South Dakota public university tuition rising at least 2.4%, with some steeper hikes


The board overseeing South Dakota’s public university system increased in-person tuition by 2.4% systemwide during its Wednesday, May 20 meeting in Custer, with some jumps being higher.

The South Dakota Board of Regents also approved a higher increase of 5% for the South Dakota School of Mines and Technology in Rapid City.

Heather Forney, regents vice president of finance and administration, told board members the increase is tied to staff and faculty salary increases. The Legislature approved a 1.4% raise for state employees during its 2026 session.

Heather Forney, South Dakota Board of Regents

Forney

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Forney said the tuition increase is also driven by “significant” increases in technology costs across the system, which rise annually around 4% to 7%.

Griffin Petersen, the student representative to the Board of Regents, called the increases “pretty modest.”

“It ensures we continue to deliver a level of quality that prepares our students for the workforce and for their lives beyond school,” Petersen said.

The bigger boost at Mines is due to more experiential and “cost intensive” learning, Forney said. The Rapid City university specializes in science, technology, engineering and mathematics.

This is the second straight year the regents increased tuition after three years of legislatively aided tuition freezes. The average annual tuition and mandatory fee cost for an in-state undergraduate student will increase from $9,652 to $9,915, an increase of $263.40.

In a regional survey of surrounding states during the 2025-26 school year presented to the board in April, South Dakota ranked fourth-highest among seven states for undergraduate resident tuition and fees and third-highest for graduate resident tuition and fees. For nonresidents, South Dakota ranked second-lowest for both undergraduate and graduate tuition and fees.

Tuition will also increase beyond 2.4% for other programs, including:

  • An 8% increase for doctorate programs at Dakota State University in Madison.
  • A 5% increases at the University of South Dakota’s law and medical schools.

Forney said the medical school increase is tied to “significant costs we’ll be dealing with” as the school moves from Vermillion to Sioux Falls.

General activity fee also going up at most schools

The board also approved a 2.2% increase in the mandatory general activity fee students pay systemwide, with exceptions for South Dakota State University and Black Hills State University where the fees will hold steady.

At South Dakota State University, a wellness center bond will be paid off, and the $1.83 per credit hour general activity fee previously covering that debt will be redirected toward career development, student organization funding and student union maintenance. Black Hills State University is in a similar position — a bond expiring will free up $6.57 per credit hour, which the university will redirect to comparable student services.

Dual-credit tuition for South Dakota high school students taking college courses will increase 2.4%, raising the student cost per credit hour to $80.37. The state Department of Education covers the other half.