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The Year in Closures and Mergers

By Josh Moody

As 2024 draws to a close, it also marks the end of an era for some institutions.

Altogether, at least 16 nonprofit colleges and universities announced closures this year. Most were small, private, tuition-dependent institutions that lacked robust endowments. Many approached the closure process in an orderly fashion, winding down operations and teaching out academic programs, but some shuttered abruptly, leaving students in the lurch.

The number is slightly higher than last year, when 14 nonprofit institutions announced closure; a 15th, the King’s College, ended operations in 2023 but did not announce it was shutting down. Experts expect college closures to increase significantly in the next five years amid enrollment pressures, according to research by the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia.

This year, seven of those headed for closure were religiously affiliated and four were located in Pennsylvania—the most of any state. (Branch campuses without stand-alone identification numbers, which are used by the U.S. Department of Education’s Office of Postsecondary Education, are not included in this year’s report.)

Officials most frequently cited financial pressures and declining enrollment as the reasons for closure; rising operating costs were also a recurring theme. Some institutions attributed their enrollment struggles to specific factors, such as the troubled rollout of the Free Application for Federal Student Aid. One blamed social issues in downtown Portland, Ore., citing homelessness, crime and open drug use as contributing causes.

Inside Higher Ed has been tracking institutional closures and mergers all year. Here’s our recap, in chronological order, of the nonprofit institutions that announced closures this year. Given teach-out processes, some will remain open into 2025 as they wind down operations.

Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts

The Philadelphia art school announced in January that it would end its degree programs, making it the first institution in 2024 to announce its demise due to financial pressures. While the academy will officially close at the end of the 2024–25 academic year, its museum will remain open.

Officials attributed the decision to end academic offerings to declining enrollment and rising costs, noting they had unsuccessfully sought partnerships to keep degree programs alive.

While in past years PAFA enrolled about 200 students, in 2022 the head count fell to just over 100, according to the latest federal data. Officials said ending academic programs would save $1 million annually—a necessity given the institution’s $3 million deficit.

Notre Dame College

After unsuccessfully pursuing a strategic partnership with Cleveland State University, the small Roman Catholic college in Ohio closed at the end of the spring semester.

Officials pointed to declining enrollment, demographic challenges, rising operating costs and steep debt when they announced Notre Dame’s closure in February.

Enrollment had fallen by more than half, from 2,281 a decade ago, according to the Department of Education’s Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System, to about 1,050 in recent years, local media reported.