43

We know that you can't transfigure food, so you have to grow it or buy it. Ditto money.

I'm sure that aside from some medicinal plants Herbology Professor had there were no farmlands at Hogwarts. So they must have bought food (as well as potions ingredients for Snape etc...). And they needed to pay the teacher salaries.

Where did all that money come from according to canon?

Ministry funding?

Tuition?

Patent money on Dumbledore's inventions?

Philanthropic donations by Malfoys and co?

Other?

8
  • I doubt the Dumbledore inventions. Headmaster seems like a paid position, not a pay position.
    – Xantec
    Oct 24, 2012 at 18:37
  • 11
    State taxes through the Ministry of Magic. Isn't that how schools usually work?
    – b_jonas
    Oct 24, 2012 at 19:04
  • @Xantec - plenty of universities patent professors' inventions AFAIK Oct 24, 2012 at 19:46
  • In Muggle universities, yes.
    – Xantec
    Oct 24, 2012 at 19:48
  • 3
    DVK: Hogwarts is not a university though, it's more like a high school, as it's teaching students between 11 and 19 years old.
    – b_jonas
    Oct 24, 2012 at 21:07

10 Answers 10

26

The Ministry pays for it all, apparently.

From Twitter earlier this evening:

My friends and I are having a super intense debate about the cost of tuition at #Hogwarts

@emmaonline1 on Twitter (17 July 2015 at 7:53pm)

@emmalineonline1 There's no tuition fee! The Ministry of Magic covers the cost of all magical education!

@jk_rowling on Twitter (17 July 2015 at 7:59pm)

Given the space allowed by Twitter, it’s understandable that she didn’t go into more detail about the funding structure.

I assume that this doesn’t cover student supplies – there are plenty of instances of students buying their own books, robes, pets, etc.


I wasn’t so surprised to learn that it was Ministry funded.

If there were multiple schools, then I think at least some schools would be private (paid-for), for rich families like the Malfoys. But (almost) everybody goes to Hogwarts, so it’s the equivalent of public education which is government funded. Ergo, Ministry funding.

And the Ministry have a compelling reason to fund the school. There aren’t any other options for education – save private tuition or going abroad – so poor families would just be unable to educate their children. The risk of those students not attending, and so having no knowledge about how to control or use their magic, would be a disaster waiting to happen. It’s much cheaper to educate students at a young age, than mop up their accidents as adults.

I would hope there are strict laws about Ministry non-interference in Hogwarts. Clearly those laws aren’t always enforced *cough* Umbridge *cough*, but it seems like the sort of thing they might have in place.

32

To start with, most boarding schools, like private and public universities, have an endowment fund, which is essentially their nest egg. The money for the endowment fund comes from alumnae donations, donations from other parties (like the parents of the students, or just general supporters of the school) interest on the fund itself from the bank, and outside investments made from businesses and companies.

Financial aid often has its own funding, but can be tied to the endowment fund. Hogwarts had a financial aid fund:

‘I haven’t got any money,’ [said Tom Riddle]

‘That is easily remedied,’ said Dumbledore, drawing a leather money-pouch from his pocket. ‘There is a fund at Hogwarts for those who require assistance to buy books and robes. You might have to buy some of your spellbooks and so on second-hand, but –’

Half-Blood Prince - page 256 - Bloomsbury - chapter 13, The Secret Riddle

Now it is my understanding that any magical child who is accepted at Hogwarts is able to go there; I don't believe Hogwarts charges tuition, if I recall correctly. The fund for children in need is for books, robes, a wand, etc. If Hogwarts charged tuition, how could five Weasleys possibly attend the school at once (Ginny, Fred, George, Percy, Ron)?

I think, based on canon, that the Ministry does not help fund Hogwarts' expenses, otherwise it would have far too much pull at Hogwarts. The Ministry, aside from Order of the Phoenix, doesn't really interfere at Hogwarts.

