Teacher Shortage Statistics 2026 - Key Facts and Trends
When we drop our children off at school, we trust that a qualified, caring expert is waiting to guide them. But new data for 2026 reveals that 1 in 8 teaching positions in the United States is currently either unfilled or held by someone not fully certified for the job. This isn't just an administrative headache; it is a direct challenge to the quality of education our children receive. We've compiled the latest numbers to help families, teachers, and advocates understand the scope of the crisis and, more importantly, how we can work together to solve it.
Key Takeaways
- 411,000+ teaching positions are either vacant or filled by under-qualified staff across the U.S.
- Special Education, Math, and Science are the hardest subjects to staff, with 45 states reporting shortages.
- Schools with high concentrations of students of color are 4 times more likely to rely on uncertified teachers.
- Replacing a single teacher costs a district between $12,000 and $25,000 in recruitment and training.
- The teacher pipeline is shrinking, with California producing only half as many new teachers in 2022 as it did in 2004.
The Scope of the Crisis
Positions Vacant or Under-Certified
Total teaching positions in the U.S. that are either unfilled or staffed by someone without full certification.
Source: Learning Policy Institute (2025)
Breakdown of the National Shortage (2025 Data)
| Category | Estimated Count | Impact |
|---|---|---|
| Unfilled Vacancies | 45,582 | Courses cancelled or larger class sizes |
| Under-Certified Teachers | 365,967 | Students taught by staff learning on the job |
| Total Gap | 411,549 | Affects approx. 1 in 8 classrooms |
Source: Learning Policy Institute (2025)
Which Subjects are Hardest to Staff?
States Reporting Shortages by Subject Area (2024-25)
Source: Learning Policy Institute (2025)
Report Special Ed Shortages
Nearly every state in the U.S. reports a critical lack of qualified Special Education teachers.
Source: Learning Policy Institute (2025)
Does this mean my child's teacher isn't qualified?
State-by-State Breakdown
Teacher Shortage Severity by Selected State (2024-2025)
| State | Status / Statistic | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Florida | 9,000+ Vacancies | Substantial increase from 4,767 in 2022-23 |
| Pennsylvania | 1,448 Vacancies | Up from 865 the previous year |
| Massachusetts | 4,800 Vacancies | Sharp rise from <100 reported in 2023-24 |
| Michigan | 5% Non-Certified | 1 in 20 teachers lacks full certification |
Source: TeacherShortages.com (Kansas State/Missouri Researchers) (2025)
Of Schools Have Vacancies
Nearly half of all public schools nationwide reported at least one teaching vacancy.
Source: Devlin Peck / Scholaroo (2025)
Why Are Teachers Leaving?
Cost to Replace One Teacher
School districts spend this amount on recruitment and training every time a teacher leaves.
Source: Learning Policy Institute (2025)
Teacher Turnover Rate Trends
Source: TeacherShortages.com (Kansas State/Missouri Researchers) (2025)
Is it just about the salary?
The Future: Pipeline and Solutions
Candidates Blocked by Cost
Nearly half of potential teachers are held back solely by the financial cost of licensing.
Source: Teach Away (2026)
What Families Can Do
- Ask your school board about 'Grow Your Own' programs that recruit local community members.
- Support local tax levies specifically designated for teacher salary increases and mentoring.
- Volunteer for non-instructional tasks (lunch duty, library) to reduce teacher burnout.
What Schools Must Do (Based on Data)
- Implement paid teacher residencies to remove the financial barrier to entry.
- Focus on induction and mentoring - support in the first 2 years significantly improves retention.
- Hire early: Vacancy rates are lower in districts that complete hiring before July.
Common Questions from Families
How does a teacher shortage affect my child's daily life?
Are private schools immune to this?
Is the problem getting better or worse?
Sources (6)
- 1. Learning Policy Institute (2025) https://learningpolicyinstitute.org/product/overview-teacher-shortages-2025-factsheet
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- 6. Michigan State University (EPIC) (2026) https://msutoday.msu.edu/news/2026/01/teacher-shortage-report