Visa rollbacks hit foreign grad students – and US colleges

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When nearly 2,000 students, many from abroad, received their graduate diplomas on a recent sunny afternoon at the University of New Haven in Connecticut, it might have been the last influx of graduate students of this size on campus for some time.

The school, which has increased its graduate student enrollment with popular programs in engineering, business and public health, has lost some 3,000 international graduate students over the past two years. When new international graduate students arrive this fall, they will be in the dozens rather than the hundreds.

A variety of factors helped force this major change within the school’s student body, but one thing they have in common is the policies of President Donald Trump. The administration’s goals of restricting legal immigration and fending off criticism on U.S. college campuses have combined to redefine classroom distribution across the country, experts say.

Why we wrote this

Enrollment of foreign graduate students is plummeting at U.S. schools, leaving them with gaping holes in their budgets. Experts blame restrictive visa and travel policies for dampening the generally strong demand for U.S. higher education.

DePaul University in Chicago saw an overall 30% decline in international student numbers, including a 62% drop in first-year international graduate enrollment last fall. As a result, the school laid off staff and froze salaries and hiring. Also facing a sharp decline in international graduate student enrollment, loss of federal funding and a persistent structural deficit, the University of Southern California has laid off more than 1,000 employees.

At the University of New Haven, the $35 million hole created by declining enrollment represented about 17 percent of its budget. This led the school to stop contributing to employee retirement accounts, eliminate about 10 academic programs and cut 80 jobs through attrition. Each administrative office has been reduced in size.

Students participate in the University of New Haven commencement ceremony, May 15, 2026.

“Every time you have to give up such a large part of your income, you have to make adjustments,” says university president Jens Frederiksen.

A change in policy

Nationally, new international student enrollments – undergraduate and graduate – declined 17% last fall, according to the Institute of International Education and 10 partner higher education associations. Schools surveyed said issues with visa applications and travel restrictions were the main factors.

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