Tuition Fees
EU/EEA students often pay no tuition at public institutions, while non-EU/EEA students usually pay substantial annual fees.
Top Quality
Denmark is known for project-based learning, innovation, design, sustainability, and strong student support across research and applied institutions.
Tuition
Higher non-EU fees
Living Cost
High Nordic costs
Language
Danish + English options
Work
Part-time allowed
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EU/EEA students often pay no tuition at public institutions, while non-EU/EEA students usually pay substantial annual fees.
Living costs are high, especially in Copenhagen and Aarhus, so housing, deposits, food, transport, and insurance need early planning.
Universities and Danish government scholarship schemes may support highly qualified non-EU students in selected programmes.
Non-EU students normally need admission, tuition payment evidence, funds, insurance where relevant, and a study residence permit.
Universities and Danish government scholarship schemes may support highly qualified non-EU students in selected programmes.
Student residence rules allow limited part-time work and full-time work in certain breaks, subject to current permit conditions.
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.
France combines globally recognised universities, grandes ecoles, public tuition advantages, and strong cultural, engineering, and business pathways.
Norway offers high-quality education, strong research environments, and specialist strengths in energy, marine industries, sustainability, and social sciences.
Denmark has many English-taught programmes at master's level, while Danish helps with internships, public life, and long-term employment.
Denmark has many English-taught programmes at master's level, while Danish helps with internships, public life, and long-term employment.
EU/EEA students often pay no tuition at public institutions, while non-EU/EEA students usually pay substantial annual fees. Living costs are high, especially in Copenhagen and Aarhus, so housing, deposits, food, transport, and insurance need early planning.
Living costs are high, especially in Copenhagen and Aarhus, so housing, deposits, food, transport, and insurance need early planning.
Non-EU students normally need admission, tuition payment evidence, funds, insurance where relevant, and a study residence permit. Living costs are high, especially in Copenhagen and Aarhus, so housing, deposits, food, transport, and insurance need early planning.
Non-EU students normally need admission, tuition payment evidence, funds, insurance where relevant, and a study residence permit. 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 normally need admission, tuition payment evidence, funds, insurance where relevant, and a study residence permit.
Student residence rules allow limited part-time work and full-time work in certain breaks, subject to current permit conditions.