schoolsbycounty

State district guide

Connecticut public school districts

Compare district systems across Connecticut by enrollment scale, school count, county context, generated guide coverage, and the parent checks that matter before choosing where to live.

Direct answer for parents

What this district ranking can and cannot tell you

If you are searching for the best school districts in Connecticut, start with the largest and most data-rich district systems below, then verify the specific school assigned to each address. SchoolsByCounty orders districts by reported enrollment and school count because those fields are consistent in NCES. It does not convert district size into a quality rating.

Start with scale

Bridgeport School District

19,112 reported students

Check county context

County profile

County scores are separate signals

Verify locally

Address fit

Attendance boundaries and transfers are not in NCES

District table

Largest public school districts in Connecticut

The first 60 rows show the largest district systems by reported enrollment. Open district guides where available, or use the county profile when a detailed district page is not generated yet.

199 districts in state file

Connecticut public school districts ranked by reported enrollment.
RankDistrictStudents
119,112
218,290
317,131
415,951
515,640
611,994
711,405
811,183
99,093
108,982
118,841
128,630
138,469
148,028
157,404
166,613
176,511
186,087
195,832
205,808
215,786
225,486
235,271
245,262
255,193
265,009
274,748
284,678
294,514
304,465
314,374
324,310
334,149
344,134
354,123
364,054
374,053
384,024
393,911
403,877
413,737
423,731
433,639
443,562
453,431
463,367
47
Windsor School District

LEA ID 0905220

3,251
48
Norwich School District

LEA ID 0903120

3,217
49
Bethel School District

LEA ID 0900270

3,184
50
North Haven School District

LEA ID 0903030

3,162
51
Guilford School District

LEA ID 0901800

3,124
52
Vernon School District

LEA ID 0904680

3,103
53
Avon School District

LEA ID 0900120

3,029
54
Windham School District

LEA ID 0905190

2,901
55
East Haven School District

LEA ID 0901290

2,856
56
New London School District

LEA ID 0902820

2,848
57
Berlin School District

LEA ID 0900210

2,632
58
Branford School District

LEA ID 0900420

2,578
59
Watertown School District

LEA ID 0904890

2,566
60
Ellington School District

LEA ID 0901440

2,552

— = enrollment not reported in the district record. District rows are informational and must be paired with local assignment tools before a housing decision.

Methodology

How to use district rankings without overreading them

District-level data is useful because it shows the operating system around a public school search: how many schools exist, which county record anchors the district, how much enrollment is reported, and whether a detailed district guide is available. It is not enough to decide where a student should enroll.

Ranking basis

Rows are ordered by reported enrollment, then school count. The method favors broad, data-rich systems because those are the districts parents most often need to research before relocation.

County context

Each district is attached to a primary county record when available. County school scores are context signals, not district ratings, and nearby counties can still matter for commute and housing decisions.

Grade pathway

Elementary, middle, and high school counts help parents spot whether a district looks like a full K-12 pathway or a narrower operating unit. Feeder patterns still require local verification.

Address verification

The final decision happens at the address level. Confirm attendance zones, open-enrollment rules, magnet admissions, charter lotteries, and transfer windows with official district sources.

Parent checklist before relying on a district ranking

Use this page to narrow the field, then answer these local questions before treating any district as a fit for a specific home.

Which school does this address actually feed into?

Use the district address lookup and confirm edge cases near attendance-zone borders.

What happens at transition grades?

A strong elementary fit can split into several middle or high school paths.

Are choice programs realistic for this student?

Magnet, charter, virtual, and transfer options can involve lotteries, applications, or deadlines.

Is the county context aligned with housing tradeoffs?

Pair school research with taxes, commute, home prices, and safety before choosing where to live.

Frequently Asked Questions About Connecticut School Districts

What are the best school districts in Connecticut?
Bridgeport School District, New Haven School District, Waterbury School District are the largest Connecticut district systems by reported enrollment in the NCES file. SchoolsByCounty does not call them the best districts; use this page to find data-rich district systems, then verify assigned schools, program rules, and local fit.
How are Connecticut districts ranked here?
Districts are ordered by reported student enrollment, then school count, using NCES public school district records. This is a research-priority ranking, not a quality rating.
Why do only 46 Connecticut districts have district guide links?
SchoolsByCounty statically generates detailed district guides for the largest district systems nationally so the pages stay fast and substantive. Districts without guide links remain represented through county and state context pages.
Do these district pages show attendance boundaries?
No. Attendance zones, transfer rules, magnet eligibility, charter admission, transportation, and program availability must be verified with official district or local assignment tools before choosing a home.
Does a large district mean better schools?
No. Larger districts usually have more school options and more public data, but enrollment size is not a school-quality measure. Compare school-level records and official local sources before treating a district as a fit.
How many districts are included for Connecticut?
This page includes 199 Connecticut public school districts from the current NCES district file, alongside county context and generated district-guide availability where available.
By Evan Brooks, Data EditorPublished

Data Sources

Education data sourced from the National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) Common Core of Data and School District Finance Survey. School scores are derived composite metrics based on available NCES graduation-rate and school-finance signals.

Data is informational only. Coverage varies by county and reporting year. Not for use as the sole basis for educational decisions.