Kentucky Supreme Court declares the state’s charter school law unconstitutional

February 20, 2026

While the Kentucky Supreme Court has declared the state’s charter school law unconstitutional, the reality is more ironic than alarming: Kentucky never truly had a functioning charter school law.

The statute allowed only two jurisdictions to authorize charter schools and, critically, never provided meaningful funding. It was a law in name only — a framework designed to appear reform-minded without actually empowering families or enabling schools to open and thrive.

For years, we have said as much. On CER’s Parent Power! Index, Kentucky earns an F because its law fails to create real opportunity for families. A charter law that produces zero — or at most one — viable school is not a charter law. It is symbolic compliance.

Importantly, this ruling does not end the constitutional debate. In 2017, former U.S. Solicitor General and constitutional expert Paul Clement authored a legal brief outlining how a fully funded, properly structured charter school proposal would comply with the Kentucky Constitution.

You can learn more about that analysis here:

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