Tuition Fees
EU/EEA students usually pay the statutory tuition fee, while non-EU/EEA tuition commonly ranges from €6,000 to €20,000 per year depending on programme and institution.
Top Quality
The Netherlands is a strong English-taught destination with research universities, universities of applied sciences, and clear institution-led residence permit processes.
Tuition
€6,000-€20,000/year
Living Cost
€1,000-€1,500/month
Language
English widely available
Work
16h/week or summer full-time
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EU/EEA students usually pay the statutory tuition fee, while non-EU/EEA tuition commonly ranges from €6,000 to €20,000 per year depending on programme and institution.
Average student living costs are often around €1,000-€1,500 per month, and housing shortage is a major planning risk.
Scholarships are offered by universities, Dutch programmes, and field-specific funders, but competition can be strong.
The host institution usually coordinates the IND residence process after admission and financial proof submission.
Scholarships are offered by universities, Dutch programmes, and field-specific funders, but competition can be strong.
Non-EU/EEA students need a work permit and may work up to 16 hours per week or full-time in June, July, and August.
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.
Austria is a strong Central European option for students who want respected public universities, music and culture, and access to German-speaking career networks.
Denmark is known for project-based learning, innovation, design, sustainability, and strong student support across research and applied institutions.
The Netherlands has many English-taught programmes, especially at bachelor's and master's levels.
The Netherlands has many English-taught programmes, especially at bachelor's and master's levels.
EU/EEA students usually pay the statutory tuition fee, while non-EU/EEA tuition commonly ranges from €6,000 to €20,000 per year depending on programme and institution. Average student living costs are often around €1,000-€1,500 per month, and housing shortage is a major planning risk.
Average student living costs are often around €1,000-€1,500 per month, and housing shortage is a major planning risk.
The host institution usually coordinates the IND residence process after admission and financial proof submission. Average student living costs are often around €1,000-€1,500 per month, and housing shortage is a major planning risk.
The host institution usually coordinates the IND residence process after admission and financial proof submission. 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. The host institution usually coordinates the IND residence process after admission and financial proof submission.
Non-EU/EEA students need a work permit and may work up to 16 hours per week or full-time in June, July, and August.