Debate topics for high school: 46 genuinely debatable questions across technology and AI, society, ethics, education, the environment, government, health, and science, each with credible evidence and real trade-offs on both sides.

A good high-school debate topic is an open question with credible arguments on both sides, phrased so a student can clearly agree or disagree — for example "Should artificial intelligence be regulated by governments?" or "Should the death penalty be abolished?". At this level students can handle ethics, policy, and science, so the strongest topics turn on genuine trade-offs rather than an obvious answer. To debate one well, pick a question, map the strongest arguments for and against with their evidence and counterarguments, and let the group rate them so consensus is measured rather than assumed. Argumentree turns a debate topic into a shared pro/con argument tree instead of a comment thread.

Debate Topics · High School

Debate Topics for High School

46 genuinely debatable questions for high-school debaters — spanning ethics, policy, science, and current events. Pick one, map the pros and cons, and let the group weigh in.

Choosing a debate topic for high school

High-school debaters can take on abstract ethics, public policy, and science, so the best topics turn on genuine trade-offs — rights against safety, cost against benefit, individual freedom against the common good. Each question below is relevant, researchable, and balanced so neither side is obviously right.

  1. Pick a question from the classroom-appropriate list below.
  2. Map the pros and cons. Collect the strongest arguments for and against, and attach evidence and counterarguments to each with argument mapping.
  3. Let the group weigh in so you can see where support actually lands.

New to running debates? See our guides to academic debate and structured debate.

Technology & AI

Should social media be banned for under-16s?

Should artificial intelligence be regulated by governments?

Should students be allowed to use AI tools for homework?

Should facial recognition be banned in public spaces?

Should smartphones be banned in schools?

Is remote work better than working in an office?

Society & Culture

Should voting be mandatory for all citizens?

Should professional athletes be paid less than teachers?

Should violent video games be restricted for minors?

Should the four-day work week become the standard?

Should influencers be legally required to disclose paid promotions?

Should public libraries remain free and publicly funded?

Ethics

Should animals be used for scientific research?

Is it ethical to eat meat?

Should the death penalty be abolished?

Should companies be allowed to profit from user data?

Is it ever justified to break an unjust law?

Should people have a right to online privacy?

Education

Should homework be abolished?

Should college education be free?

Should schools replace letter grades with pass/fail?

Should students be required to learn a second language?

Should standardized testing be eliminated?

Should school uniforms be mandatory?

Environment

Should single-use plastics be banned?

Should nuclear energy be part of fighting climate change?

Should governments ban gas-powered cars by 2035?

Should there be a tax on carbon emissions?

Should zoos be phased out?

Government & Politics

Should the voting age be lowered to 16?

Should there be term limits for all elected officials?

Should a universal basic income be introduced?

Should national service be mandatory for young adults?

Should the minimum wage be raised?

Should governments provide free public transport?

Health

Should junk food advertising to children be banned?

Should sugary drinks be taxed?

Should vaccines be required for school attendance?

Should professional sports ban performance-enhancing drugs?

Should mental health days be a standard workplace benefit?

Should fast food be sold in school cafeterias?

Science

Should human genetic engineering be allowed?

Should space exploration be a government funding priority?

Should scientists be allowed to clone extinct animals?

Should self-driving cars be allowed on public roads?

Should humans try to colonize Mars?

Debate topics by grade level

Looking for a different level? Browse debate topics for middle school and debate topics for college students, or return to the full debate topics library.

Turn a topic into a real debate

Map the strongest arguments for and against each question — not just opinions.
Attach evidence and counterarguments to every claim so reasoning stays transparent.
Let participants rate the arguments so consensus is measured, not assumed.
Keep a shared record of how the group reached its position.

Frequently Asked Questions

What are good debate topics for high school?

Good high-school debate topics pair everyday relevance with real complexity — questions like "Should artificial intelligence be regulated by governments?", "Should college education be free?", or "Should the voting age be lowered to 16?". At this level students can handle ethics, policy, and science, so the strongest topics have credible evidence and genuine trade-offs on both sides rather than an obviously correct answer. Every topic on this page is classroom-appropriate and tagged for high-school level.

How do you pick a debate topic for high-school students?

Choose a question the class cares about and can research, then confirm both sides can be defended with evidence — if one side clearly wins, it will not make a real debate. High-school debaters can take on abstract ethics and policy, so look for genuine trade-offs (rights vs. safety, cost vs. benefit) and phrase the question to force a position. This page filters the library to exactly the questions that suit that level across technology, ethics, education, the environment, and government.

How many debate topics are on this page?

This page lists 46 high-school-appropriate debate questions, grouped by subject — technology and AI, society, ethics, education, the environment, government, health, and science. Each is a genuinely open question with credible arguments on both sides. Pick any question and click "Debate this" to open it as a structured argument map.

How do you run a structured debate on one of these topics?

Start from the question, then map the reasoning rather than just trading opinions. Collect the strongest arguments for and against, attach the evidence and counterarguments to each, and let participants weigh in so you can see where support actually lands. Argumentree turns a debate topic into a shared pro/con argument map: each side adds claims, others respond with supporting or opposing points, and the group rates them so consensus becomes visible instead of hidden behind whoever spoke loudest.

Where can high-school students debate these topics online?

You can open any topic in the free Argumentree community, where a debate becomes a structured argument tree instead of a comment thread. Choose a question below and click "Debate this" to start it in the forum, or map the pros and cons first. It works well for classrooms and debate clubs that want students to reason through a question together and keep a record of how they reached an answer.

Debate any topic — as a structured argument

Argumentree turns a debate topic into a shared pro/con argument map, so your class reasons through the question and can see where consensus lands. Free to start.

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