The announcement on April 14 carried the weight of something that had been feasible for some time and was now final on the Hampshire College campus in Amherst, a place where the buildings have names that reflect the institution’s self-conscious idealism and where students pursuing self-designed degrees have walked the pathways through its nearly 700 acres since 1970. The Board of Trustees of Hampshire decided to permanently close after the conclusion of the fall semester of 2026.
In 2025, the college had fallen short of its enrollment goal by about half. It was a long-standing debt. The sale of the land that may have bought extra time had not taken place. Jose Fuentes, the chair of the board, said in a statement that “every possible alternative” had been considered but deemed to be inadequate. The experiment was coming to an end after 56 years.

Those who were present when the announcement was made are most immediately affected by Hampshire College’s closure. Between 250 and 269 professors and staff members are losing their jobs, with the majority of layoffs starting on June 15. The aspect that has infuriated the community the most is the severance situation, and it makes sense: according to Hampshire’s own employment handbook, qualified workers who were dismissed off without a recall would receive severance pay based on years of service. The college has admitted that it is unable to uphold that promise.
The funds are insufficient. The college was told it was on a sustainable trajectory, according to a number of recently appointed faculty members, some of whom specifically queried administrators about closure risk before accepting posts. One assistant professor who moved with her spouse to accept a job in 2024 explained that she didn’t have enough knowledge to decide whether or not to uproot her life.
An emergency relief fund established by academics, staff, and alumni as a community response to the severance gap has received over $1.3 million in non-binding promises from over 1,000 donors. That amount is both significant and inadequate when compared to an estimated $25 million in overall financial liabilities.
The remaining 600 or so kids must deal with their own disruption. In an effort to provide pathways for students to complete degrees without losing too much of what they had built, Hampshire established transfer and advising agreements with partner institutions in the Five College Consortium, including Amherst College, Mount Holyoke, Smith, and UMass Amherst, as well as other institutions.
The problem lies in Hampshire’s truly unique educational approach, which included self-directed learning, narrative assessments in place of grades, no mandatory majors, and a Division III capstone project in place of a traditional senior thesis. The methods and abilities those students acquired don’t easily convert into equivalent credit hours at more traditional universities. A few pupils will lose time. Some will no longer follow the precise path that their schooling was leading them. Many might land well. The change is still taking place.
Though less dramatic than the human narrative, the local influence on Amherst, which lies next to the school, is nonetheless important to comprehend. Hampshire made a yearly contribution of about $100,000 in water and sewer costs, which is a meaningful amount but not a game-changer for a community. Businesses in the area that depend on foot traffic from students and professors will be impacted. The 700-acre site, which is zoned specifically for educational purposes and is nearly entirely tax-exempt, raises more difficult issues regarding its future.
Concerns regarding abandoned structures, vandalism, maintenance expenses, and publicly accessible recreational trails and facilities have been voiced by town officials. There are no clear answers to these questions. Alumni and community members have created the Hampshire Next initiative, which has been investigating alternate uses for the site and delaying the closure’s schedule. However, it is challenging to bridge the $1.3 million pledge gap with the $25 million commitments on the basis of optimism alone.
Observing this from the outside, Hampshire is being drawn into a larger narrative whether it wants to or not. Higher education analysts have been discussing Huron Consulting Group’s prediction for months that about 450 of the nation’s 1,700 private nonprofit four-year institutions may close or consolidate during the next ten years.
Hampshire’s unique educational style and decades of financial instability make it both a unique institutional narrative and a precursor to a potentially much broader trend. Small enrollment bases, high tuition reliance, limited endowments, and programs that cater to specific student types who have other options are traits that the institutions most at danger have in common with a sizable portion of the American liberal arts college landscape. Hampshire is going to close. It might not be the final one to close this year.
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