There is, however, canon evidence that in the Wizarding world, inventions require patents that must be purchased:

‘Level Seven, Department of Magical Games and Sports, incorporating the British and Irish Quidditch League Headquarters, Official Gobstones Club and Ludicrous Patents Office.’ - The Elevator, Ministry for Magic

Order of the Phoenix - page 119 - Bloomsbury - chapter 7, The Ministry of Magic

I'm not quite sure how patents work in the UK. Here in the US, I believe the inventor who wishes to take out a patent pays for the privilege to do so, from their own private funds. I don't know if any of Dumbledore's inventions were patented. There's the Deluminator, but would he have wanted to disclose the full capabilities of the Deluminator to the patents office? Dumbledore truly doesn't strike me as a man who would even bother to fuss about patents. If he did, though, I'm not sure why anyone other than himself would pay for the patent. As well, any money that came from the patent portion of the sale of an invention would seemingly go to the Ministry as some kind of taxation, with the rest going to the patent holder. I don't think any money would go directly to Hogwarts.

I can't find any evidence in canon that suggests there are taxes in the Wizarding World. I could be entirely wrong on this, though. It kind of goes back to the question on Gringotts on whether or not the Goblins pay interest on their deposits. If there are taxes in the Wizarding World, then undoubtedly some might go to Hogwarts, just as taxes here (US) go to fund education. If it's different in the UK, please leave a comment and I'll adjust this accordingly.

The Malfoys contribute a lot of money to causes that they feel will ingratiate themselves with persons in positions of power, which is mostly the Ministry of Magic. I couldn't find any information on the Malfoys contributing money to Hogwarts, although Lucius Malfoy did provide the Nimbus 2001 brooms for the Slytherin Quidditch team in 1992. Malfoy 1, 2, and 3

There's the Fountain of the Brethren inside the atrium at the Ministry of Magic, which people throw coins into. I would have to figure out how much the average fountain makes in change per year and then convert it from Wizarding currency to pounds/dollars ... But again, there's no guarantee that the money from the fountain would go to Hogwarts.

Hogwarts is home to many magic antiquities, such as the Sword and Gryffindor and the Diadem of Ravenclaw (until it was destroyed in Deathly Hallows), the Sorting Hat, and the jewels in the house hourglasses. I would imagine this is but the tip of the iceberg and that Hogwarts has many, many more priceless items sequestered away. NOTE: This is just my guess, that Hogwarts has a lot of treasure-like items in store. It's not canon.

Canon doesn't specify where Hogwarts' money comes from, as far as I know. So I'm going to suggest that Hogwarts has an endowment fund or the Wizarding equivalent, and that's where its income comes from, to pay teachers, stock the school with supplies, take care of the students, maintain the Hogwarts Express, and provide food and drink for the students.

Remember, also, that they utilize slave labor in the form of house-elves. Can you imagine how much money that must save them? Not a small amount, I'd wager.

19
  • 2
    "couldn't find any information on the Malfoys contributing money to Hogwarts" - Malfoy is on the school board of governors. As a rule, that would high probability that he donates to the school, no? Oct 24, 2012 at 22:40
  • 1
    that's like saying your bank account pays for your expenses. No. Bank account is simply the intermediary between your income and your spending - your income pays for your expenses (and a vehicle for getting a minor income in terms of percentage paid by the bank - but as we established, we don't kow if HPU has interest income). In other words, if you didn't have a bank account and simply gave your income to your grocer, maid, etc... (assume you are paid salary in cash), you would still have the same exact income and expenses, just no convinient place to hold your money in one central place. Oct 24, 2012 at 23:38
  • 2
    Also, re: Governors, I meant that the fact that someone was made a member of the board implies that that person heavily donated to the school. I think that's how it works with most private colleges, no? Oct 24, 2012 at 23:40
  • 5
    In the UK it is completely normal that education is funded by the government, so normal that I would expect J K to assume it. Probably the most definite thing that can be said, given we know nothing about taxes, is "however Wizarding government and bureaucracy is funded, that mechanism also funds Hogwarts". If Hogwarts was entirely funded by some kind of endowment then the Ministry of Magic wouldn't be able to fire the headmaster. Oct 25, 2012 at 14:20
  • 3
    @DVK, not so with endowments - they are generally set up so that there's a lump of cash in some kind of high-yielding arrangement, and the establishments can live largely off the interest. "At universities, typically 4-6% of the endowment's assets are spent every year... Any excess earnings are typically reinvested to augment the endowment. This spending figure represents the proportion that historically could be spent without diminishing the principal amount of the endowment fund." (from wikipedia)
    – hairboat
    Oct 25, 2012 at 15:33
5

