 14 years at the Twin Cities campus. Officials blamed anticipated flat funding from the state and declining federal support for research in outlining the tuition spike and a 7% cut in academic programming for the proposed 2025-26 budget.
“Clearly, this is a once-in-a-lifetime assault on higher education in general, as an industry,” said Gregg Goldman, the U’s executive vice president for finance and operations. “My job and the president’s job is to remain as nimble as we can as we watch what’s happening at other institutions across the country.”
Goldman said the effects of the Trump administration’s tariffs could bring added costs to the U as well, describing them as a “pingpong game right now.”
The $5.1 billion proposal, which balances the budget, includes a 4% bump in faculty and staff compensation, though most pay raises would be merit-based rather than across-the-board.
Overall, Goldman emphasized that the budget proposal invests in the U’s employees and in improving its decaying infrastructure.
The deans of schools and colleges — such as the College of Biological Sciences and the College of Liberal Arts — were in charge of making the 7% cuts to academic programs, Goldman said, adding that they “did a phenomenal job” in preserving what was most important in their budgets.
The U also announced the planned closure of its Les Bolstad Golf Course, putting it up for sale because the historic 140-acre course in Falcon Heights isn’t bringing in enough money to allow for extensive repairs.