First TEFA Awards Show Demand Exceeds Capacity

Estimated Time to Read: 14 minutes

The Texas Comptroller’s office has announced the first round of Texas Education Freedom Account (TEFA) awards, marking the initial implementation of the state’s new school choice program. More than 42,600 students are receiving award notifications in this first phase, with priority given to students with disabilities in households at or below 500% of the federal poverty level, along with their siblings.

This initial rollout provides the first opportunity to evaluate how the program is functioning in practice. While the number of awards is substantial, the underlying data offers a clearer picture of both the scale of demand for school choice and the structural limits that define access under the current system.

Demand for School Choice Is Concentrated but Clearly Statewide

The Comptroller’s district-level data provides important context for understanding where demand is strongest. The highest volume of applications is concentrated in Texas’s largest urban and suburban school districts, with Houston ISD reporting 1,558 applications, followed by Dallas ISD with 1,313 and Northside ISD in San Antonio with 1,139. Other large districts, including Fort Bend ISD, Cypress-Fairbanks ISD, Katy ISD, and Fort Worth ISD, each report several hundred applications.

Where the applications are coming from

Top 40 districts
200 apps
800 apps
1,500+ apps
Source: Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts, Priority Tier 1 + Siblings · report run 4.15.2026

This concentration indicates that demand is particularly strong in major population centers, where families already have access to a wide range of educational options. Even within these systems, a significant number of families are actively seeking alternatives.

Top 20 districts by application volume

Colored by metro
Houston
Dallas–Fort Worth
San Antonio
Austin
Other

At the same time, the data shows that demand is not limited to large districts. Mid-sized and smaller districts across Texas also report consistent application levels, with communities such as Georgetown, Tyler, Victoria, and Weatherford all showing meaningful participation. Dozens of additional districts report between 50 and 200 applications, and even smaller districts appear throughout the dataset.

Taken together, this reflects a statewide pattern rather than a localized trend. Demand for school choice is broadly distributed across geography, district size, and community type.

The First Round of Awards Quickly Runs Into Structural Limits

While the geographic distribution of applications demonstrates broad demand, the structure of the program determines how much of that demand can be met.

Total applications
42,644
Top 5 districts
14%
Districts with 30+ applications
241

The 42,644 applications cited in the Comptroller’s fact sheet represent only Tier 1 students and their siblings. Because the first round of awards is largely allocated to this priority group, much of the program’s initial capacity is absorbed before additional tiers are considered. In practical terms, the first round of awards does not reflect total demand for the program. It reflects how much demand can be accommodated within a single priority category. Once lower-priority applicants are included, the gap between demand and available funding becomes more pronounced.

The use of a lottery system and waitlist for remaining applicants further reinforces this limitation. Even among eligible families, access is not guaranteed. Participation depends on available funding, prioritization rules, and, in some cases, random selection.

TEFA Participation Reflects a Mix of Educational Backgrounds

The early data also provides insight into who is participating in the Education Freedom Account program and how families intend to use it. A majority of participants are expected to enroll in private schools, while a smaller share are selecting homeschooling or other alternatives.

Who applied

Tier 1 + siblings · 42,644 total
Source: Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts, Priority Tier 1 + Siblings · report run 4.15.2026

At the same time, participation is not limited to students currently enrolled in public schools. The data shows a mix of students coming from public school systems and those already in private or homeschool environments. This reflects the fact that demand for school choice exists across different educational settings, rather than being confined to a single group of families.

This distinction is important in understanding how the program functions. Education funding in Texas is supported broadly by taxpayers, including families whose children are not enrolled in public schools. The TEFA program provides a mechanism for some of those families to access a portion of that funding, while also enabling others to transition into alternative educational options.

Taken together, the data suggest that participation is shaped by existing preferences and circumstances across a range of families, rather than driven by any single category of students.

Structural Constraints Create a Bifurcated System

The data from the first round of awards points to a broader structural reality. The Education Freedom Account program expands access to school choice, but it does so within a system that remains fundamentally unchanged.

Funding is capped, eligibility is tiered, and participation is limited by administrative processes. These constraints prevent the program from scaling in proportion to demand. As a result, the system operates with two parallel tracks. The traditional public education system continues to receive funding through established formulas, while the school choice program provides limited access to alternative options through a capped framework. This creates a bifurcated system in which one side remains broadly accessible, and the other is restricted by design.

In this context, the program does not fully introduce competition into the education system. Instead, it attempts to operate alongside an existing structure that continues to function largely as a monopoly.

The Texas Liberty Compact and Universal School Choice

The limitations evident in the first round of TEFA awards are not incidental. They reflect the underlying structure of the program itself.

The Texas Liberty Compact addresses this directly by calling for a truly universal school choice system in which education funding follows students without arbitrary caps or restrictive eligibility tiers. Under such a model, access would not be determined by priority categories or lottery systems. Instead, families would be able to make educational decisions based on what best meets their needs.

A universal approach would also eliminate the bifurcated nature of the current system. Rather than maintaining separate tracks with unequal access, it would create a single framework in which funding aligns with student choice across the board.

The early TEFA data reinforce this case. Demand is broad, sustained, and statewide. The primary constraint is not interest from families, but the structure of the program itself.

Legislative Review Will Shape the Next Phase

Both the Texas Senate and House of Representatives have included school choice and the Education Freedom Account program in their interim charges, signaling that lawmakers intend to evaluate how the program is being implemented.

This review will likely focus on the same dynamics reflected in the initial data, including application volume, geographic distribution, and access limitations. The first round of awards provides a baseline for that analysis and will inform decisions about how the program evolves moving forward.

Conclusion

The first round of Texas Education Freedom Account awards provides a clear view of both demand and design. Families across Texas are actively seeking school choice, with applications concentrated in major districts and distributed across communities statewide.

At the same time, the structure of the program limits its ability to meet that demand. By prioritizing certain groups and capping participation, the system expands access for some families while excluding others. This creates a partial reform that operates alongside the existing education system rather than fundamentally restructuring it. The result is a bifurcated framework that introduces school choice without fully displacing the underlying monopoly it is intended to challenge.

As lawmakers prepare to revisit the program, the data from this initial rollout will play a central role in shaping the next phase of education policy in Texas.


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