Computer Science Enrollment Drops 15%: AI Fears and Market Shifts Drive the Decline
Education Trends

Computer Science Enrollment Drops 15%: AI Fears and Market Shifts Drive the Decline

After a decade of growth, CS enrollment is falling as students worry about AI job displacement. Here's what's happening and what it means.

Key Takeaways
  • 1.CS enrollment dropped 15% at graduate institutions and 6% at undergraduate two-year schools in Fall 2025 (National Student Clearinghouse, 2025)
  • 2.62% of computing units report declining enrollment for 2025-26 academic year (CERP/CRA, 2025)
  • 3.64% of pessimistic CS majors cite generative AI as a factor in their outlook (Handshake, 2026)
  • 4.Students shifting to cybersecurity, trade programs, and specialized degrees instead of general CS
On This Page

-15%

Graduate CS Enrollment Drop

62%

Programs Reporting Decline

64%

CS Majors Citing AI Concern

2x

Decade Growth (2013-2023)

The Enrollment Numbers Tell the Story

According to the National Student Clearinghouse Research Center, computer science enrollment dropped significantly in Fall 2025, ranging from a 15% decline at graduate institutions to nearly 6% at undergraduate two-year institutions. This reverses a decade-long growth trend.

The CERP Pulse Survey comparing 2025-26 to 2024-25 found that 62% of computing units reported declining enrollment, while only 19% remained steady and just 13% saw increases.

This marks a dramatic shift. The number of students earning bachelor's degrees in computer and information sciences had more than doubled over the last decade—from 51,696 in 2013-2014 to 112,720 in 2022-2023. That growth has now stalled and reversed.

62%
Computing Programs Reporting Enrollment Decline
The CERP Pulse Survey shows nearly two-thirds of computing departments saw enrollment drops in 2025-26, with only 13% reporting growth.

Source: CERP/CRA, 2025

Why Students Are Leaving Computer Science

The Computing Research Association links the enrollment drop to labor market fears, AI concerns, and shifts toward specialized degrees like cybersecurity. Multiple factors are converging to make students reconsider CS as a major:

  • AI job displacement fears — 64% of pessimistic CS majors cite generative AI as a factor in their outlook
  • Tech layoffs coverage — High-profile layoffs at major tech companies have dampened enthusiasm
  • Entry-level hiring freeze — 25% drop in junior developer hiring at top firms signals tougher job prospects
  • Salary growth stagnation — CS salary premiums have shrunk relative to other professional degrees
  • International student decline — Visa concerns reduce international enrollment in graduate CS programs

Handshake data shows that generative AI is a clear driver of pessimism among CS students—64% of pessimistic CS majors say generative AI is a factor, compared to 47% of pessimistic students overall.

Where Students Are Going Instead

The enrollment decline isn't students leaving tech entirely—many are pivoting to fields they perceive as more secure or specialized:

FieldEnrollment TrendStudent Perception
Cybersecurity
Growing
AI-resistant, high demand, clear career path
Engineering Technologies
+8%
Hands-on skills, can't be automated
Mechanic/Repair Technologies
+10%
Trade skills, immediate employment
Data Science/Analytics
Stable
Specialized, business-focused
AI/ML Concentrations
Growing
Future-proof, cutting edge
General Computer Science
-15%
Too broad, AI competition concerns

Source: National Student Clearinghouse, CRA Data, 2025

Should You Still Study Computer Science?

Despite the enrollment decline, computer science remains a valuable degree—but the calculus has changed. Here's how to evaluate whether CS is right for you:

  • CS still makes sense if: You're genuinely interested in how computers work, you want to build complex systems, you're prepared to specialize and continuously learn
  • Consider alternatives if: You're choosing CS purely for salary, you prefer defined career paths, you're uncomfortable with rapid change
  • Key insight: A general CS degree alone is no longer a guaranteed ticket to a high-paying job—specialization and practical experience matter more than ever

According to MARKETview Education, 'Computer Science isn't the only major to see changes in interest emerge.' They note that Nursing saw a similar substantial downward swing post-pandemic and is only starting to recover—suggesting that enrollment trends can reverse.

CS Specializations That Are Growing

Within computer science, some concentrations are bucking the decline. According to Research.com analysis, artificial intelligence and machine learning concentrations lead enrollment trends due to explosive growth in AI-driven applications.

  1. Artificial Intelligence/Machine Learning — Fastest growing concentration
  2. Cybersecurity — Strong demand, clear certification paths
  3. Cloud Computing — Enterprise digital transformation driving need
  4. Data Engineering — Critical infrastructure for AI systems
  5. DevOps/Site Reliability — Operational expertise remains in demand

Career Paths

Foundational degree covering theory and practice

Median Salary:$125,000

Growing field with 4.8M unfilled positions globally

Median Salary:$120,000

Specialized degree combining CS with statistics

Median Salary:$130,000

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Frequently Asked Questions

Sources

National Student Clearinghouse Research Center

Fall 2025 enrollment data showing 15% graduate CS decline

62% of computing units report declining enrollment

Handshake Class of 2026

64% of pessimistic CS majors cite AI concerns

Analysis of undergraduate enrollment shifts

Context on enrollment cycle patterns

Taylor Rupe

Taylor Rupe

Co-founder & Editor (B.S. Computer Science, Oregon State • B.A. Psychology, University of Washington)

Taylor combines technical expertise in computer science with a deep understanding of human behavior and learning. His dual background drives Hakia's mission: leveraging technology to build authoritative educational resources that help people make better decisions about their academic and career paths.