Indiana High Schoolers Set Record Graduation Rate in 2025
It's the third straight year of improvement, following a pandemic-era low.
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Nearly 92% of Indiana鈥檚 high school seniors graduated in 2025, setting the highest graduation rate on record, the Indiana Department of Education announced Monday.
鈥淭oday鈥檚 record-high graduation rate is a testament to the hard work of Indiana鈥檚 students, families, and educators,鈥 Gov. Mike Braun said in a news release.
鈥淲hile high school graduation marks the end of a student鈥檚 K-12 journey, our schools play an essential role in preparing students for all that comes next, whether that鈥檚 going to college, starting a career, or joining the military,鈥 he continued. 鈥淭his strong improvement in our state鈥檚 graduation rate shows that when we focus on academic excellence and establish clear, personalized pathways, our students thrive.鈥
The 91.83% graduation rate bested the 90.23% by 1.6 percentage points.
It represents the third straight year of post-pandemic improvement kicked off in 2023, when 88.98% graduated. Seniors recorded a decade-low graduation rate of 86.65% in 2022.
鈥淎s we continue to scale the new Indiana diploma and readiness seals statewide, we will not only strengthen the value of high school and help more students graduate, we will ensure that they are prepared to succeed in whatever path they choose for their future,鈥 state Education Secretary Katie Jenner said.
Numerous student populations improved in the results released Tuesday.
Almost 87% of Black students graduated in 2025, up 3 percentage points from the previous year, along with nearly 90% of Hispanic students, in a boost of 2 percentage points. White students improved to 93%, or by about 1.5 percentage points, and their multiracial classmates logged a graduation rate of 88%, up by 1 percentage point.
Seniors learning English, receiving free and reduced-price meals, and in special education also graduated at higher rates than the year prior 鈥 but still lagged their native speaker, paid lunch and general education peers.
The rate of students who graduated without waivers additionally cleared 90%. Students who do not complete or pass some graduation requirements can still qualify for a diploma if they demonstrate knowledge or skill.
The waivers are intended to help students with special circumstances, like those who鈥檝e transferred to a new school or who have attempted to pass competency tests at least three times.
State education and policy leaders have for years sought to lower dependence on waivers, including by setting caps on the percentage of graduation waivers that can be counted toward a school鈥檚 state and local graduation rate. They took effect with the 2024 cohort.
Non-public schools outperformed their public counterparts by about 1 percentage point 鈥 93% versus 92% 鈥 but the differences between traditional public and public charter schools were not reported. In the 2024 results, about 93% of students at traditional public schools graduated as opposed to just 59% of students at public charter schools.
Indiana鈥檚 federal graduation rate increased, almost hitting 90% compared to 2024鈥檚 89%. The rates are calculated differently because of differences between state and federal accountability models, according to IDOE.
is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Indiana Capital Chronicle maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Niki Kelly for questions: [email protected].
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