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Ranked: The States Getting More From Education Dollars

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Ranked: The States Getting More From Education Dollars

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Key Takeaways

  • Florida ranks 47th in public school funding but 24th in education performance, one of the largest positive gaps in the dataset.
  • Tennessee, Virginia, and Wisconsin also outperform their funding ranks by double digits.
  • Several high-funding states, including Vermont, Rhode Island, and Alaska, rank much lower in performance than in spending.

Some states spend heavily on education. Others deliver stronger results with far less.

This chart compares education performance and public school funding across all 50 states, using data from ConsumerAffairs. It shows which states deliver strong results with less funding—and where higher spending still leads to weaker outcomes.

The result is a state-by-state look at education efficiency, comparing rank in outcomes against rank in funding. In several cases, lower-spending states rank far higher in outcomes than their higher-funded peers.

Where Education Dollars Go Furthest

Florida stands out as one of the most efficient systems in the country, ranking 47th in funding but 24th in performance, a gap of 23 places. Tennessee shows a similar pattern, placing 38th in funding and 20th in performance.

Meanwhile, Virginia and Wisconsin also outperform their spending levels, each with an efficiency gap of +13.

This table ranks states by educational performance and funding. Performance is measured across K–12 and college outcomes, safety, and overall quality. Funding includes spending per student and teacher-to-student ratios.

State Performance Rank 2025 Public School Funding Rank Efficiency Gap
New York 1 1 0
Connecticut 2 3 +1
Massachusetts 3 2 -1
New Jersey 4 5 +1
Illinois 5 9 +4
Washington 6 10 +4
Virginia 7 20 +13
California 8 16 +8
Maryland 9 8 -1
Pennsylvania 10 7 -3
Wisconsin 11 24 +13
Kentucky 12 22 +10
Wyoming 13 17 +4
Minnesota 14 18 +4
Nebraska 15 25 +10
Vermont 16 4 -12
Georgia 17 21 +4
Rhode Island 18 6 -12
Maine 19 13 -6
Tennessee 20 38 +18
Delaware 21 12 -9
New Hampshire 22 11 -11
Missouri 23 32 +9
Florida 24 47 +23
Colorado 25 26 +1
Iowa 26 35 +9
Kansas 27 29 +2
Hawaii 28 15 -13
Mississippi 29 37 +8
North Carolina 30 42 +12
Indiana 31 41 +10
North Dakota 32 31 -1
Montana 33 36 +3
Texas 34 45 +11
Ohio 35 23 -12
South Dakota 36 43 +7
Michigan 37 28 -9
Arkansas 38 34 -4
Utah 39 46 +7
Oregon 40 14 -26
Louisiana 41 40 -1
South Carolina 42 30 -12
Alabama 43 39 -4
West Virginia 44 33 -11
Idaho 45 48 +3
New Mexico 46 27 -19
Oklahoma 47 49 +2
Nevada 48 44 -4
Alaska 49 19 -30
Arizona 50 50 0

These gaps suggest that spending alone does not explain education outcomes. Cost of living, policy choices, student demographics, teacher availability, and how funding is allocated can all shape results.

Where High Spending Isn’t Delivering Results

At the other end of the spectrum, several states spend heavily on education but see weaker outcomes.

Vermont ranks 4th in funding but only 16th in performance, while Rhode Island (6th vs. 18th) and New Hampshire (11th vs. 22nd) show similar gaps. The most striking case is Alaska, which ranks 19th in funding but near the bottom (49th) in performance.

Oregon also stands out, placing 14th in funding but 40th in performance, one of the largest mismatches in the dataset. While administration costs have grown over the past decade, the share of dollars spent on classroom instruction has shrunk.

The Biggest Gap Is Efficiency

While higher funding can support better resources, outcomes vary widely—even among states with similar funding levels. Some translate each dollar into stronger test scores, graduation rates, and college readiness, while others see far weaker returns.

That gap points to deeper factors shaping education systems, from how money is allocated to differences in policy, cost of living, and student demographics. For families and taxpayers, the takeaway is straightforward: where you live can shape not just how much is spent on education, but how effectively it’s used.

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For more, explore this graphic on average salaries by state in 2025.