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PALM BEACH COUNTY, FL (Boca Post) (Copyright © 2025) — Public-school enrollment in Palm Beach County continues to fall, and the newest data show that even Boca Raton — long one of the county’s most stable areas for public education — is beginning to feel it.
Each August, the school district counts students 11 days after classes begin. This year’s count showed 5,701 fewer students in traditional public schools than the year before — a sharp contrast to last year’s drop of 1,298 and a gain of 713 two years ago.
The decline is consistent with the district’s latest five-year projections, released May 22, 2025, which forecast a loss of 731 students district-wide by 2030. Traditional district schools are expected to shrink by 709 students, while charter schools hold roughly flat, rising only 10 students over five years to about 21,883. The steepest losses will be in middle schools, projected to fall by 1,182 students, while elementary schools are expected to gain 469 and high schools remain steady (+4).
That follows what district officials describe as “a second straight year of charter declines” — about 250 fewer students in 2024–25 — and a continuing rise in private-school voucher use under Florida’s 2023 law that made vouchers available regardless of income. In the 2022–23 school year, roughly 4,000 Palm Beach County students used vouchers. Last year, that number was around 20,000 and still climbing.
The Florida Education Association has argued that universal vouchers “are essentially an attempt to undermine public education.” District officials warn the enrollment slide could cost local schools about $45 million in state funding.
Boca Raton: Still strong, but showing cracks
Some of Boca Raton’s newer schools remain packed. Addison Mizner and Verde K-8 schools are each expected to stay at or above 98–100 percent capacity through 2030, and Blue Lake Elementary should climb from 93 to 99 percent. Spanish River High continues to run over capacity — projected to hit 107 percent by 2030.
West Boca and Olympic Heights high schools are both nearly full and expected to reach capacity by the end of the decade.
But other campuses are clearly feeling the shift. Omni Middle School, a feeder for Spanish River, is projected to dip to around 889 students by 2030 — just 63 percent of its 1,417-student capacity. Calusa Elementary in northwest Boca Raton is forecast to rise modestly from 849 to 950 students (80 percent capacity). Further east, J.C. Mitchell Elementary — once overcrowded — is now projected to hover around 60 percent capacity through the next five years.
Delray Beach: Deeper declines
Delray Beach’s public schools are seeing far more dramatic drops. The district’s report shows no school in Delray Beach operating at capacity:
- Carver Middle School: down to 40 percent capacity by 2030.
- Atlantic High School: steady decline from 74 to 71 percent capacity.
- S.D. Spady Elementary: falls from 71 to 67 percent.
- Plumosa School of the Arts K-8: around 70 percent through 2030.
City commissioners have long voiced frustration with under-performance and under-enrollment in local schools, but authority over education rests with the county school board and state lawmakers in Tallahassee.
| School | Capacity | 2025 Enrollment | 2030 Projection | % Utilization 2030 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Addison Mizner K-8 | ≈1,175 | 1,177 | 1,175 | 100% |
| Verde K-8 | 1,364 | 1,345 | 1,340 | 98% |
| Blue Lake Elementary | 1,006 | 931 | 991 | 99% |
| Spanish River High | 2,574 | 2,740 | 2,749 | 107% |
| Omni Middle | 1,417 | 911 | 889 | 63% |
| Calusa Elementary | 1,184 | 849 | 950 | 80% |
| J.C. Mitchell Elementary | 1,032 | 649 | 623 | 60% |
| Boca Raton High | 2,936 | 2,800 | 2,745 | 93% |
| Carver Middle (Delray) | 1,552 | 678 | 626 | 40% |
| Atlantic High (Delray) | 2,446 | 1,808 | 1,727 | 71% |
| S.D. Spady Elementary (Delray) | 697 | 494 | 469 | 67% |
| Plumosa K-8 (Delray) | 1,183 | 811 | 826 | 70% |
Source: Palm Beach County School District FY26–FY30 Enrollment Projection Report (May 22 2025)
Cost of living and choice programs
Demographers say rising housing costs and migration trends are also influencing the numbers. Families with young children are less likely to move into Boca and Delray as prices climb, and county data show the number of five-year-olds has stayed virtually flat for a decade.
District planners use a geographically based cohort model that factors in birth rates, migration, and new construction. While large developments such as Avenir and Westlake will add families elsewhere in the county, South County areas like Boca and Delray are largely built out and aging.
Community reaction
Online discussion reflects a wide range of views — from parents defending homeschool and choice options to teachers warning of a slow drain of resources. One Boca teacher wrote, “The vouchers are doing serious damage. It’s not going to the people who it was intended for. What we see is people taking the money and homeschooling.”
Another resident countered, “If you had an opportunity to send your child to a better school with a voucher, why would you not do it?”
That debate — how to balance choice and quality in public education — now sits at the heart of Palm Beach County’s enrollment challenge.
What’s next
A follow-up count this month will finalize student numbers for 2025, but officials don’t expect major changes. The district forecasts overall K-12 enrollment of 186,831 by 2030, down from 187,562 today, with middle schools continuing to lose students as families weigh new options.
For Boca and Delray, the numbers point to a simple truth: even A-rated schools can’t outrun the combined forces of policy and economics.

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