While a number of international studies have attempted to assess the influence of
geographic accessibility on the decision to participate in higher education, this issue has not been
addressed in detail in an Irish context. The aim of this paper is to fill this gap and to present a
higher education choice model that estimates the impact of travel distance on the decision of
school leavers to proceed to higher education in Ireland, while also controlling for a range of
individual level characteristics and school related variables. To do so we use data from the 2007
wave of the School Leavers’ Survey and find that, on average, travel distance is not an important
factor in the higher education participation decision, when factors such as student ability are
accounted for. However, further analysis shows that travel distance has a significantly negative
impact on participation for those from lower social classes and that this impact grows stronger as
distance increases. We also find that the distance effects are most pronounced for lower ability
students from these social backgrounds. This has important implications for higher education
policy in Ireland, especially in relation to equity of access and the design of the maintenance grant
system.