Florida’s Board of Governors advanced a proposal that would functionally bar undocumented applicants from selective public universities, with the policy set to take effect for 2027–28 admissions. The change would prevent institutions that did not admit all academically qualified applicants in the prior two years from accepting prospective students “present in the United States unlawfully,” while enrolled students are reportedly unaffected. In parallel, the Department of Justice and Kansas officials moved to quash Kansas’s tuition-equity law for undocumented students, asking a federal judge to strike it down. The joint motion followed a DOJ lawsuit and framed the policy as unconstitutional discrimination under federal law. Together, the actions mark escalating legal and administrative pressure on enrollment access and tuition participation for undocumented students across multiple states—issues likely to spill into institutional admissions policy, scholarship packaging, and compliance risk management.