delivered the opinion of the Court.
We granted certiorari (
I.
These cases were brought by Negro public school pupils and their parents as class actions against the respective school authorities. They challenged, among other points in the desegregation plans not here relevant, the transfer provisions which permitted a pupil to transfer, upon request, from the zone of his residence to another school. The transfer plans are essentially the same, each containing, in addition to the provisions at issue here, general provisions providing for transfers on a showing of “good cause.” 2 The crucial provision, however, present in *686 somewhat the same form in each plan, is exemplified by § 6 of the Knoxville plan:
“6. The following will be regarded as some of the valid conditions to support requests for transfer:
“a. When a white student would otherwise be required to attend a school previously serving colored students only;
. “b. When a colored student would otherwise be required to attend a school previously serving white students only;
“c. When a student would otherwise be required to attend a school where the majority of students of that school or in his or her grade are of a different race.”
This provision is attacked as providing racial factors as valid conditions to support transfers which by design and operation would perpetuate racial segregation. It is also said that no showing is made that the transfer provisions are essential to effectuation of desegregation and that other procedures are available.
II.
It is readily apparent that the transfer system proposed lends itself to perpetuation of segregation. Indeed, the provisions can work only toward that end. While transfers are available to those who choose to attend
*687
school where their race is in the majority, there is no provision whereby a student might transfer upon request to a school in which his race is in a minority, unless he qualifies for a “good cause” transfer. ' As the Superintendent of Davidson County’s schools agreed, the effect of the racial transfer plan was “to permit a child [or his parents] to choose segregation outside of his zone but not to choose integration outside of his zone.” Here the right of transfer, which operates solely on the basis of a racial classification, is a one-way ticket leading to but one destination,
i. e.,
the majority race of the transferee and continued segregation. This Court has decided that state-imposed separation in public schools • is. inherently unequal and results in discrimination in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment.
Brown
v.
Board of Education,
III.
Classifications based on race for purposes of transfers between public .schools, as. here, violate the Equal Pro*--tection Clause of the' Fourteenth Amendment. As the Court said in
Steele
v.
Louisville & Nashville R. Co.,
The alleged equality — which we view as only superficial — of enabling each race to transfer from a desegregated to a segregated school does not save the plans.. Like arguments were made without success in Brown, supra, in support of the separate but equal educational program. Not only is race the factor upon which the transfer plans operate, but also the plans lack a provision whereby a student might with equal facility transfer from a segregated to a desegregated school. The obvious one-way operation of these two factors in combination underscores the purely racial character and purpose of the transfer provisions. We hold that the transfer plans promote discrimination and are therefore invalid.
This is not to say that appropriate transfer provisions, upon the parents’ request, consistent. with sound school administration and not based upon any state-imposed *689 racial conditions, would fall. Likewise, we would have a different case here if the transfer provisions were unrestricted, allowing transfers to or from any school regardless of the race of the majority therein. But no official transfer plan or provision of which racial segregation is the inevitable consequence may stand under the Fourteenth Amendment.
In reaching this result we are not unmindful of the deep-rooted problems involved. Indeed, it was consideration for the multifarious local difficulties and “variety of obstacles” which might arise in this transition that led this Court eight years ago to frame its mandate in
Brown
in such language as “good faith compliance at the earliest practicable date” and “all deliberate speed.”
Brown
v.
Board of Education,
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
A full discussion of the Knoxville plans may be found in the opinion of the Court of Appeals,
The ^Knoxville Plan-provides - (R. 31):
“5. Requests for transfer of students in desegregated grades from the school of their Zone to another school will be given full consideration and will be granted when made in writing by parents or guardians or those acting in the position of parents, when good cause *686 therefor is shown and when transfer is practicable, consistent with sound school administration.”
The Davidson County Plan provides (R. 214):
“4. Application for transfer of first grade students, and subsequent grades according to the gradual plan, from the school of their zone to another school will, be given careful consideration and will be granted when made in writing by parents, guardians, or those acting in the position of parents, when good cause therefor is shown and when transfer is practicable and consistent with sound school administration.”
