Kevin Richert | 11/11/2025
For Idaho higher education, it’s an enrollment clean sweep.
All eight of Idaho’s public colleges and universities reported an enrollment increase this fall. That translates into a 4.2% statewide increase, which outpaces national trends.
Here are the Idaho headcounts for 2024 and 2025, as reported to the State Board of Education.
| Institution | Fall 2024 | Fall 2025 | Increase, pct. |
|---|---|---|---|
| Boise State University | 27,198 | 28,461 | 4.6% |
| Idaho State University | 13,056 | 13,910 | 6.5% |
| University of Idaho | 12,286 | 12,383 | 0.8% |
| College of Western Idaho | 10,979 | 11,724 | 6.8% |
| College of Southern Idaho | 10,456 | 10,545 | 0.9% |
| North Idaho College | 4,585 | 4,662 | 1.7% |
| Lewis-Clark State College | 3,877 | 4,037 | 4.1% |
| College of Eastern Idaho | 3,040 | 3,351 | 10.2% |
| Total | 85,477 | 89,073 | 4.2% |
The State Board headcounts include full- and part-time degree-seeking students, and career-technical students. They do not include dual-credit enrollment: high school students taking college classes.
The new headcounts show a continued surge, after Idaho colleges and universities recovered from an enrollment decline during the COVID-19 pandemic. Headcount is up 19.1% since fall 2020.
Colleges and universities must file fall enrollment reports with the State Board by Oct. 15. The State Board provided this data to Idaho Education News on Friday.
However, college and university leaders have already been touting highlights from their fall numbers: a record in-state freshman class at Boise State; Idaho State’s highest enrollment in 13 years; record undergraduate enrollment at the U of I; and LC State headcount surpassing 4,000 for the first time in school history.
A heightened sense of urgency surrounds the 2025 enrollment report. College administrators in Idaho and across the nation have long been bracing for a “demographic cliff” — a dwindling number of college-aged students, resulting from lower birth rates during the Great Recession.
This demographic dropoff hasn’t hit yet, in Idaho or nationally. According to a National Student Clearinghouse Research Center report issued Tuesday, higher education enrollment is up by 2% nationally.
Nationally, enrollment at four-year schools is up by 1.9%, while community college enrollment is up by 4%. Idaho’s enrollment is up by 4.2% across the board, at four-year schools and community colleges alike.
REDI also tracks enrollment trends for institutions that play a major role in Eastern Idaho’s education and workforce pipeline. Although BYU–Idaho is not part of the state’s public higher education system, its enrollment patterns directly influence the region.
Using equivalent criteria—matriculated, degree-seeking, campus-based students, excluding dual-credit—BYU–Idaho reported the following headcounts:
| Institution | Fall 2024 | Fall 2025 | Increase, pct. |
|---|---|---|---|
| BYU–Idaho | 24,111 | 24,450 | 1.4% |
These numbers place BYU–Idaho’s growth in line with the statewide increases observed across Idaho’s public colleges and universities, providing a fuller picture of enrollment activity in Eastern Idaho.
Note: BYU–Idaho headcounts reflect matriculated, degree-seeking, campus-based students only, consistent with the State Board of Education’s reporting method for public institutions. Dual-credit (high school) and fully online BYU–Pathway Worldwide students are not included.