Trustees Hold Tuition Flat For Maine Students

Seventh time in ten years Maine students will not see a tuition increase in new academic year

Strong enrollment projections, Governor’s supplemental budget proposal create an opportunity for University of Maine System to provide a more affordable return to normal for Maine students

Orono, Maine — The University of Maine System Board of Trustees approved a $578 million FY22 budget that holds in-state tuition rates flat for students. The spending plan will be the seventh UMS budget in the last ten years to hold tuition rates flat for Maine students.  UMS has been steadily reducing the cost of tuition as a percentage of Maine per capita income since 2013. 

In May, Chancellor Dannel Malloy and Trustees delayed passage of an earlier budget proposal that would have included a 2.4 percent inflation-based increase to tuition rates for all students. The delay gave university leaders an opportunity to consider the financial impacts of strong May 1 first-year and transfer deposit activity and a proposal from Governor Mills after the FFT Committee’s May 5th meeting to increase the state UMS appropriation by 3 percent in FY22 and FY23.   

“Our students come first at Maine’s public universities. Holding the line on tuition makes our life-changing degrees more affordable and accessible, and allows our students to earn their degrees with less debt,” said Chancellor Dannel Malloy. “The strong support of Governor Mills and the Legislature is making it possible for us to provide a more affordable return to normalcy for our Maine students. On behalf of our students, we are grateful.”

The average, full-time tuition for Maine students attending University of Maine System universities will be $8,572 for the upcoming academic year.  Please follow this link for a media briefing document on affordability and proposed tuition rates and student charges provided as part of the June 14 FFT Committee.

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About the University of Maine System

Established in 1968, the University of Maine System (UMS) unites six distinctive public universities, comprising 10 campuses and numerous centers, in the common purpose of providing quality higher education while delivering on its traditional tripartite mission of teaching, research, and public service.  

In 2020 UMS became the first and only statewide enterprise of public higher education in the country to transition to a unified accreditation for the system.  Much different than a merger or consolidation, unified accreditation is a new operating model for the University of Maine System that removes the primary barrier to inter-institutional collaboration.

A comprehensive public institution of higher education, UMS serves more than 30,000 students annually and is supported by the efforts of more than 2,000 full-time and part-time faculty, more than 3,000 regular full-time and part-time staff, and a complement of part-time temporary (adjunct) faculty. 

Reaching more than 500,000 people annually through educational and cultural offerings, the University of Maine System also benefits from more than two-thirds of its alumni population residing within the state; more than 123,000 individuals.

The System consists of seven main campuses: The University of Maine (UMaine), including its regional campus the University of Maine at Machias (UMM); the University of Maine at Augusta (UMA); the University of Maine at Farmington (UMF); the University of Maine at Fort Kent (UMFK), the University of Maine at Presque Isle (UMPI); and the University of Southern Maine (USM).  The System also includes a UMA campus in Bangor, USM campuses in Gorham and Lewiston-Auburn, the University of Maine School of Law, and the University of Maine Graduate and Professional Center.    

Please follow these links to the  UMS Logo, UMS and individual university style guides and an image and biographical information for Chancellor Malloy.