Texas Public Colleges Must Waive Application Fees October 13-19 Under First Statewide Law
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Texas becomes one of the latest states to create a coordinated college access program with Free College Application Week running October 13-19, 2025. Under Senate Bill 2231, all public universities and community colleges must waive application fees for Texas residents who submit through ApplyTexas, eliminating costs typically ranging from $50-75 per school.
Texas Launches Statewide Free Application Week
Texas residents will be able to apply to any public university or community college in the state without paying application fees during a week-long period this October, thanks to a new state law that makes Texas one of the latest states to create a coordinated college access initiative.
Governor Greg Abbott and the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board announced that Free College Application Week will run from October 13-19, 2025, with applications submitted through the ApplyTexas platform automatically receiving fee waivers. Senate Bill 2231, which passed the Texas Legislature with strong bipartisan support earlier this year, requires all public institutions to waive admission application fees for Texas residents during the designated week.
“Texas prioritizes opportunities for students to pursue the best education they need to succeed in high demand, good-paying jobs after graduation,” Abbott said in announcing the program. “By supporting our students today, we are investing in a stronger Texas tomorrow.”
The fee waivers apply to first-time college students, transfer students, and residents returning to school, eliminating fees that typically range from $50 to $75 per application. To qualify, applicants must submit their complete applications through ApplyTexas between midnight on October 13 and 11:59 PM on October 19. Applications that are started but not submitted by the deadline will not receive fee waivers.
While Governor Abbott’s announcement characterized the initiative as addressing financial barriers to higher education, the program builds on existing individual fee waiver options already available through organizations like the National Association for College Admission Counseling (NACAC), College Board, and individual institutions. Many states participate in the American College Application Campaign, which coordinates state-level College Application Month programs with similar goals.
“In addition to the cost savings, combined with other tools available to Texans for planning and achieving educational and career goals, free application week removes a barrier so more students can take their first step toward higher education,” said THECB Commissioner Wynn Rosser.
The program complements Texas’s broader college access ecosystem, including My Texas Future—a digital platform that helps students explore careers, compare programs by tuition and outcomes, and connect with advisors—and the Direct Admissions program, which provides students with pre-acceptance to participating institutions based on their academic credentials.
Author Quote"
This is a positive step for college access, but families should understand that fee waivers only apply to public institutions through ApplyTexas—private universities aren’t included, and you must submit complete applications by the October 19 deadline to qualify.
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Laura LurnsLearning Success Expert
How the MSM Has Misled
Multiple Headlines: "Texas Launches First-Ever Free College Application Week" — This framing overstates novelty by implying unprecedented innovation without acknowledging that many other states have similar College Application Month campaigns coordinated through the American College Application Campaign for years. While this is Texas's first statewide law, it's not a groundbreaking national concept.
Governor Abbott Quote (Multiple Sources): "Texans can apply to their preferred colleges or universities without application fees" — This statement creates the misleading impression that all Texas colleges participate when the program only applies to public institutions using ApplyTexas. Private universities like Rice, SMU, and Baylor are excluded, and some public institutions using alternative platforms may not participate.
Official Announcements: Omitted critical implementation details including the tight October 13-19 submission deadline, the requirement that applications be submitted (not just started) by 11:59 PM on the final day, and platform restrictions to ApplyTexas only. These limitations received insufficient emphasis in most coverage.
Rep. Terry Wilson Quote: "This initiative removes financial barriers for families" — This overstates impact by characterizing $50-75 application fee waivers as barrier removal when students still face far larger financial obstacles including SAT/ACT testing fees, transcript costs, enrollment deposits, and tuition itself. Application fees are relatively minor compared to total college costs.
Understanding Program Limitations and Requirements
Education policy expert Laura emphasizes that families should understand the program’s scope and limitations. “This is a positive step for college access, but it’s important to be clear about what it does and doesn’t do,” she explains. “The fee waivers only apply to public institutions in Texas—private universities like Rice, SMU, and Baylor aren’t included. And you must use the ApplyTexas platform; some institutions accept applications through other systems that may not be covered.”
The one-week window also presents challenges for students who may not be ready to submit complete applications during that specific period. “If you’re not prepared to hit ‘submit’ by 11:59 PM on October 19, you won’t get the waiver,” Laura notes. “This makes advance planning essential—students need to have their essays written, transcripts requested, and all materials ready before the week begins.”
Representative Terry Wilson, who sponsored the legislation, emphasized the policy’s intent to encourage post-secondary opportunities. “This policy removes financial barriers for families, encourages post-secondary opportunities and streamlines the admissions process through My Texas Future,” Wilson said. “By waiving application fees during this window, we are sending a clear message: If you’re willing to work hard and pursue higher education, Texas wants you to succeed.”
Key Takeaways:
1
Statewide fee waivers: All Texas public institutions must waive application fees for residents applying through ApplyTexas from midnight October 13 to 11:59 PM October 19
2
Bipartisan legislative support: Senate Bill 2231 passed 31-0 in the Senate and 122-25 in the House during the 89th Texas Legislative Session
3
Annual program: After the inaugural 2025 week, Free College Application Week will occur every year during the second full week of October
Realistic Expectations About Impact and Future Implementation
While eliminating application fees represents progress, Laura cautions against overstating the program’s transformative potential. “Application fees are real costs, and for some families, $50-75 per school does add up,” she says. “But these are relatively minor compared to the much larger financial barriers students face—SAT and ACT testing fees, college transcript costs, enrollment deposits, and ultimately tuition and living expenses.”
Research on similar programs shows that free applications combined with guaranteed admission do increase applications from historically underrepresented students, particularly first-generation college students and those from low-income families. However, applications don’t necessarily translate to enrollment when students still face substantial financial barriers to actually attending college.
“What matters most is whether students who apply during Free College Application Week actually enroll and complete degrees,” Laura emphasizes. “That will depend on whether they can access sufficient financial aid, scholarships, and support systems once accepted. The application fee is just the first step—we need to ensure students can afford to say ‘yes’ when they get accepted.”
Students planning to take advantage of Free College Application Week should begin preparing immediately. The Texas Education Agency recommends that high schools use the week for college and career events, promotion, and instruction related to ApplyTexas and My Texas Future. After this inaugural year, Free College Application Week will be held annually during the second full week of October. The Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board has created resources and frequently asked questions at their website, with inquiries directed to CollegeandCareerAdvising@highered.texas.gov.
Author Quote"
Application fees are real costs for families, but they’re relatively minor compared to SAT/ACT testing, transcripts, enrollment deposits, and tuition. We need to be honest that fees were never the primary barrier preventing college access.
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Laura emphasizes that Free College Application Week represents progress but shouldn’t be oversold. “Removing the application fee barrier is valuable, especially for families where $50-75 per school genuinely prevents students from applying to multiple institutions,” she notes. “But we need comprehensive strategies that address the much larger financial obstacles students face—testing fees, enrollment deposits, tuition, housing, and ongoing living expenses. The real measure of success won’t be how many applications Texas students submit during this free week, but whether those applications lead to enrollment, persistence, and degree completion. That requires robust financial aid systems, academic support structures, and institutional commitment to student success that extends far beyond a one-week fee waiver.” For more insights on educational policy implementation and college access strategies, explore our All Access Program.
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