Kings County
Public-school families in Kings County pick from 583 schools serving the county's roughly 291,697 K-12 students, with a mix of 307 elementary, 102 middle, and 147 high.
7-year change in Kings County
SY 2017-18 vs SY 2024-25County vs. school enrollment demographics
Left bar is the racial makeup of Kings County residents (Census ACS 5-year). Right bar is the enrollment-weighted makeup of public schools in the county (NCES CCD). NCES systematically under-reports Hispanic, Pacific Islander, and Native American enrollment for many schools; where the resident share is meaningful but the reported school share is zero, we mark the school bar "not reported".
Test scores in Kings County
Latest 2024-25 ELA proficiency, 537 schools ranked. New York state average: 58.3%.
- PS 89 CYPRESS HILLS· 22.0%
- KHALIL GIBRAN INTERNATIONAL ACADEMY· 24.0%
- MOTT HALL BRIDGES ACADEMY· 24.0%
- PS 116 ELIZABETH L FARRELL· 24.0%
- PS 202 ERNEST S JENKYNS· 24.0%
Cities in Kings County
About Kings County
Across the broad New York county of Kings County of about 2,631,580 residents, the public-school footprint covers 583 schools and about 291,697 students.
For perspective, census numbers show median household income runs near $80,263, about 42% of adults have a bachelor's degree or above, and roughly 15% of residents live below the federal poverty line.
For a sense of the school types, Kings County spans 307 elementary schools (143,667 students), 102 middle schools (41,772), 147 high schools (87,039), and 27 combined or other schools.
NEW YORK CITY GEOGRAPHIC DISTRICT #20 is the biggest district by enrollment, covering about 44,136 students across Kings County.
Looking at the last 7 years. Across the same 7-year window, public-school enrollment fell 10%: 324,317 students in SY 2017-18 versus 290,852 in SY 2024-25. The school count climbed from 566 to 578 across the same 7-year window. The Black share of public-school enrollment shrank from 37% to 31%.
On this page, the community for Kings County discusses comparison threads between local schools and program reviews. Discussions cut across districts, schools, and grade levels.