The Independent
·5 de julio de 2025
Colleges will soon have to fork over millions of dollars as Trump’s bill extends a tax on their endowments

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Yahoo sportsThe Independent
·5 de julio de 2025
President Donald Trump's "big, beautiful bill" has passed and is causing panic for the heads of America's top universities.
The bill — which was unanimously opposed by Democrats in the House and the Senate — was sold by Trump as a method for providing tax relief and expanding American wealth.
Among its various provisions, the bill levies a tiered tax on university endowments, which previously were not taxable. The new tax is justified by the Trump administration as a way to prevent universities from "[abusing] generous benefits provided through the tax code".
The taxes range from 1.4 percent to 8 percent at the wealthiest institutions.
Universities rely on their endowments to fund essential operations and to provide services to their students.
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Harvard University is one of nine U.S. colleges that will have its endowments taxed at 8 percent under President Donald Trump’s newly passed “One Big Beautiful Bill” (Copyright 2024 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.)
In 2017, during Trump's first term, Congress started taxing universities with endowments of $500,000 or more per student at 1.4 percent. The new bill expands that.
Harvard and Princeton both have endowments of $2 million or more per student. They will be subject to an 8 percent tax on their investment income. It could be worse; the original House bill set the tax at 21 percent, and Vice President J.D. Vance — himself a product of a wealthy school and its endowment funding — wanted to set the tax at 35 percent, according to the New York Times.
Harvard has the largest endowment of any U.S. university, with an estimated $53.2 billion. At an 8 percent tax rate, the school will be paying approximately $4.24 billion to the federal government.
Only nine U.S. universities qualify for the highest tax rate; Harvard, Yale, Princeton, MIT, Stanford, CIT, Juilliard, Amherst and Pomona.
Schools with endowments of between $750,000 and $2m per student will be taxed at 4 percent.
That tier includes universities such as Notre Dame, Dartmouth, the Mayo Clinic College of Medicine, Baylor, Northwestern, Johns Hopkins, Duke, Vanderbilt, the University of Chicago, Columbia and Brown.
In the case of a school such as the University of Chicago, the college has an endowment of $850,000 per student, so it will be taxed at the 4 percent rate. With an endowment estimated at $10.4 billion, the university will pay $416 million each year.
The University of Notre Dame’s endowment is approximately $18 billion, so it will pay around $720 million each year.
All other schools that qualify — meaning they have at least 500 tuition-paying students — will be taxed at 1.4 percent.
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The University of Notre Dame’s endowment is approximately $18 billion, so it will pay around $720 million each year in tax under Trump’s bill. (Getty Images)
The tiered endowment taxes aren't the only changes to higher education that the "big, beautiful bill" has introduced.
Student loans are also being re-tooled. A lifetime borrowing cap of $100,000 for graduate students and a $200,000 cap for law and med school students is now in place.
The bill also set a $65,000 cap on Parent PLUS loans, which are unsubsidized loans that parents can use to support their dependent undergraduate students. Those loans will no longer be eligible for repayment programs.
Repaying student loans has also changed. The new bill puts limits on deferments and forbearances and replaces existing income-based payment plans — aimed at helping lower-income borrowers — with two ways to repay.
One plan is a standard repayment plan that lets borrowers pay over 10 to 25 years based on their loan amounts, regardless of their income. The other is labeled at a "Repayment Assistance Plan" that is based on a percentage of a borrower's discretionary income.
The approximately eight million borrowers enrolled in former President Joe Biden's SAVE repayment plan will have to wait a little longer for a judge to rule on the program's legality.