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Perth Schools Overcrowded: How Population Boom Impacts WA Education

Perth's schools and universities struggle with overcrowding as WA's population grows 60,000 annually. Explore how the education crisis affects families seeking the best schools in Perth.

By Perth News Desk · Published 2 July 2026 at 9:35 am

2 min read

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Perth Schools Overcrowded: How Population Boom Impacts WA Education
Photo: Photo by Tibor Janas on Pexels

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Perth's education system is at a breaking point. With the state's population expected to grow by 60,000 residents annually—driven by migration, defence contracts at Stirling Naval Base, and resources sector demand—schools and universities are buckling under pressure.

The numbers tell a stark story. Primary schools in growth corridors like Ellenbrook, Thornlie, and Baldivis are operating above capacity, with some classes exceeding 30 students. Secondary colleges across the metropolitan area report waitlists for enrolment, while boarding fees at established private institutions on the Peppermint Grove-Dalkeith belt have climbed beyond $50,000 annually, pricing out middle-income families.

Curtin University and the University of Western Australia are grappling with their own challenges. Despite strong domestic and international demand, federal funding constraints have forced both institutions to limit places in high-cost disciplines like engineering and sciences—precisely the fields driving WA's economic future. University of Western Australia's Crawley campus and Curtin's Bentley campus are operating near maximum physical capacity.

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The ripple effects are immediate and concerning for local communities. Teachers report burnout at record levels; parent volunteers are stretched thin organising fundraisers for basic resources; and families in postcodes like Wanneroo and Joondalup face hour-long commutes to find suitable secondary education options.

For young people, the bottleneck is equally troubling. Year 12 students competing for university places face tighter quotas. Apprenticeship and vocational pathways, while promoted as alternatives, struggle with infrastructure investment compared to traditional university routes. Families relocating to Perth for jobs at AUKUS-related defence facilities or iron ore logistics often find their children's education planning derailed by local capacity constraints.

The WA government's Metronet rail expansion and state budget surplus have created an opportunity. Education infrastructure investment—new school facilities in high-growth areas, expanded university lecture theatres and laboratories, and improved vocational education hubs—should be urgent priorities. Without it, Perth risks becoming a city where economic opportunity exists but educational pathways do not.

Residents investing in Perth's future deserve a school system and university sector that grows with them. Right now, the system is falling behind, and the cost will be borne by the next generation of Western Australians.

This article was compiled by AI and screened before publishing. See our editorial standards.

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Published by The Daily Perth

This article was produced by the The Daily Perth editorial desk and covers news in Perth. See our editorial standards for how we use AI.

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