The bulletin board for America's public schools. Parents, teachers, students, and staff. One community per school.
ENROLLMENT TRENDS · FLORIDA

Florida schools in decline

Florida public schools with the largest enrollment loss from 2017-18 to 2024-25.

Schools in this report
50
steepest declines in state
Largest drop
-100%
J FRANKLYN KELLER INTERMEDIATE SCHOOL
Range
-100% to -49%
2017-18 → 2024-25
TOP 50 FL PUBLIC SCHOOLS BY ENROLLMENT LOSS · 2017-18 → 2024-25
SchoolCityDistrict2017-182024-25% change
J FRANKLYN KELLER INTERMEDIATE SCHOOLMACCLENNYBAKER7660-100%
ALTERNATIVE OUTREACH PROGRAMMIAMI GARDENSMIAMI-DADE3070-100%
PARKVIEW EDUCATIONAL CENTERMIAMI GARDENSMIAMI-DADE29721-92.9%
POLK GRAD ACADEMYLAKELANDPOLK11014-87.3%
MITTYE P. LOCKE EARLY LEARNING ACADEMY PREV PK-5NEW PORT RICHEYPASCO58484-85.6%
CARTER PARRAMORE ACADEMYQUINCYGADSDEN18832-83.0%
JACKSON ALTERNATIVE SCHOOLMARIANNAJACKSON11522-80.9%
ESE BIRTH THRU AGE 5TAMPAHILLSBOROUGH25752-79.8%
SUNCOAST SCHOOL FOR INNOVATIVE STUDIESSARASOTASARASOTA38996-75.3%
THE BRIDGE TO SUCCESS ACADEMY AT W JACKSONVILLEJACKSONVILLEDUVAL753220-70.8%
EARLY LEARNING ACADEMY AT DUVALGAINESVILLEALACHUA363117-67.8%
MYRTLE GROVE ELEMENTARYMIAMI GARDENSMIAMI-DADE474154-67.5%
OCEAN PALMS ELEMENTARY SCHOOLPONTE VEDRA BEACHST. JOHNS1,168386-67.0%
OKALOOSA TECHNICAL COLLEGEFORT WALTON BEACHOKALOOSA12542-66.4%
RIVERBEND ACADEMYTEQUESTAMARTIN14149-65.2%
HOSPITAL/HOMEBOUNDPINELLAS PARKPINELLAS17461-64.9%
MIAMI KILLIAN SENIOR HIGH SCHOOLMIAMIMIAMI-DADE1,900675-64.5%
BROWARD ELEMENTARY SCHOOLTAMPAHILLSBOROUGH388138-64.4%
FRESH START COMMUNITY SCHOOLLAKELANDPOLK284105-63.0%
LEARNING ACADEMY OF SANTA ROSAMILTONSANTA ROSA16762-62.9%
TEENAGE PARENT PROGRAMMIAMIMIAMI-DADE13751-62.8%
R. V. DANIELS ELEMENTARY SCHOOLJACKSONVILLEDUVAL319121-62.1%
REEDY CREEK ELEMENTARY SCHOOLKISSIMMEEOSCEOLA1,074431-59.9%
OASIS MIDDLE SCHOOLBRADENTONMANATEE12149-59.5%
LEGACY PREPARATORY ACADEMYTAMPAHILLSBOROUGH247102-58.7%
GRAHAM ELEMENTARY SCHOOLTAMPAHILLSBOROUGH388162-58.2%
DR. ROLANDO ESPINOSA K-8 CENTERDORALMIAMI-DADE1,372584-57.4%
UCP EAST CHARTERORLANDOORANGE281120-57.3%
JOHN I. SMITH K-8 CENTERDORALMIAMI-DADE1,836785-57.2%
GAUSE ACADEMY OF LEADERSHIPBARTOWPOLK22697-57.1%
W. R. THOMAS MIDDLE SCHOOLMIAMIMIAMI-DADE1,181507-57.1%
CENTRAL FLORIDA LEADERSHIP ACADEMY CHARTERORLANDOORANGE226100-55.8%
PREKTALLAHASSEELEON11652-55.2%
SEAGULL SCHOOLFORT LAUDERDALEBROWARD287131-54.4%
OKALOOSA ACADEMYFORT WALTON BEACHOKALOOSA251115-54.2%
ST. ANDREW SCHOOL AT OAKLAND TERRACEPANAMA CITYBAY12055-54.2%
REYNOLDS LANE ELEMENTARY SCHOOLJACKSONVILLEDUVAL344158-54.1%
DISSTON ACADEMYGULFPORTPINELLAS13663-53.7%
RENAISSANCE ACADEMYTALLAHASSEELEON511243-52.4%
WATERBRIDGE ELEMENTARYORLANDOORANGE1,352644-52.4%
WABASSO SCHOOLSEBASTIANINDIAN RIVER10952-52.3%
POINCIANA PARK ELEMENTARY SCHOOLMIAMIMIAMI-DADE354169-52.3%
CHAMBERS HIGH SCHOOLHOMESTEADMIAMI-DADE491243-50.5%
EUGENIA B. THOMAS K-8 CENTERDORALMIAMI-DADE1,738861-50.5%
GRETCHEN EVERHART SCHOOLTALLAHASSEELEON18391-50.3%
WASHINGTON SHORES ELEMENTARYORLANDOORANGE605301-50.2%
BRIDGEPREP ACADEMY OF GREATER MIAMIMIAMIMIAMI-DADE775388-49.9%
RAINBOW PARK ELEMENTARY SCHOOLOPA LOCKAMIAMI-DADE341172-49.6%
YOUNG MIDDLE MAGNET SCHOOLTAMPAHILLSBOROUGH606307-49.3%
CROSS CREEK SCHOOLPOMPANO BEACHBROWARD14272-49.3%
50 of 50 rows · Brick-and-mortar only. Virtual, online, and cyber schools excluded. Schools must have had ≥100 students in 2017-18 and be open in both school years.↓ Download schools-in-decline-by-state-fl.csv

