Tuition Fees
Tuition varies by programme and institution, with medicine and specialised degrees generally higher than business or humanities options.
Affordable
Latvia offers affordable Baltic study options, English-taught programmes, and a practical base for business, logistics, aviation, and IT.
Tuition
Moderate fees
Living Cost
Lower Baltic costs
Language
Latvian + English options
Work
Part-time possible
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Tuition varies by programme and institution, with medicine and specialised degrees generally higher than business or humanities options.
Riga costs more than smaller cities, but overall rent, food, and transport can remain budget-friendly by EU standards.
Latvian state scholarships, university awards, and mobility programmes may support selected nationalities and profiles.
Non-EU students generally need admission, funds, accommodation, insurance, and long-stay visa or residence-permit steps.
Latvian state scholarships, university awards, and mobility programmes may support selected nationalities and profiles.
International students can work within residence-permit rules, though Latvian or Russian language skills may help in local roles.
Poland is a practical European option for students who want affordable tuition, lower living costs, and a growing English-taught programme market.
Bulgaria is a value-focused EU study destination with recognised universities, relatively low living costs, and English-taught options in professional fields.
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.
English-taught programmes are available across business, IT, engineering, health, and transport-related fields.
English-taught programmes are available across business, IT, engineering, health, and transport-related fields.
Tuition varies by programme and institution, with medicine and specialised degrees generally higher than business or humanities options. Riga costs more than smaller cities, but overall rent, food, and transport can remain budget-friendly by EU standards.
Riga costs more than smaller cities, but overall rent, food, and transport can remain budget-friendly by EU standards.
Non-EU students generally need admission, funds, accommodation, insurance, and long-stay visa or residence-permit steps. Riga costs more than smaller cities, but overall rent, food, and transport can remain budget-friendly by EU standards.
Non-EU students generally need admission, funds, accommodation, insurance, and long-stay visa or residence-permit steps. 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 admission, funds, accommodation, insurance, and long-stay visa or residence-permit steps.
International students can work within residence-permit rules, though Latvian or Russian language skills may help in local roles.