Public Policy · Texas

Public Policy colleges in Texas

CampusPin lists 166 U.S. colleges in Texas that offer Public Policy programs. Compare tuition, acceptance rate, and enrollment in the table below, every figure links back to the institution's official IPEDS data.

Public Policy teaches you to analyze how governments decide, weighing economic and political tradeoffs to design and evaluate programs that address real public problems.

Schools in Texas that offer Public Policy

Public Policy programs in Texas: by the numbers

A quick comparison of the 50 schools (of 166 total) listed above, drawn from each institution's published IPEDS data.

Schools listed

166

Public / private

21 / 29

Universities / 2-year

27 / 23

Cities represented

32

In-state tuition range

$1,773–$54,844

Median in-state tuition

$13,743

Figures reflect the schools currently listed and each institution's most recent reported data. Verify current tuition and admissions details with the school before applying.

What you'll study in a Public Policy program

  • Microeconomics for policy and welfare analysis
  • Cost-benefit and cost-effectiveness analysis
  • Applied statistics and regression methods
  • Program evaluation and causal inference
  • Public budgeting and fiscal analysis
  • Decision modeling and resource allocation
  • Survey design and quantitative data collection
  • Policy memo writing and stakeholder briefing
  • Capstone or practicum with a client agency

Where a Public Policy degree can lead

  • Policy Analyst
  • Legislative Aide
  • Program Evaluator
  • Budget Analyst
  • Public Affairs Specialist
  • Government Relations Manager

Typical pay: Early-career wages vary by employer, region, and experience (BLS, 2024 political scientists median $139,380).

Public Policy trains students to study how public decisions get made and to judge whether the resulting programs actually work. You learn to break a policy question, say, who benefits from a housing subsidy or how a tax change ripples through behavior, into parts you can measure: who is affected, what it costs, what alternatives exist, and what the political and economic forces pushing each option look like. Coursework leans on microeconomic reasoning, statistical methods, decision modeling, and structured cost-benefit analysis, then applies those tools to concrete domains such as health, education, the environment, and the budget. Unlike political science, which often emphasizes theory, institutions, and how power is acquired and used, public policy is more applied and quantitative: the emphasis is on evaluating choices and recommending what to do, not only explaining why systems behave as they do.

Most programs in this area award a bachelor's degree, while analytical and government roles often expect a master's degree, and graduate study is a common path for those who want to lead evaluation or budget work. The credential does not require a professional license, but students should verify whether a given program holds programmatic accreditation. Learning is built around a practicum or capstone in which teams take a live policy problem from a client agency or nonprofit and deliver a written recommendation backed by data; many students also complete an internship in a legislative office, an agency, or a research organization. Graduates work in federal, state, and local government, in legislative and budget offices, in think tanks and research institutes, and in advocacy groups, foundations, and consulting firms that advise public-sector clients.

In federal data for the closely related occupation of political scientists, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reports a 2024 median wage of $139,380 and projects employment to decline about 3.1% from 2024 to 2034; a master's degree is the typical entry-level education for that occupation. National figures are occupation-wide medians across all experience levels, not starting wages or graduate outcomes.

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