How this list was built

Every Florida public school that reported total enrollment in both the NCES SY 2017-18 and SY 2024-25 vintages was scored on percent change in enrollment. Schools needed at least 100 students in 2017-18 to qualify, and must have been open in both school years. Schools that closed entirely are tracked in the separate school closures report. Virtual academies, cyber charters, and online schools are excluded so the list reflects neighborhood schools that families have moved away from rather than program-design changes.

Enrollment loss is not a verdict on a school. Schools shrink because catchment populations shrink, because new schools open nearby, because a magnet program elsewhere pulls transfers, because districts redraw boundaries, or because the building physically aged out. Use this list as a starting point for understanding which Florida schools are operating with substantially fewer students than they were seven years ago.

Source data

NCES Common Core of Data, EDGE_ADMINDATA_PUBLICSCH MapServer, vintages 2017-18 and 2024-25. Refreshed yearly when NCES publishes a new admin-data release. School names, slugs, and current district affiliation come from the 2024-25 snapshot.

HOW TO CITE THIS REPORT

Anyone is welcome to cite or republish these findings. Please credit allk12.com and link back to this page so readers can verify the underlying data.

allk12 (2026). "Florida schools in decline: enrollment loss 2017–2024." Retrieved from https://allk12.com/reports/in-decline/florida
For interview requests or custom data pulls: [email protected]
DOWNLOAD THE DATA
schools-in-decline-by-state-fl.csv
RELATED
Florida schools on the rise · All Florida schools · Best Florida schools · All states
DATA NOTICE

allk12 is independent and not affiliated with, endorsed by, or sponsored by NCES, the US Census Bureau, any state education agency or assessment program, or any other government agency. Source data is compiled from public records and provided "as is," without warranty of accuracy or completeness. You rely on it, and any analysis derived from it, at your own risk. See the full disclaimer.