
By: Dennis Richmond, Jr.
In Yonkers, prom season still carries the same emotional weight it did years ago. Families gather for photos, students spend weeks planning outfits and transportation, and one spring night becomes a milestone people remember for decades. But in 2026, the conversation around prom is not only about glamour. It is also about cost. And Yonkers families feel it.
For many families, the biggest surprise is how quick the price rises before a student even steps onto the dance floor. In Yonkers, Roosevelt High School listed its 2026 prom fee at $130 per student, according to Yonkers Public Schools. On Long Island, William Floyd High School listed 2025 prom tickets at $125 per person, based on information from the William Floyd School District. In New York City, the Bronx High School of Science listed 2026 senior prom tickets at $223 each, while also offering a financial-aid fee waiver, according to the Bronx High School of Science. Those numbers alone show that just getting in the room can already be a serious expense.
But of course, prom is rarely only about the ticket. Once formalwear, shoes, hair, makeup, nails, dinner and transportation are added, the total can swell fast. Prom expenses can reach “the hundreds and in some cases thousands of dollars,” according to a 2026 statement from the Westchester County Government. Local media has also taken notice. A 2025 segment titled “The Cost of Prom” by News 12 Westchester highlighted how families across the region are increasingly budgeting for what has become a multi-layered event rather than a simple school dance.
That pressure helps explain why free formalwear efforts have become so visible across New York. In Westchester, organizations have stepped in to help offset costs, with programs providing dresses and tuxedos at no charge. “Prom is very expensive, costs just keep rising,” said organizers of Operation Prom National Network, based on reporting from News 12 Westchester. Westchester County has also continued to promote its annual giveaway, describing affordability as a “major challenge” for families, according to county officials.
Closer to home, Yonkers schools are responding as well. Roosevelt High School hosted a 2026 formal dress giveaway for students, according to Yonkers Public Schools, a sign that local educators recognize the financial pressure tied to the tradition.
For older readers, that may be the biggest shift of all. Prom was always special, but it was not always this financially layered. What used to be a ticket, an outfit and a family photo has, for many, become a carefully budgeted production.
None of that means the tradition has lost its meaning. It means the meaning now comes with a sharper economic edge. In Yonkers and across New York, prom remains a rite of passage. But for many families in 2026, it is also one more reminder that even a joyful teenage milestone can now come with adult-sized costs.
Are you ready?
Dennis Richmond, Jr. (@NewYorkStakz) is a journalist, historian, and educator from Yonkers, NY. He writes to uplift unheard voices, honor history, and inspire change.