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Home » NYC private school tuition soars past $70K per year: report

NYC private school tuition soars past $70K per year: report

By News RoomFebruary 9, 2026No Comments5 Mins Read
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New York City private school tuition has soared past $70,000 per year – as institutions nod to the sky-high cost of living and the need to ramp up financial aid offerings, according to a report.

The Spence School, the Dalton School, the Nightingale-Bamford School and at least four other Big Apple private schools charged more than $70,000 in tuition for the 2026-27 year, according to a Bloomberg analysis of school disclosures.

Avenues in Chelsea topped the list, with eye-watering tuition of $75,300 – up $3,000 from 2025-26 and more expensive than many elite colleges, according to the report.

The lists includes some of the most exclusive schools in the country. Dalton School alumni include Anderson Cooper, Chevy Chase, Sean Lennon and Claire Danes, while the Nightingale-Bamford School provided the inspiration for the setting of “Gossip Girl.”

A number of schools outside the top seven priciest ones still charged jaw-dropping tuition, with Columbia Grammar & Preparatory School charging $69,960 and Horace Mann School, a cool $68,700.

The Dalton School (above) is one of at least seven NYC schools that charged more than $70,000 in tuition, according to the report.

Tuition fees at 15 private city schools jumped a median of 4.7% – outpacing the New York metro area’s 3.4% inflation rate as of December and national inflation figures, according to the most recently available government data.

It’s a sharp increase from a median NYC tuition of $39,900 in 2014 – but schools have argued the rising fees are necessary to cover higher costs, particularly teacher salaries, and offer more financial aid to struggling families.

Eye-popping tuition costs are squeezing even the Big Apple’s highest earners, but for some families, “the numbers are what the numbers are, and they’re looking for a stellar education for their children and they’re willing to pay what’s necessary to secure that experience,” Barbara Scott, executive director of nonprofit Parents League of New York, told Bloomberg.

That’s especially true for New York families fearful of changes coming to the city’s public school system following the election of socialist Mayor Zohran Mamdani, according to Emily Glickman, who runs Abacus Guide Educational Consulting.

The Mamdani administration has assumed control of New York City’s $43 billion school system, including 150,000 staffers and nearly 900,000 students – facing worsening challenges like chronic absenteeism, dismal reading and math scores and falling enrollment.

Glickman told Bloomberg she has noticed more families looking into private schools following Mamdani’s promises to shake up the educational system, “whether they can afford it, or barely afford it.”

The 34-year-old mayor has floated axing the gifted and talented track for kindergartners, which has faced criticism for not admitting many black and Latino students.

Mayor Zohran Mamdani has proposed several changes to the NYC education system.

Proponents of the program have argued getting rid of the classes would eliminate opportunities for thousands of students from low- and middle-income families.

He has also discussed making class sizes smaller by hiring more than 10,000 new teachers – which would require up to $700 million in fresh funding – and integrating the school system, which remains largely segregated by race and economic status.

So far, his administration has focused on outreach for the city’s free preschool programs, which received more than 50,000 applications in just two weeks.

Noni Thomas López, head of school at Poly Prep Country Day School – which charged $71,852 in grade 12 tuition this year – told Bloomberg the school’s board of trustees sets rates based on “careful review of the school’s operating needs,” including financial aid.

Tuition fees at 15 private city schools jumped a median of 4.7%, according to Bloomberg’s analysis.

The school provided about 22% of its student body with more than $14.5 million in aid this year, according to its website.

Tara Powers, head of communications at Avenues New York, told Bloomberg the school allocated more than $20 million in financial aid to more than 20% of its students this year.

Tuition can also cover the costs of learning supplies, school meals and extracurricular programs like field trips – which can pack a punch.

“We’re not talking about going to the Statue of Liberty or the Metropolitan Museum of Art,” Scott, who runs a nonprofit that helps parents apply to private schools, told the outlet. 

“We are talking about going to that eighth grade trip to Washington for three days, or that trip to the Freedom Trail in Boston when you’re a sixth grader, or the ninth grade trip to Europe.”

Most parents budget for an annual tuition increase of 3% to 5%, according to Robin Aronow, who runs School Search NYC and helps guide parents through the admissions process. 

But there has been “definite sticker shock for some families” this year, said Sharon Decker, an education consultant who helps families apply to private schools.

Her firm, The Admissions Plan, has seen more families asking about financial aid and increased interest in Catholic and Jewish schools, which typically charge less than independent private institutions, she told Bloomberg.

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