NYC’s Record-High Student Homelessness Numbers, by Neighborhood and Shelter Type

posted in: All news | 0

The number of homeless children attending New York City public schools increased again in 2024-2025—rising for the fifth consecutive school year, and surpassing 150,000 for the first time. Some school districts had a deeper crisis than others

Students head into school in New York City in February 2021. (Michael Appleton/Mayoral Photography Office)

The number of homeless children attending New York City public schools increased again in 2024-2025—rising for the fifth consecutive school year, and surpassing 150,000 for the first time.

This latest count, obtained from the state’s education department and released by the nonprofit Advocates for Children (AFC), tallied more than 154,000 students experiencing some form of homelessness in city schools, a new record.

“There are now more students who are homeless in [New York City] than the entire Dallas public school system,” Jennifer Pringle, director of AFC’s Learners in Temporary Housing Project, said in a statement accompanying the new data.

The total number of students experiencing homelessness nearly doubled from 11 years ago. It dipped slightly during the COVID-19 pandemic, when eviction protections and other relief programs were in effect.

In all, one in seven public school students were homeless during the 2024-2025 school year, a higher proportion than any previous year on record. The most common form of homelessness students experienced was “doubling up,” where families have an unplanned stay in a home with another family or friends. A record high 65,000 stayed in city shelters. 

Some school districts had a deeper crisis than others. In school districts in Northeast Brooklyn, the Northwest Bronx, and Upper Manhattan, over one in five students experienced homelessness last year. 

Being unhoused poses significant hurdles to education, AFC says, pointing to its analysis of data from the 2023-2024 school year which found students experiencing homelessness were more likely to drop out than their permanently-housed peers. They also had lower state test scores, and two out of three students in shelter were chronically absent, meaning they missed at least one out of every 10 school days.

“This year alone, we’ve worked with families whose children already missed an entire month of school because of the lack of coordination between the shelter and school systems,” Pringle said in a statement.

AFC and other family homelessness advocates are calling for the city’s next mayor—who will take office in January following next month’s election—to make a number of policy changes to tackle the crisis.

That includes increasing access to early childhood education programs, ensuring families are placed in shelters near their children’s schools, and addressing delays and inefficiencies with the city’s school bus network.

Christine Quinn, the former City Council speaker who now runs Win (Women in Need), a family shelter provider, called the uptick in student homelessness “a moral failure and a stark indictment on our city.”

Win has released its own set of recommendations for the next mayor, which calls for expanding and streamlining CityFHEPS—the city’s main rental assistance program—and building more apartments set aside for the lowest income households. The group wants the city to hire more shelter-based community coordinators, who help families navigate the school system, and to increase the number of school social workers that counsel kids in shelter.

“We know that homeless students face an uphill climb, from battling chronic absenteeism to struggling to meet the benchmarks their housed peers routinely meet,” Quinn said in a statement Monday. “As our city prepares to welcome a new mayor, we have a ripe opportunity to bring new attention to this crisis and to finally end the family homelessness epidemic.”

To reach the reporter behind this story, contact Mariana@citylimits.org. To reach the editor, contact Jeanmarie@citylimits.org

Want to republish this story? Find City Limits’ reprint policy here.

The post NYC’s Record-High Student Homelessness Numbers, by Neighborhood and Shelter Type appeared first on City Limits.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.