(The Center Square) – Johns Hopkins University announced last week a major expansion of financial aid that will make undergraduate education tuition-free for most American families beginning in 2026.
Starting next year under its new policy, undergraduate students at the Baltimore, Maryland, university’s Homewood campus whose family earns $200,000 or less per year will pay no tuition.
According to U.S. Census data, this threshold covers more than 85% of American households.
Families earning $100,000 or less will receive grants that cover tuition, fees and other expenses, with parents expected to contribute nothing. Family households earning over $250,000 per year will continue to qualify for financial aid.
The change comes after a $1.8 billion gift from alumnus Michael R. Bloomberg back in 2018.
Johns Hopkins officials say the change is designed to remove barriers and widen access to one of the nation’s top privately-owned research universities, particularly for middle-class and lower-income families who often assume elite private institutions are financially out of reach.
“Trying to understand financial aid offers can be overwhelming,” said David Phillips, vice provost for admissions and financial aid at Johns Hopkins.
“A big goal here is to simplify the process. We especially want to reach students and families from disadvantaged backgrounds, rural locations and small towns across America who may not know that a Hopkins degree is within reach,” Phillips added.
When the announcement was sent out on Nov. 13, the student body reacted with excitement. Students quickly took to social media, posting about the financial aid change.
In an email to The News-Letter, Johns Hopkins student newspaper, Brandon Breznik, a junior at the university, shared his thoughts on the policy change.
“The implementation of the new financial aid program brought me such immense joy reading it, being able to incorporate the middle-class families who usually floated in a grey zone of financial aid,” Breznik wrote. “I know for my family in particular, this is going to help support me in all my endeavors and even allow me to participate in more financially demanding programs like studying abroad.”
The policy takes effect in spring 2026 for current eligible students and in the 2026–27 academic year for all new incoming undergraduates.
The Center Square reached out to the university for additional comment, but did not receive a response.




