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Curiosity drives inquisitive people to find answers. Opportunity links the curious with validation. Somewhere between the two, a wider educational experience develops, not only for traditional students but also for those who refuse to stop learning.
In Fayetteville that opportunity quietly becomes part of everyday life. It’s one of many reasons why people choose to settle here long-term, retire intentionally, or move here to begin a new, meaningful chapter, taking advantage of the open potential of legacy years.
Through the Senior Razorbacks Free Tuition Program, older adults are discovering that living in a college town is about more than just football Saturdays or campus culture. It’s about access, engagement, and the unique chance to return to the classroom on your own terms.

The Senior Razorbacks Free Tuition Program is a state-approved tuition waiver that allows Arkansas residents aged 60 and older to take classes at public universities, including the University of Arkansas. The program originates from Act 678 of 1975, which provides a tuition exemption for credit courses at Arkansas state universities.
Under this program:
Most participants choose to audit classes, meaning they attend lectures, join discussions, and engage with the material without the pressure of exams or grades. Others pursue degree credits for additional undergraduate or graduate degrees.
The outcome is a highly personalized, adaptable learning experience that adapts to each person’s curiosity, energy and phase of life.

Participation follows the same admission process as any student, with a few additional considerations:
As one participant shared, “You are a student. Not an ‘older person’ receiving special treatment. You navigate the system just like everyone else.” That expectation, while sometimes intimidating at first, becomes part of the reward. Seniors are not mere observers on the sidelines; they are fully integrated members of the campus community.

For Brent, who retired to Fayetteville in 2021 after an oil industry career in Houston, choosing a university town was intentional.
“I always wanted to retire in a college town,” he shared. “The free tuition program was an added bonus.”
After earning his bachelor’s degree decades ago, Brent chose to enter the workforce rather than attend graduate school. Over the years that unfinished goal remained with him. Living in Fayetteville brought him close enough to curiosity that it finally demanded an answer.
Today, he completed his master’s degree in geology at the University of Arkansas, reaching a lifelong academic goal and joining his wife, daughter and mother-in-law, whose names are already engraved in campus sidewalks as Razorbacks.
John, another participant, is chasing his childhood dream: becoming an artist! When you walk into his home, his first drawing from age 5 is displayed in a frame by the front door and reflects one of the pieces shown in his art exhibit last year.
The Senior Razorback program allowed him to pursue a Bachelor of Arts after a rewarding career using his Bachelor of Science degree. Through the art program, he’s studying art history, learning to create and work with art using graphic design programs and exploring new design media, one semester at a time.

For many Senior Razorbacks, the program’s value isn’t determined by degrees earned but by the perspective gained and experiential learning.
Learning becomes part of everyday life, not as a duty, but as a source of enrichment.
Fayetteville’s campus culture encourages relationships that go far beyond lecture halls. Senior students talk about building meaningful bonds with classmates, professors and other lifelong learners. Conversations carry on outside of class. Questions turn into friendships. Shared curiosity connects different generations.
“I worried at first about how students or faculty might react to an older person, a nontraditional student in their class,” one participant admitted. “But the students were amazingly welcoming.”
That openness fosters unexpected reciprocity. Seniors share their lived experiences and thoughtful perspectives, while younger students bring energy, fresh ideas and connection. Many friendships extend into the wider Fayetteville community, creating a richer, more connected place to live.

Most seniors enroll in audit classes. A few, like Brent and John, pursue formal degrees over several years. Whether you take one class at a time or a full semester load, both options are valid, meaningful and deeply personal.
As one participant reflected, “In my retirement and with a need for routine, this gives me a reason to get up in the morning. Deadlines, goals, planning. It engages my mind in a way nothing else quite does at this stage. It is for sure an advantage of living in a college town.”
Tips and Things to Know Before You Start
Understanding the process beforehand helps set expectations and ensures a rewarding experience.
At its core, the Senior Razorbacks Free Tuition Program is not just about passing time. It’s about celebrating curiosity. It’s practical, easy to access and woven into the community’s daily life. It’s another reason why people choose to stay, settle and thrive here. And it serves as a reminder that education doesn’t stop with a diploma.
Beyond the University of Arkansas, these funds can be used at any state-funded institution in Arkansas. Colleges such as UAFS, Henderson State University, UALR, Arkansas State, and others have active programs supporting senior citizen learners.
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