A key feature of the Chilean school system is the discrimination in educational provision, showing a strong association between learning outcomes, on the one hand, and cultural capital and income of households, on the other. This discrimination forcesfamilies to seek educational institutions according to their expectations, generating mobility of students from their communities of origin to other communities. The analysis of the Chilean survey of households in 2006allowed to quantify this phenomenon (student commuting), and demonstrated the existence of patterns associated with the dynamics of settlement of the population along the country: low mobility in the end regions, intermediate in the central regions of the country, and high in the Metropolitan Region of Santiago. According to these results, we discuss policy recommendations essential to incorporate the territorial dimension in the design of the new institutions of public education in Chile.