Explore Academy↗ opened in 2014 with a narrow pitch: a high school in Albuquerque where students pick short themed seminars instead of following a fixed course sequence. It enrolled 199 students in the first year the state data covers. A decade later, the flagship campus has 1,418 students, a K-12 grade span, an "A" rating from the Public Education Department, and a 612.6% enrollment increase without a single year of decline. Only three other entities in New Mexico can claim an unbroken growth streak of eight or more years.
The growth story gets more complicated when the lens widens. Explore now operates three campuses across the state: Albuquerque, Las Cruces↗ (opened 2022), and Rio Rancho↗ (opened 2023). As a network, it peaked at 2,442 students in 2025. In 2026, the combined enrollment fell to 2,318, a 5.1% decline and the network's first contraction.

A flagship that keeps climbing
The Albuquerque campus has defied every statewide trend. While Albuquerque Public Schools↗ lost 19,579 students over the same period, a 21.2% decline, Explore ABQ added 1,219. The charter now enrolls 1.95% of APS's total headcount, up from 0.22% in 2016.
The trajectory has two distinct phases. From 2016 to 2018, growth was modest: 13 students, then 46. In 2019, the campus nearly doubled, jumping from 258 to 441. That acceleration continued through the pandemic, when many traditional districts were losing students in droves. Between 2021 and 2022 alone, the ABQ campus gained 380 students, a 58.8% single-year surge. The gains have tapered since then: 178 in 2023, 120 in 2024, 89 in 2025, and just five in 2026. The flagship may be approaching a plateau.
The original campus served grades 9 through 11. By 2024, it had expanded to K-12, with a dedicated elementary campus at Journal Center now listed for sale at $10.95 million. Head administrator Jacob Kolander confirmed expansion plans but said "nothing has been finalized."
The network's uneven geography
The expansion beyond Albuquerque has produced mixed results.
The Las Cruces campus opened in 2022 with 94 students and grew rapidly, reaching 599 by 2025. Then it shed 174 students in a single year, dropping 29.0% to 425 in 2026. The campus is currently undergoing charter renewal review by the Public Education Department. Las Cruces Public Schools↗, the traditional district in that market, also declined, losing 2,809 students since 2016 to reach 22,156.
The Rio Rancho campus opened in August 2023, converting a former Concentrix call center into a K-6 school with class sizes capped at 14 to 16 students. It enrolled 273 students in its first full year and has grown to 475 in 2026, a 74.0% increase. Rio Rancho Public Schools↗, its host district, has lost 667 students since 2016 and now enrolls 16,245.

The stacked area chart makes the 2026 contraction visible: the Las Cruces wedge shrinks sharply while the Albuquerque base barely moves. The network's growth over the past four years was primarily driven by new campus openings, not by organic expansion of the flagship.
The 2026 reversal in context
The network's first decline does not appear to be an Explore-specific phenomenon. Mission Achievement and Success, New Mexico's largest charter entity at 1,898 students, lost 338 students in 2026, a 15.1% drop. The charter sector as a whole contracted for the first time in the data, falling from 22,242 to 21,734 students while its share of total enrollment held steady at 7.3%.

One possible driver is the maturation of pandemic-era enrollment shifts. Several charters that grew rapidly during 2020-2022, when families sought alternatives to closed or remote traditional schools, may be experiencing a reversion as those students graduate or return to traditional districts. The Las Cruces campus's 29% single-year decline is harder to explain by maturation alone. It may reflect growing pains specific to a young campus still building community roots in a smaller market than Albuquerque.
Where Explore fits in the charter landscape
Even after the 2026 decline, the Explore network accounts for 10.7% of all charter enrollment in New Mexico. The ABQ campus alone is the state's fourth-largest charter entity.

The top tier of New Mexico charters is dominated by brick-and-mortar schools with distinctive instructional models. Mission Achievement and Success (1,898) runs extended-day schedules. Pecos Cyber Academy (1,616) and NM Connections Academy (1,508) are virtual. Explore's "flavored" curriculum, where students choose themed seminars that rotate every six weeks, occupies a niche between traditional instruction and online learning.
Since 2019, Explore ABQ has added more students in absolute terms (+977) than any other charter entity in the state. Hozho Academy (+729, a 592.7% increase) and ABQ School of Excellence (+415) are the next-largest growers.
A demographic profile unlike the state
Explore Academy's student body does not mirror New Mexico. In 2019, when the network was a single Albuquerque campus, 51.0% of students were white and 37.0% were Hispanic. By 2026, that had shifted: 33.9% white, 56.0% Hispanic. The network's demographics have moved toward the state average but remain significantly whiter. New Mexico's public school enrollment is 64.6% Hispanic and 19.6% white.

The demographic gap was a central concern when Explore attempted to open a Santa Fe campus in 2023. The Public Education Department's Charter Schools Division noted that the application projected 30% white students, double the 15% rate at Santa Fe Public Schools, and questioned the school's decision not to offer bilingual instruction. The application was withdrawn before a final vote. A new notice of intent for a Santa Fe campus was filed with the Public Education Commission in late 2024.
Separately, the network's special education enrollment has grown faster than total enrollment. In 2019, 9.3% of Explore students received special education services (41 of 441). By 2026, that rate was 15.7% (365 of 2,318), closer to the statewide rate and a sign that the school is serving a broader cross-section of student needs than in its early years.
What 2027 will test
The question facing Explore Academy is whether its model can sustain itself at scale across multiple markets. The ABQ flagship gained just five students in 2026. The K-5 campus is for sale. Las Cruces lost nearly a third of its enrollment. Rio Rancho is still growing, but from a small base and with a grade span that has not yet reached middle school age.
The network has also signaled ambitions beyond New Mexico. Explore Academy campuses now operate in Las Vegas and Peoria, Arizona, making it a multi-state charter operator. Whether the New Mexico network can hold 2,300 students while the organization's attention spreads across state lines will be the enrollment story to watch in 2027.
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