Florida’s higher education governance bodies are advancing proposals that would bar undocumented students from enrolling in parts of the state’s public university system. A vote is scheduled on a Florida Board of Education proposal requiring prospective students at 28 public colleges to provide documentation of citizenship or lawful presence. Separately, Florida’s Board of Governors approved an amendment that would prevent people “present in the United States unlawfully” from initially enrolling at institutions that had not admitted all academically qualified applicants in the prior two years—functionally targeting undocumented applicants at selective universities. Advocacy groups warn the policy would produce large tuition revenue losses and broader economic harms. If approved, Florida would join a small set of states that have moved to expel undocumented students from public higher education, intensifying legal and access pressures on admissions, student services, and compliance offices.