Mukilteo School District in South Everett: A 2026 Family Guide to the District That Serves Half of Casino Road

Last updated: April 30, 2026 | South Everett families have two school district options depending on which side of Mukilteo Speedway and Casino Road they call home. Here’s what to know about the one most outsiders forget exists.

The short answer: Mukilteo School District serves more than 15,200 students across 24 schools — including a sizable chunk of south Everett residents who live south of Casino Road, along Picnic Point Road, around Lake Stickney, and west toward the Mukilteo waterfront. After voters narrowly rejected a $400 million capital bond in February 2026, district staff recommended bringing the measure back to the ballot in November. South Everett families will pay attention.

Two Districts, One Everett

Most coverage of Everett schools focuses on Everett Public Schools — the 19,000-student district that runs Cascade, Everett, Jackson, and Sequoia high schools and serves the bulk of the city. But a real piece of south Everett — the streets where Casino Road, Evergreen Way, and Mukilteo Speedway funnel commuters toward Boeing and Paine Field — actually lives inside the boundaries of Mukilteo School District No. 6, headquartered at 9401 Sharon Drive in Everett 98204.

If you live in Boulevard Bluffs, the western half of Pinehurst-Beverly Park, the Picnic Point corridor, or the streets around Lake Stickney, your kids likely catch a Mukilteo SD bus, not an EPS bus. The two districts share a city, but operate as completely separate institutions with separate boards, levies, and bond cycles.

The District at a Glance

Mukilteo School District was organized in 1878 — the same decade Everett itself was being plotted by James J. Hill’s railroad interests on Port Gardner Bay. Today the district enrolls more than 15,200 students across:

  • 12 elementary schools: Challenger, Columbia, Discovery, Endeavour, Fairmount, Horizon, Lake Stickney, Mukilteo, Odyssey, Olivia Park, Picnic Point, and Serene Lake
  • Four middle schools: Explorer, Harbour Pointe, Olympic View, and Voyager
  • Three high schools: Mariner (opened September 8, 1970), Kamiak (opened September 8, 1993), and ACES/Big Picture (alternative)
  • One kindergarten center

The district’s service area covers all of Mukilteo, a portion of south Everett, Picnic Point, the majority of Lake Stickney, and a portion of Martha Lake. To the north and east, the boundary hands off to Everett Public Schools. To the south, it hands off to Edmonds School District. The Emander district — a one-room schoolhouse founded in 1919 near what is now Mariner High School — was consolidated into Mukilteo SD in 1945, which is how the district’s service area first stretched into south Everett.

A District Built by South Everett Families

Mukilteo SD’s student population is a different mix than the district’s name suggests. Per the most recent federal data, the district’s minority enrollment runs about 70 percent, and roughly 39.5 percent of students are economically disadvantaged. Those numbers reflect the families packed into the apartment corridors along Casino Road, around Mariner High School, and through the south Everett neighborhoods that have absorbed decades of immigration from Latin America, Southeast Asia, the Pacific, and East Africa.

If you’ve read the desk’s coverage of Stations Unidos and the Casino Road anti-displacement work, the same demographic picture is showing up at the schoolhouse door. The students riding Mukilteo SD buses out of south Everett are part of the same community story — just a different institution telling it.

February 2026: The Bond That Almost Passed

On February 11, 2026, Mukilteo SD voters considered a $400 million capital bond — the district’s biggest ask in years. The measure landed at 57.2 percent yes. In any normal democratic context, that’s a comfortable margin. But school bonds in Washington require a 60 percent supermajority to pass, so the measure failed by 2.8 percentage points.

That outcome triggered exactly the conversation any district has after a near-miss: redo it, or rework it. On March 25, 2026, the Mukilteo school board received a staff recommendation to put the bond measure back on the ballot in November 2026. The proposal would impact several sites across the district, including Mariner High School — the campus that anchors south Everett’s Mukilteo SD experience.

The financial impact, as presented by district staff: passage of the 2026 bond plus renewal of the existing Educational Programs & Operations (EP&O) levy would add about 38 cents per $1,000 of assessed home value. For a home assessed at $659,200 — roughly the median in the district — that pencils out to about $5 a week.

Why South Everett Should Pay Attention

For families in Twin Creeks and the south Everett apartment corridors who fall inside Mukilteo SD lines, the November vote is a property-tax decision and a school-quality decision in the same breath. Aging buildings on the bond list include classroom additions, seismic upgrades, HVAC replacements, and program-space modernizations — the kind of work that determines whether a 1970s-era Mariner classroom feels like 2026 or like the year it was built.

It’s also a useful contrast point. Everett Public Schools’ record 96.3 percent graduation rate and Cascade High’s IB Program sit at the top of the district’s page. Mukilteo SD has its own headline numbers — Mariner’s comeback story over the past decade, Kamiak’s consistent placement on state academic recognition lists, and the district’s capacity to absorb the demographic complexity of south Everett. Different districts, different dashboards, but same kids in the same city.

How to Find Out Which District You’re In

The simplest way: pull up your address on the Mukilteo SD “Which School Should Your Child Attend?” tool at mukilteoschools.org. The tool returns the assigned elementary, middle, and high school in seconds. If your address comes back blank, you’re probably inside Everett Public Schools’ boundaries instead — and the EPS lookup at everettsd.org will confirm.

For new south Everett residents arriving from outside Snohomish County, the most common moment of confusion: assuming “Everett address” means “Everett Public Schools.” It often doesn’t. The Casino Road and Evergreen Way corridors, in particular, have addresses that read as Everett 98204 but feed into Mukilteo SD elementaries and Mariner High School. Knowing the difference before September is worth the ten minutes it takes to look up.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does Mukilteo School District serve Everett?

Yes. Mukilteo SD’s service area includes a portion of south Everett — most prominently the apartment corridors along Casino Road, the Lake Stickney area, the Picnic Point Road corridor, and parts of the western edge of south Everett near Mukilteo Speedway. The district shares Everett with Everett Public Schools, which serves the rest of the city.

How big is Mukilteo School District?

The district enrolls more than 15,200 students across 24 schools: 12 elementary schools, four middle schools, three high schools (Mariner, Kamiak, and ACES/Big Picture), and one kindergarten center. Mariner High School, opened September 8, 1970, is the district’s south Everett anchor.

Did Mukilteo’s bond pass in February 2026?

No. The $400 million capital bond received 57.2 percent yes votes — strong support, but short of the 60 percent supermajority Washington requires to approve a school bond. On March 25, 2026, district staff recommended putting the measure back on the November 2026 ballot.

What would the 2026 bond cost a typical homeowner?

According to district staff figures presented in March 2026, passage of the bond plus renewal of the EP&O levy would add about 38 cents per $1,000 of assessed home value — roughly $5 a week on a home assessed at $659,200.

How do I find out which Everett school district my address is in?

Use the Mukilteo SD school lookup at mukilteoschools.org/37434_3, or the Everett Public Schools attendance area tool at everettsd.org. Both tools return your assigned schools by address. If you’re between districts, your assigned school will determine which lookup shows results.

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