High school costs forcing indebted parents to work more

January 14, 2026 05:00 | News

Australian families are reconsidering whether to have more children and are relying on others for help to pay for education fees as the cost of schooling accumulates.

For a child starting school in 2026, it will cost families in major cities $113,594 for a government education, $247,174 for private schooling and $369,594 to send them to an independent school over 13 years.

In regional and remote areas, families will pay $100,395 for a government education, $223,874 for Catholic and $230,144 for independent schools.

Education cost graphic
The cost of educating children in Australia has been mapped by state and type of school institution. (Joanna Kordina/AAP PHOTOS)

The research conducted by school finance group Futurity takes in school fee data from Australia’s curriculum authority and interviews with 2500 parents about their spending habits.

Melbourne topped the capital cities in government school costs at $121,202, while regional and remote Queensland parents face the steepest education bill of $108,647.

Government school fees made up 13 per cent for metro and five per cent for regional costs, with the remaining amount going to add-ons including outside tutoring, transport, school camps and uniforms.

Regional education costs
Parents are also facing high education costs in regional areas. (Joanna Kordina/AAP PHOTOS)

Canberrans will spend the most for a Catholic education while in regional and remote Queenslanders pay the highest fees at $273,494.

Independent schools are most expensive in Melbourne, costing 435,902 while Western Australia is the priciest for regional and remote schools at $275,639.

Families value education, with nine in 10 saying education is important for their child to thrive in life, Futurity’s Sarah McAdie said.

“(They) are prepared to make sacrifices in order for their child to access the education that the parents choose and value for their child,” she told AAP.

School work
More working hours and fewer family holidays are the cost for many families to educate their kids. (Dean Lewins/AAP PHOTOS)

But parents are increasingly looking to save by searching for second-hand school uniforms, making a laptop last longer and spending less on musical instruments and camps.

A third of respondents said they turned to credit debt, while others are having fewer family holidays and working more to afford the quality education for their kids.

Over half said they rely on others, including grandparents, to pay for their children’s education.

“Alarmingly, 45 per cent of parents said that they are now considering having less children as a result of the cost of raising and educating a child today,” Ms McAdie said.

School students
Every child should be able to participate without money being a barrier, state schools say. (Dean Lewins/AAP PHOTOS)

Families have been tightening their spending as concern increases about Australian schools being fully funded, according to the Australian Council of State School Organisations.

“When the household budget is under pressure, things like sport and camps and upgrades are the first things that are scaled back,” interim chair Peter Garrigan said.

He said the real test is whether every child can participate fully without money being a barrier, as parents turn to the “bank of grandparents” for help.

“Australia’s society should be able to support everyone to do that,” Mr Garrigan said. 

In Australia, 63 per cent of students are enrolled in government schools, followed by 20 per cent in Catholic schools and 17 per cent in independent schools, according to the bureau of statistics.

AAP News

Australian Associated Press is the beating heart of Australian news. AAP is Australia’s only independent national newswire and has been delivering accurate, reliable and fast news content to the media industry, government and corporate sector for 85 years. We keep Australia informed.

Latest stories from our writers

Don't pay so you can read it. Pay so everyone can!

Don't pay so you can read it.
Pay so everyone can!

Pin It on Pinterest

Share This