Think US-based public schools are free? Indian Google techie reveals the real fee is hidden in your ZIP code
Many Indians dream of studying or settling in the US, often getting lured into its public schools as a golden ticket, completely free and of high quality. After all, no tuition fees sound like a parent's paradise compared to the steep bills back home in cities like Bengaluru or Delhi.
But for families actually living there, the story changes once kids enter school age. Choices about homes, neighborhoods, and daily budgets suddenly revolve around education quality, revealing costs that aren't labeled as "fees."

A tech professional's recent social media post changed the perspective on free education in the US, claiming that good education often comes with trade-offs, whether through direct payments or lifestyle changes.
Google engineer says free education in the US might just be a ‘myth’
A Google engineer from Hyderabad, Aditya Goyal, recently sparked online discussions with a LinkedIn post after moving back to India. He addressed frequent grumbles about Bengaluru's expensive schools; IB or IGCSE options cost about double, and top-tier schools charge even higher fees. People often claim US public schools are free, and Goyal shared, “For a long time, I believed that too.” But his time in cities like Cincinnati, Philadelphia, Charlotte, Jersey City, and Austin shifted his perspective.
Not free, just shifted costs
Goyal explained that newcomers pick neighborhoods for jobs or fun spots at first. “That changes very quickly once you have a child. Suddenly, the most important question becomes: ‘What school district is this house in?’” he wrote.
Top-rated public schools sit in pricey areas with high property taxes, often $10,000–$15,000 yearly (roughly ₹8.3 lakh–₹12.5 lakh). “Families aren’t just choosing houses. They are buying access to a school district,” he noted. Effectively, “The tuition isn’t charged per child. It’s charged per house.”
Housing is the real ‘fee’ behind free education
In these premium zones, rents and home values soar to fund better schools through taxes. Goyal further wrote, “Public education in the US may be free on paper. But in many cities, the real question is, Are you paying for school through tuition… or through your ZIP code?” It's like housing premiums act as indirect fees for quality districts.
Social media relates well!
Aditya Goyal's post ignited a debate across social media, with users offering their takes on how housing ties into school quality.
One user wrote, “One of the trade-offs in the US housing market is what you prioritise. For the same budget, some people choose a larger home in a weaker school district, while others choose a smaller home in a stronger one.”
Another commented, “That is anyway true for metro cities like Bangalore, the school fees are in addition to the extremely high cost of apartments/houses in Bangalore. In the US, cities are spread out, and yes, better school districts have higher rent. While in Delhi or Bangalore, everything is clustered together, and any decent locality is very expensive.”
But for families actually living there, the story changes once kids enter school age. Choices about homes, neighborhoods, and daily budgets suddenly revolve around education quality, revealing costs that aren't labeled as "fees."
A tech professional's recent social media post changed the perspective on free education in the US, claiming that good education often comes with trade-offs, whether through direct payments or lifestyle changes.
Google engineer says free education in the US might just be a ‘myth’
A Google engineer from Hyderabad, Aditya Goyal, recently sparked online discussions with a LinkedIn post after moving back to India. He addressed frequent grumbles about Bengaluru's expensive schools; IB or IGCSE options cost about double, and top-tier schools charge even higher fees. People often claim US public schools are free, and Goyal shared, “For a long time, I believed that too.” But his time in cities like Cincinnati, Philadelphia, Charlotte, Jersey City, and Austin shifted his perspective.
Not free, just shifted costs
Goyal explained that newcomers pick neighborhoods for jobs or fun spots at first. “That changes very quickly once you have a child. Suddenly, the most important question becomes: ‘What school district is this house in?’” he wrote.
Top-rated public schools sit in pricey areas with high property taxes, often $10,000–$15,000 yearly (roughly ₹8.3 lakh–₹12.5 lakh). “Families aren’t just choosing houses. They are buying access to a school district,” he noted. Effectively, “The tuition isn’t charged per child. It’s charged per house.”
Housing is the real ‘fee’ behind free education
In these premium zones, rents and home values soar to fund better schools through taxes. Goyal further wrote, “Public education in the US may be free on paper. But in many cities, the real question is, Are you paying for school through tuition… or through your ZIP code?” It's like housing premiums act as indirect fees for quality districts.
Social media relates well!
Aditya Goyal's post ignited a debate across social media, with users offering their takes on how housing ties into school quality.
One user wrote, “One of the trade-offs in the US housing market is what you prioritise. For the same budget, some people choose a larger home in a weaker school district, while others choose a smaller home in a stronger one.”
Another commented, “That is anyway true for metro cities like Bangalore, the school fees are in addition to the extremely high cost of apartments/houses in Bangalore. In the US, cities are spread out, and yes, better school districts have higher rent. While in Delhi or Bangalore, everything is clustered together, and any decent locality is very expensive.”
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