In addition to the endowment discussion it seems likely that Hogwarts would also possess substantial land holdings and would generate a significant amount of revenue in rent - given that the school is stated as being around 1000 years old and every witch and wizard of note will have studied there I'm sure it will have received some substantial donations and bequests over the years. This is similarly the case for many ancient boarding schools and universities, for example legend has it that it's possible to walk from Cambridge to London solely on land owned by Trinity College, Cambridge.

2
  • 1
    Even Trinity College charges its students fees. Oct 25, 2012 at 17:28
  • @DJClayworth Trinity doesn't really need to charge fees, except that (1) other poorer Cambridge colleges would complain about the unfair competition for the best students and (2) because of (1) there are strict limits on what endowment funds can be spent on.
    – Mike Scott
    Mar 28, 2017 at 15:29
4

In the UK it is completely normal that education is funded by the government, so normal that I would expect J K to assume it. Probably the most definite thing that can be said, given we know nothing about taxes, is "however Wizarding government and bureaucracy is funded, that mechanism also funds Hogwarts". If Hogwarts was entirely funded by some kind of endowment then the Ministry of Magic wouldn't be able to fire the headmaster.

Against that, I know that J K draws heavily on the "boarding school stories" tradition of children's literature - Jennings, Mallory Towers etc. The schools in those stories were invariably fee-paying, though the subject was never mentioned. Those stories, and the assumption that most middle-class kids would go to fee-paying schools, was already outdated when J K was growing up.

On the whole, I think some kind of government funding is most likely.

3
  • Government funding is a bit suspect (though can't be ruled out) due to seeming autonomy of Hogwarts for most of its time. He who pays the band... Oct 26, 2012 at 19:49
  • Actually governments rarely interfere with schools they fund at the detailed level. School headmasters are appointed by school boards, not governments. Oct 26, 2012 at 20:06
  • 3
    @DVK: I think Hogwarts' seeming autonomy is just that: seeming. If the Ministry is being run by sane heads, they know better than to stick their noses in where they're not needed. But as Dolores Umbrage demonstrates, the Ministry can actually do whatever it wants to do with Hogwarts.
    – Martha
    Oct 26, 2012 at 20:24
2

There is proof that food, at least, is not a problem:

"It's impossible to make good food out of nothing! You can Summon it if you know where it is, you can can transform it, you can increase the quantity if you've already got some - "

Deathly Hallows, Chapter 15. Emphasis is mine

So it is entirely possible that there at least some wizards who don't need to worry about food, and it is extremely likely that Hogwarts would have some of these.

As for pay, what do the teacher's really need other than room and board? Maybe that's how they're paid. As for money for supplies and improving the building & grounds, the students pay for their own stuff, with a few exceptions (Tom Riddle being the only one mentioned), which takes care of the former. As for the latter, there are probably donations, given that nearly all of the wizards and witches in England were taught at Hogwarts.

1

We know that you can't transfigure food, so you have to grow it or buy it.

There is at least one sentence in the books to disprove this statement:

Mrs. Weasley slammed a large copper saucepan down on the kitchen table and began to wave her wand around inside it. A creamy sauce poured from the wand tip as she stirred.

