The FAMU underfunding lawsuit just got a second life, and this time Florida can’t make it disappear with a procedural move.
On June 9, 2026, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit revived a lawsuit alleging that the State of Florida underfunded Florida A&M University by nearly $2 billion over three decades. In a split decision, the court ruled that a lower court dismissed the case too quickly — before the students behind it ever got a real chance to present their evidence. Now they will.
This is not a final verdict. But it is a significant win. And for the FAMU community and HBCU advocates nationwide, it sends a message that these claims are serious enough to survive in federal court.
What the Lawsuit Actually Claims
A group of current and former FAMU students originally filed the lawsuit in 2022. Their argument is direct: Florida has chronically underfunded its only public HBCU compared to predominantly white institutions like the University of Florida and Florida State University. That disparity, they argue, isn’t accidental. It traces directly to the state’s former system of legally enforced racial segregation in higher education.
The specific allegations are wide-ranging. Plaintiffs point to lower per-student funding allocations, reduced faculty salaries, less support for campus infrastructure, fewer academic research resources, and weaker student services — all compared to what UF and FSU receive. They also challenge Florida’s handling of land-grant funding. Both FAMU and UF hold land-grant status, but students argue Florida has never supported the two institutions equally.
A federal analysis backed up part of that argument. It found a funding gap of roughly $1.9 billion between FAMU and the University of Florida over a 30-year period. That number is not abstract — it represents decades of compounding disadvantage.
Why the Appeals Court Stepped In
A federal district court previously dismissed the case. The lower court found that students hadn’t provided enough evidence to show that today’s funding disparities connect to Florida’s history of de jure segregation. In plain terms, the judge said the proof wasn’t there yet.
The Eleventh Circuit pushed back hard on that reasoning. In its opinion, the majority wrote that the lower court had crossed a line — it weighed the evidence rather than simply determining whether real factual disputes existed that deserved to go to trial.
“Simply put, the district court weighed the evidence instead of determining whether genuine disputes of material fact existed,” the majority wrote.
That’s a meaningful distinction in federal law. Courts aren’t supposed to resolve factual disputes at the motion-to-dismiss stage. They’re supposed to ask whether the claims are plausible enough to move forward. The Eleventh Circuit said yes — they are.
What Happens Next
The case now returns to federal district court. Both sides will continue presenting evidence and expert analysis. Plaintiffs will work to prove that Florida’s funding decisions carry the fingerprints of its segregated past. The state will keep arguing its practices are lawful and fair.
Crucially, the appeals court did not rule that Florida discriminated against FAMU. That question remains unanswered. What the court did decide is that the students deserve a fuller examination before anyone shuts the door on their claims. That distinction matters — but so does the momentum.
The Broader Stakes for HBCUs
This case doesn’t just matter to FAMU. It carries implications for public HBCUs across the South and beyond. At its center is a question that many states have quietly avoided answering: Have they actually dismantled the effects of segregated higher education, or have they simply stopped enforcing formal segregation while allowing the inequities to persist?
Maryland faced a version of this question and settled it. In 2021, the state agreed to pay $577 million to its four HBCUs after acknowledging decades of underfunding. That settlement became a benchmark. If Florida’s students ultimately prevail, the ripple effects could pressure other states to take a hard look at their own funding histories.
What This Means for the FAMUly Right Now
For current FAMU students, this ruling is personal. Every dollar the state withheld from FAMU over 30 years is a dollar that didn’t go toward their classrooms, labs, faculty, or support services. The HBCU funding gap isn’t a historical abstraction — it shows up in real time, on real campuses, affecting real students every single day.
The road ahead is still long. Federal litigation moves slowly, and the state will fight back. But after years of procedural setbacks, FAMU students now have what they’ve been asking for: a chance to make their case in full. That chance is worth something.
