Tuition Fees
Tuition is often lower than Western Europe, especially outside private programmes, but medical and health degrees can be significantly higher.
Affordable
Bulgaria is a value-focused EU study destination with recognised universities, relatively low living costs, and English-taught options in professional fields.
Tuition
Accessible public fees
Living Cost
Lower EU costs
Language
Bulgarian + English options
Work
Part-time possible
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Tuition is often lower than Western Europe, especially outside private programmes, but medical and health degrees can be significantly higher.
Sofia costs more than regional cities, yet rent, food, and transport are usually manageable compared with many EU capitals.
Scholarships are mainly institution-led or based on bilateral agreements, academic merit, or specific mobility programmes.
Non-EU students generally need university admission, funds, accommodation, medical insurance, and a long-stay visa before residence registration.
Scholarships are mainly institution-led or based on bilateral agreements, academic merit, or specific mobility programmes.
Student work is possible within residence rules, though Bulgarian language skills can strongly affect access to local roles.
Poland is a practical European option for students who want affordable tuition, lower living costs, and a growing English-taught programme market.
Czechia offers strong universities, central European access, and a wide range of English-taught programmes at costs that can be lower than many Western destinations.
Hungary is a popular Central European destination for affordable English-taught medicine, engineering, business, and science programmes.
English-taught programmes exist in medicine, dentistry, business, computing, and engineering, while Bulgarian helps with clinical and daily contexts.
English-taught programmes exist in medicine, dentistry, business, computing, and engineering, while Bulgarian helps with clinical and daily contexts.
Tuition is often lower than Western Europe, especially outside private programmes, but medical and health degrees can be significantly higher. Sofia costs more than regional cities, yet rent, food, and transport are usually manageable compared with many EU capitals.
Sofia costs more than regional cities, yet rent, food, and transport are usually manageable compared with many EU capitals.
Non-EU students generally need university admission, funds, accommodation, medical insurance, and a long-stay visa before residence registration. Sofia costs more than regional cities, yet rent, food, and transport are usually manageable compared with many EU capitals.
Non-EU students generally need university admission, funds, accommodation, medical insurance, and a long-stay visa before residence registration. 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. Non-EU students generally need university admission, funds, accommodation, medical insurance, and a long-stay visa before residence registration.
Student work is possible within residence rules, though Bulgarian language skills can strongly affect access to local roles.