Goblet Of Fire, Chapter 5

4
  • 4
    Good find! But personally I'd simply interpret that as the sauce being "siphoned off" from pre-made jar (or from ingredients). Oct 26, 2012 at 19:47
  • 4
    You cannot transfigure food from nothing or thin air -- it is one of the five exceptions to Gamp's Law of Elemental Transfiguration. J.K. Rowling has explained that one can make food disappear in one part of, say, a house and reappear in another. So like when McGonagall transfigures a plate of sandwiches and pumpkin juice in Snape's office in CoS, she has really made the sandwiches and juice disappear from the kitchens and reappear in Snape's office. Same thing for when the food in the Great Hall magically appears on the students' plates. :) Oct 26, 2012 at 22:19
  • 2
    Even if it's not possible to create food, it can still be duplicated. This means they could simply grow a small quantity of everything they need and then replicate until there's enough for everybody. That's just speculation, though. Oct 27, 2012 at 15:53
  • @FelixLange What evidence is there that it can be duplicated? Sep 16, 2016 at 11:31
0

We know that you can't transfigure food, so you have to grow it or buy it. Ditto money.

as twoerd said, you can increase the food quantity (magical Banach–Tarski?)

I'm sure that aside from some medicinal plants Herbology Professor had there were no farmlands at Hogwarts.

I'm not so sure about that; given that not getting noticed is a virtue for house elves they might as well grow food/livestock in not so visible areas (cleared spots in the forbidden forest or Hogwarts fields that are not in the main grounds). Same with Snape's ingredients although some part of those might actually be in his private collection. Given that Hogwarts has been around since the medieval times, it fits that a (basically) castle would get the basic supplies on its own without relying too much on nearby markets; for example, they didn't buy the pumpkins for Halloween, Hadgrid grew them.

Also, we can assume that the plants in the Herbology greenhouse could be sold as potion ingredients after covering Hogwarts' needs.

And they needed to pay the teacher salaries.

While this is true, there is no reason to believe that the teacher salaries are huge (I think that Lupin's clothes were still ragged at the end of the year). After all, all the day-to-day expenses are covered and the position is quite prestigious.

While I'm not saying that Hogwarts has 0 expenses, it doesn't seem that it requires a vast amount of money either.

0

Just thought I should add: it's unlikely they sell Herbology items and the like. Otherwise, Horace Slughorn would be in deep trouble. He seemed rather sneaky while he was.. "collecting" different items around the school. If the school was funding itself using unicorn hair or the like, Horace would be charged with petty theft at best and full-out embezzlement at the worst. And there won't be any leniency from being Dumbledore's buddy, if the headmaster showed us anything it's that he loves his students. Stealing from his school's funding would NOT go well.

0

The fact that it is ministry funded is somewhat supported by the events in Book 5. A person is placed at hogwarts to assess the standards which could only be done if it is ministry funded. However, the ministry can not replace the headmaster, near the end of Book 5, it says that the headmasters office was blocked to Umbridge. Additionally, the school has a governing board which means that it is most likely a private school.

In conclusion, hogwarts is a private school, with government funding, with a governing board.

-2

its ministry funded but the school is somewhat self sufficient, the professors have a lower salary than usual muggle equivalents, however; this salary is subsidized do too each teachers specialty, as well as free room and board.

its a combination of a highschool combined with a university so its board of governors etc have too ensure the highest standards so the can help fullfill the needs of future students/ employers.

primary expenditures for students, books, wand, cauldron, incidentals.

house elves,= free labor (not counting dobby) basic maintenance, lighting fires, cooking and laundry. Not too mention transportation of goods.

Hogsmeade village; would definitely provide edibles, the engorgio spell would do wonders. as well as more stock for herbology.

Herbology; provides potion stock as well edibles, as slughorn stated venomous tentacula 10galleons a leaf....

Care of magical creatures , from pheonix feathers too unicorn hair this would be a profitable venture ,training thestrals.....

Potions ; all students make potions in class where does all that surplus stock go....the school sells them.

tranfiguration, charms, etc all can affect food quality ,and if i remember correctly must professors are published authors...lockheart...dumbledore.

1
  • This answer would greatly benefit from the addition of some quotes from the source material as supporting evidence. Jan 17 at 22:58

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