糖心Vlog

Fears of free tuition crackdown as Chile moves to exempt over-30s

New right-wing president eyes reforms to student finance as part of wider austerity measures

Published on
April 5, 2026
Last updated
April 5, 2026
Main Square in Santiago
Source: iStock/tifonimages

Plans to restrict free university tuition to under-30s in Chile will have a limited direct impact but could signal the start of a wider rollback of the country鈥檚 flagship higher education policy, according to academics.

Since being sworn in as president in March, right-wing leader Jos茅 Antonio Kast has enacted austerity measures aimed at reducing the country鈥檚 budget deficit, including ordering spending cuts of 3聽per cent across all government departments.

His聽administration has also proposed limiting free university tuition to those under the age of聽30. Chile initially implemented a free tuition policy in 2016, and it was later extended to about聽60聽per cent of households, with wealthier families exempt.

If the聽restriction is implemented,聽its direct impact is likely to be minimal, said Carolina Guzm谩n-Valenzuela, senior research fellow at the University of聽Tarapac谩,聽because students聽above the age of 30聽represent only 1 to 2聽per cent of those who currently receive free tuition.

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鈥淗owever, the significance of the proposal lies less in its scale and more in what it signals,鈥 she said.

鈥淔ree tuition has been one of the most visible and politically significant higher education policies in Chile over the past decade.

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鈥淓ven relatively minor restrictions could be seen as part of a gradual shift in the policy鈥檚 focus from a flagship equity reform to a more targeted and fiscally constrained instrument.鈥

Veronica Santelices, associate professor at Pontificia Universidad Cat贸lica de Chile, agreed that the number of affected students would be small, but聽pointed out that this meant that financial savings for the government聽would be minor.

Technical institutions would be exempt from the change as the government attempts to tackle the country鈥檚 high unemployment rate, with vocational courses seen as a pathway to jobs.

The government is also considering limiting the expansion of free tuition in the future 鈥 currently聽leaders聽are legally obliged to do this聽if Chile鈥檚 wealth increases 鈥 but this would require approval from Congress.

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Guzm谩n-Valenzuela said there is currently an absence of alternative proposals for student finance, which could reinforce 鈥渞eliance on individual debt鈥.

鈥淚n this context, there is concern that this may be the start of an incremental process of restriction, not necessarily through major reforms, but rather through gradual changes to eligibility, coverage or funding conditions; a policy, in short, of constraint through slippage.鈥

There were fears when Kast was elected that he could follow the approach of other populist leaders聽such as Donald Trump in directly attacking higher education.

However, Santelices said that the policy was being seen as a cost-saving move聽rather than as a direct attack on universities.

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Other measures enacted by Kast鈥檚 government could also affect Chile鈥檚 higher education ecosystem.

In particular, Kast has demanded the resignation of the head of the 糖心Vlog Superintendency 鈥 a government body responsible for overseeing universities 鈥 following an investigation by the body into irregular payments made by universities to politicians, including members of Kast鈥檚 own Republican Party.

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The former leader of the superintendency,聽Jos茅 Miguel Salazar, was thought to have聽prioritised close scrutiny of the quality of private institutions. Santelices said his departure could be perceived as a way of 鈥渞elaxing the rules鈥 for private providers.

helen.packer@timeshighereducation.com

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