- StudentsReduces or eliminates tuition costs for eligible students at public and eligible private institutions, increasing affor…
- Federal agenciesExpands access for undocumented 'Dreamer' students to federal Pell grants and college aid eligibility.
- Federal agenciesIncreases federal funding to HBCUs, Tribal colleges, and MSIs, supporting institutional budgets and student supports.
College for All Act of 2025
Referred to the Committee on Education and Workforce, and in addition to the Committees on Ways and Means, and the Budget, for a period to be subsequently determined by the Speake…
The College for All Act of 2025 (H.R.3543) creates a federal-state partnership to eliminate tuition and required fees for eligible undergraduate students at public community colleges, public 4‑year institutions, Tribal Colleges and Universities, and eligible private nonprofit HBCUs and MSIs.
It phases federal/state shares (federal initially covers most costs, tapering to 80% federal/20% state), expands Pell Grant maximums and immigration-based eligibility for aid (including Dreamer students), authorizes grants for student success and underfunded institutions, increases funding for TRIO, GEAR UP, and HBCU/MSI programs, and includes automatic stabilizers for state obligations during economic downturns.
Ambitious, high‑cost federal expansion with immigration elements and heavy federalism implications; content is unlikely to clear both chambers and appropriations hurdles without major modification.
Relative to its intended legislative type, this bill is a substantive reform that is extensively drafted into the Higher Education Act: it provides detailed statutory mechanisms (formulas, eligibility, indexed amounts, prohibitions, and maintenance‑of‑effort/relief rules) and integrates with existing law. It leaves customary administrative and appropriation specifics to executive implementation and appropriations processes.
Scale and fiscal cost: liberals accept cost; conservatives cite fiscal risk
Who stands to gain, and who may push back.
- Federal agenciesSubstantially increases federal spending and future appropriation obligations, potentially raising deficits or requirin…
- Federal agenciesImposes a growing state fiscal responsibility once federal share phases down, potentially pressuring state budgets.
- StatesAdds new administrative compliance and reporting requirements for states and institutions, increasing regulatory burden.
Why the argument around this bill splits.
Scale and fiscal cost: liberals accept cost; conservatives cite fiscal risk
Overall strongly supportive.
Views the bill as a major federal investment to expand college access, reduce student debt pressure, and advance equity for underserved groups and Tribal/HBCU communities.
Appreciates inclusion of undocumented/Dreamer students and increased funding for student supports.
Qualified support with caution.
Sees clear access and equity benefits, but worries about scale, long-term federal cost, and state fiscal transitions.
Values built-in maintenance-of-effort and stabilizers but wants clearer offsets and evaluation metrics.
Likely opposed.
Views the bill as a large federal expansion into higher education that risks long-term fiscal strain, reduces institutional autonomy, and includes controversial eligibility expansions (e.g., Dreamer/undocumented students).
The path through Congress.
Reached or meaningfully advanced
Reached or meaningfully advanced
Still ahead
Still ahead
Still ahead
Ambitious, high‑cost federal expansion with immigration elements and heavy federalism implications; content is unlikely to clear both chambers and appropriations hurdles without major modification.
- No CBO or formal cost estimate included in text
- Actual annual appropriation decisions and fiscal offsets unknown
Recent votes on the bill.
No vote history yet
The bill has not accumulated any surfaced votes yet.
Go deeper than the headline read.
Scale and fiscal cost: liberals accept cost; conservatives cite fiscal risk
Ambitious, high‑cost federal expansion with immigration elements and heavy federalism implications; content is unlikely to clear both chamb…
Relative to its intended legislative type, this bill is a substantive reform that is extensively drafted into the Higher Education Act: it provides detailed statutory mechanisms (formulas, eligibility, indexed amounts,…
Go beyond the headline summary with full stakeholder mapping, legislative design analysis, passage barriers, and lens-by-lens tradeoff breakdowns.