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How much does it cost to study in Germany?

Sean143

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In 2014, Germany’s 16 states abolished tuition fees for undergraduate students at all public German universities. This means that currently both domestic and international undergraduates at public universities in Germany can study for free, with just a small fee to cover administration and other costs per semester.

This good fortune may not last though. In December 2016 it was announced the south-west state of Baden-Württemberg will be reintroducing tuition fees for non-EU students, starting from autumn 2017, and it’s possible other states will follow suit in the coming years.

For now, the low fees certainly help to make studying in Germany an attractive option for prospective students, and the country has previously been ranked as the fourth most popular destination for international students in the world (after the US, UK and Australia).

Cost of living in Germany
While many students can study in Germany for free, living expenses are unavoidable. The cost of living in Germany is more expensive in some areas than others – Munich, for example, is considered the most expensive German city to live in, with living costs averaging about €10,800 (~US$11,645) per year. By comparison, the average annual living costs in Germany are around €9,600 (~US$10,350).

Rent will be your largest monthly expense, though this is cheaper if you live in a shared flat (average rent of €298/~US$320 per month) or a student hall of residence (€240/~US$260 per month).

Based on data from DAAD, other average monthly costs are as follows:

€165 (~US$180) for food
€52 (~US$56) for clothes
€82 (~US$90) for transport
€33 (~US$36) for telephone, internet and TV license
€30 (~US$33) for work/study materials
€68 (~US$73) for leisure activities
To find living expenses for specific cities in Germany (and compare them to the average costs in your home city) Numbeo is a useful tool.

You won’t need a visa to study in Germany if you’re an EU national or citizen of Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway or Switzerland. Otherwise, expect to pay around €60 (~US$65) for your student visa, but there are also fee reductions or waivers for Schengen visas. In order to fulfill the visa requirements, you will need to show proof you have, or have access to, around €8,700 (~US$9,390) per year or €725 (~US$780) per month to cover your living costs.

For more information on getting a German student visa, see this article.

You will also need health insurance as a pre-condition of registering at a German university. If you’re a resident of a country within the EU or EEA, there should be a social security agreement between your country and Germany. This means that if you have public health insurance, you should be covered in Germany as well (full list here). If your health insurance isn’t valid in Germany, expect to pay around €80 (~US$86) per month to cover this.

Undergraduate costs to study in Germany
Although you can study for free at public German universities as an undergraduate, there is a charge per semester for enrolment, confirmation and administration. This is typically no more than €300 (~US$320) per semester, but varies depending on the university.

There may be an additional charge to purchase a “Semesterticket”, which covers public transport expenses for six months – the price varies depending upon which Semesterticket option you choose. If you exceed the standard period of study by more than four semesters, you may also face a long-term fee charge, which could be as much as €500 (~US$540) per semester.

Most universities in Germany are public. Private institutions are usually dependent on tuition fees for their funding (though some also receive support from foundations), and set their own fees, which can be anything up to €20,000 a year (~US$21,560).

The Federal Student Financial Aid Program (BAföG: Bundesausbildungsförderungsgesetz) can be used by both German nationals and EU students, as well as some foreigners under select conditions. Generally, this aid is for those under 30 years old (under 35 if you’re studying for a master’s degree), but exceptions can be made depending on circumstance. The BAföG is usually split in two, with 50% taking the form of a state grant and the other half being an interest-free loan that must be paid back in instalments when the maximum period of assistance expires.

Master’s and postgraduate costs to study in Germany
Master’s degrees at German universities are usually free if they are classed as “consecutive” – i.e. following directly on from a related bachelor’s degree gained in Germany. Again, there is a small charge per semester for enrolment, confirmation and administration, plus a Semesterticket. Tuition fees for “non-consecutive” master’s degrees, for those who have gained their bachelor’s degree elsewhere in the world, vary between universities and may be around €5,000 (~US$5,400) per year at public institutions and up to €30,000 (~US$32,410) at private German universities.

For example, Germany’s top-ranked institution, the Ruprecht-Karls-Universität Heidelberg, lists fees for non-consecutive master’s degrees ranging from €2,500 (US$2,700) per semester for a Master of Arts in American Studies up to €7,000 (US$7,560) per semester for a Master of Science in Health Economics.

At PhD level, tuition is once again free at all universities in Germany – for the first six semesters at least. As at all levels of study, PhD students are also required to make a semester contribution of no more than €300 for administration and other costs. You can find out more about studying a PhD in Germany here.

Scholarships to study in Germany
The German Academic Exchange Service, otherwise known as the DAAD (Deutscher Akademischer Austausch Dienst), provides support for German and international students to gain funding to live and study in Germany for free or at a more affordable cost.

DAAD scholarships to study in Germany are offered to German and international students of all levels, as well as academics and researchers. To find relevant scholarships to study in Germany, you can search based on keywords, study level, country of origin and subject.

