Byย Alvin Buyinza
(WIB) – At a moment when higher education in the United States is under political and cultural siege, Black or African American students are continuing to apply to college at rates faster than anyone else.
Indeed, the number of students who identified as Black or African American who applied to college in the United States in fall 2025 grew by 11% compared to the year before. That makes them the fastest-growing group of first-year applicants this admissions cycle,ย according to a new report from the Common Application. Itโs a hopeful surge in the wake of the Supreme Court ending affirmative action, and college tuition and fees rising.
Students who identified as two or more races were the second-fastest-growing group of college applicants, with applications rising 8% year over year. Applications from Asian and Latino students also rose, each by 5%, according to the report.
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Altogether, the Common Appโs findings are consistent with trends from previous admissions cycles, which show that the U.S. Supreme Courtโs 2023 decision to end affirmative action isnโt stopping students of color from applying to college. In fact, the share of applicants of color continues to outpace the share of non-applicants of color by 7%.
In the report, the authors note that, โthese data suggest that there have been no meaningful deviations from pre-existing trends over the past decade in race/ethnicity reporting or population growth on the Common App platform after the U.S. Supreme Court ruling.โ It also echoes their findings from the previous year.
Why Are More Black Students Applying to College?
James Murphy, a senior fellow at Class Action, a higher education advocacy organization, says the trend โconfounds, or at least complicates, the expectation that we would see this chilling effect.โ
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โStudents thinking that they wouldnโt have as strong a chance of getting and just decide not to apply to these, especially to more selective institutions, it doesnโt look like we saw that.โ
Bryan Crook, the director of higher education policy at the Urban Institute, says the Supreme Courtโs ruling on affirmative action wasnโt really going to affect whether Black students apply to college, but where they would apply.
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โRoughly 80 percent of four-year institutions admit more than half of their applicants and are therefore less likely to have relied on race-conscious admissions practices in the first place,โ Crook wrote in an email to Word In Black. โGiven the continued economic value of a bachelorโs degree, it is not surprising that college applications among Black students have continued to rise.โ
Itโs estimated that a Black person with a college degree will earn about $1 million more over their lifetime than a Black person with just a high school diploma,ย according to a study from Texas A & M University.
Where Are Applications Growing the Fastest?
Applicant growth was fastest in the Southwest. The region grew at twice the rate of the next fastest region, the Mid-Atlantic, according to the report. Texas and Oklahoma both contributed to the large application gains in this region, with 9% and 14%, respectively. Mississippi was the state with the fastest-growing number of applications. Compared to last year, itsaw a 31% jump in applications.
Where Are Applications Declining?
But just as applications have increased in certain areas, they have also decreased in others โ and the Trump administrationโs foreign policies and immigration crackdown may be a factor. Specifically, international student applications fell 7%. There were significant declines in applications from Asia and Africa, by 9% and 14%, respectively.
