Tuition Fees
Public tuition is often modest for EU students and remains comparatively accessible for many non-EU students, but exact fees depend on nationality, institution, and programme.
Top Quality
Austria is a strong Central European option for students who want respected public universities, music and culture, and access to German-speaking career networks.
Tuition
Low public fees
Living Cost
Moderate EU costs
Language
German + English options
Work
Part-time with limits
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Public tuition is often modest for EU students and remains comparatively accessible for many non-EU students, but exact fees depend on nationality, institution, and programme.
Vienna and Innsbruck usually require a higher monthly budget than smaller cities, with housing deposits, insurance, transport, and winter costs planned separately.
Scholarships are offered by Austrian institutions and public funding bodies, usually with competitive academic or country-specific conditions.
Most non-EU students need admission, proof of funds, accommodation evidence, insurance, and a student residence process before or soon after arrival.
Scholarships are offered by Austrian institutions and public funding bodies, usually with competitive academic or country-specific conditions.
International students can work part-time within residence and labour rules, but working hours and permit needs depend on nationality and contract type.
Finland is known for high-quality education, strong student support, and a practical residence model for degree students who can plan their tuition and living budget early.
The Netherlands is a strong English-taught destination with research universities, universities of applied sciences, and clear institution-led residence permit processes.
Denmark is known for project-based learning, innovation, design, sustainability, and strong student support across research and applied institutions.
English-taught degrees exist, especially at master's level, while German remains important for daily life, internships, and many regulated careers.
English-taught degrees exist, especially at master's level, while German remains important for daily life, internships, and many regulated careers.
Public tuition is often modest for EU students and remains comparatively accessible for many non-EU students, but exact fees depend on nationality, institution, and programme. Vienna and Innsbruck usually require a higher monthly budget than smaller cities, with housing deposits, insurance, transport, and winter costs planned separately.
Vienna and Innsbruck usually require a higher monthly budget than smaller cities, with housing deposits, insurance, transport, and winter costs planned separately.
Most non-EU students need admission, proof of funds, accommodation evidence, insurance, and a student residence process before or soon after arrival. Vienna and Innsbruck usually require a higher monthly budget than smaller cities, with housing deposits, insurance, transport, and winter costs planned separately.
Most non-EU students need admission, proof of funds, accommodation evidence, insurance, and a student residence process before or soon after arrival. Processing times vary by embassy workload and document readiness, so students should prepare their file early after admission.
Common documents include Passport, Admission letter, Academic transcripts and certificates, Language evidence when required, Financial means evidence, Health insurance or medical cover, Accommodation or arrival plan when requested. Most non-EU students need admission, proof of funds, accommodation evidence, insurance, and a student residence process before or soon after arrival.
International students can work part-time within residence and labour rules, but working hours and permit needs depend on nationality and contract type.