The University of Wisconsin-Madison is taking a big step to ensure that an education at the state’s flagship public university is accessible to Wisconsin students and affordable for their families. Today, UW-Madison is expanding on that commitment by announcing “Bucky’s Tuition Promise.”

With this major new investment, UW-Madison pledges to cover four years of tuition and segregated fees for any incoming freshman from Wisconsin whose family’s annual household adjusted gross income is $56,000 or less, roughly the median family income in Wisconsin. Transfer students from Wisconsin meeting the same criteria will receive two years of tuition and segregated fees.

UW-Madison Chancellor Rebecca Blank announced the pledge today at the February meeting of the Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin System.

“Many low- and middle-income families in Wisconsin are simply uncertain whether they can afford to send their child to UW-Madison,” Blank said. “Our goal is to ensure that anyone who is admitted can afford to be a Badger.”

Eligibility is based solely on one line from a family’s federal income tax return called adjusted gross income, or AGI. There are no other qualifying factors, and there is no separate application process. The award is automatic to eligible students based on information they provide through the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA).

“Bucky’s Tuition Promise will provide parents with clarity around cost much earlier in the college-selection process,” said Derek Kindle, director of the UW-Madison Office of Student Financial Aid, in a statement. “For the first time ever, we are saying to these Wisconsin families, in the clearest and most concise way possible, that if your student applies here and is accepted, we will cover the cost of tuition and fees – plain and simple.”

The guarantee begins in the fall of 2018 for incoming freshmen and transfer students.

“We know there’s a perception that UW-Madison is financially out of reach for some of our Wisconsin families, and we know this keeps some high school students in our state from applying here,” Blank said in a statement. “We don’t want this to be the case any longer. Going forward, we are removing the cost of tuition as a barrier for these families.”

The pledge is expected to cover more than 800 students overall in each new incoming class of freshmen and transfer students.

Through Bucky’s Tuition Promise, the university expects to invest about $825,000 per year, per class beyond what it already offers these students in aid. Put another way, by the time four classes of students are fully part of the pledge, UW-Madison will cumulatively be spending about $3.3 million each year on Bucky’s Tuition Promise.

This additional financial commitment will be funded through private gifts and other institutional resources, not tax dollars. UW-Madison is currently seeking additional private support for a number of high-level funding priorities, including scholarships, through its All Ways Forward campaign.