Scottsdale Unified District (4240)
Scottsdale Unified District (4240) is a public school district in Arizona serving 21,177 students across 30 schools. It includes 18 elementary, 6 middle, 5 high schools. Its graduation rate of 92.5% is above the national average of 86.5%. Per-pupil spending of $12,713 is below the national average for a US public school district. Only 23% of students qualify for free or reduced-price lunch, suggesting a relatively low-poverty student body. Opportunity scores across its schools are limited, with a district median of 42/100.
| School | Grades | Students |
|---|---|---|
| Anasazi Elementary | PK–05 | 442 |
| Cherokee Elementary School | PK–05 | 659 |
| Cheyenne Traditional School | PK–08 | 880 |
| Cochise Elementary School | PK–05 | 615 |
| Copper Ridge School | PK–08 | 600 |
| Desert Canyon Elementary | PK–05 | 496 |
| Echo Canyon K-8 | PK–08 | 320 |
| Hohokam Elementary School | PK–06 | 441 |
| Hopi Elementary School | KG–05 | 676 |
| Kiva Elementary School | PK–06 | 527 |
| Laguna Elementary School | PK–05 | 370 |
| Navajo Elementary School | PK–06 | 472 |
| Pima Elementary School | PK–06 | 389 |
| Pueblo Elementary School | PK–06 | 425 |
| Redfield Elementary School | PK–06 | 428 |
| Sequoya Elementary School | PK–05 | 548 |
| Tavan Elementary School | PK–05 | 608 |
| Yavapai Elementary School | PK–06 | 387 |
| School | Grades | Students |
|---|---|---|
| Cocopah Middle School | 06–08 | 886 |
| Desert Canyon Middle School | 06–08 | 490 |
| Ingleside Middle School | 06–08 | 777 |
| Mohave Middle School | 06–08 | 799 |
| Mountainside Middle School | 06–08 | 550 |
| Tonalea Middle School | 06–08 | 442 |
| School | Grades | Students |
|---|---|---|
| Arcadia High School | 09–12 | 1,602 |
| Chaparral High School | 09–12 | 2,038 |
| Coronado High School | 09–12 | 740 |
| Desert Mountain High School | 09–12 | 1,880 |
| Saguaro High School | 09–12 | 1,466 |
| School | Grades | Students |
|---|---|---|
| Scottsdale Online Learning | KG–12 | 224 |
This district draws the majority of its budget from local property taxes (68%), typical of wealthier suburban districts.
All figures on this page come directly from US federal open datasets — NCES Common Core of Data, EDFacts, and the Opportunity Atlas — and we work hard to keep them accurate and up to date. That said, federal data is published on an annual cycle, so some figures may not yet reflect the very latest school-year changes or local updates. We recommend using this page as a helpful starting point and cross-checking with the school or district directly, or visiting the NCES Common Core of Data and ed.gov for the most authoritative figures before making any important decisions.