Another useful resource is the Federal Ministry of Education and Research or BMBF (Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung), which hosts a site dedicated to providing information on scholarships to study in Germany.

You can also check out our own listing of Scholarships to Study in Germany.

Figures contained in this article are averages. The amount you pay will fluctuate depending on the length of your program, your level of study, the German state (Länder) you live in and whether your university is private or public.

This article was originally published in December 2013. It was updated in February 2015 and again in March 2017.

Source link:https://www.topuniversities.com/student-info/student-finance/how-much-does-it-cost-study-germany
 
Very informative for prospective students. Thanks for sharing. Are there any German public universities that have instruction in English? How open is Germany to people who are not fluent in the language and do the universities teach the German language as part of the program for international students?
 
Very informative for prospective students. Thanks for sharing. Are there any German public universities that have instruction in English? How open is Germany to people who are not fluent in the language and do the universities teach the German language as part of the program for international students?

most of the universities have instruction in English but you have to learn basic German(Level A-1,A-2,B-1) to live there.Have completed A-1 last semester going to take level A-2 next semester
 
most of the universities have instruction in English but you have to learn basic German(Level A-1,A-2,B-1) to live there.Have completed A-1 last semester going to take level A-2 next semester

What are you planning to study? I heard the German engineering program is quite comprehensive. Students do two years of apprenticeship program as a mechanic, electrician etc to get practical know-how plus three years of course-work. This produces well rounded engineers.
 
I recently completed a 12 month study period in Germany and, compared to Ireland at least, Germany was much much cheaper. Exact university fees and the like I'm not so certain on as as part of the ERASMUS programme I had to pay those as usual to my Irish university and not the German one, but general daily life Germany was cheaper. If you utilise the cheaper retail stores like Netto or any of the thousands of Turkish foodstores you can get cheap food no problem.

If you have self discipline, dont eat out and dont mind seeking a bargain I reckon grocery shopping could be 120 a month if you ate breakfast, a cheap lunch and dinner a day. Least thats generally how I managed. If that fails a döner or döner pizza is about 3 to five euro and good value, if you dont mind eating junk regularly of course lol.

Semester tickets are absolutely so worth it. They pay for themselves within 2 weeks as German railways are quite expensive. I studied in Bochum in NordRhein Westfalen and the semester ticket there was about 300 euro. To put into perspective a one way ticket to Düsseldorf would be 20 odd euro and thats only 40 mins away. I mustve racked up 5 grand in rail bills I travelled so often, yet paid barely 10%. They also grant, at least in NRW, access to all public transport, not just trains.

As the OP mentioned the DAAD offer grants of about 800 euro IIRC to all students or researchers who get accepted (not easy to do though, I got rejected this year and will reapply next year). Basically they cover the registration fees and if youre lucky the rent (if you only want a month long stay or so)

Accommodation is very cheap, insane actually. I paid 290 a month for a house with 2 others with a massive bedroom and two bathrooms plus a solid kitchen. Wifi electricity heating all included and all excellent. In certain cities like Frankfurt or Münich it can be much dearer though. Apply months in advance though or get in contact early, if you leave it only a couple weeks before leaving you can find yourself in trouble. The university you attend will almost certainly provide assistance for accommodation if you go there early enough and even book it for you leaving you only to pay (although I went on Erasmus, may be different if you are independent)

Leisure also very cheap. Alcohol if thats your thing in stores is over twice as cheap as in Ireland, football tickets for 2nd league teams (still an insane atmosphere and dare I say superior to the first division) cost less than a tenner for students and on and on the benefits list goes.....

Very informative for prospective students. Thanks for sharing. Are there any German public universities that have instruction in English? How open is Germany to people who are not fluent in the language and do the universities teach the German language as part of the program for international students?

The Goethe Institut basically run the German language so they have spots in many places. However I imagine as was the case where I went every university would run language courses for learners at all levels, beginner to advanced. However while these are helpful ultimately how you get on with German depends on how much you want to use it. If you work hard youll benefit, otherwise you likely wont gain much. If you want to learn the language there would be language courses everywhere for people of all nationalities to go. I met Koreans, Japanese, Syrians, Romanians, Brazilians at my language course location to name but a handful.

Germans freaking love people from abroad with no German because one of the most lovely and simultaneously irritating things about Germans, students in particular, is that they loveee to practice English. It is entirely possible and dare I say it easy to get by in German university with not a word of German, particularly if you hang around primarily with foreign students who would primarily talk in English anyway. Pick english taught lectures and you may as well be in Birmingham not Bielefeld.

This doesnt apply so much to middle aged or elderly Germans now, as English became a mandatory subject in Germany in the early 90s IIRC, but its not often you meet a young German with bad english. They all have a good grasp of it (and generally another language like spanish or french too) and can easily communicate.

As for lectures, where I studied many of the business modules were often english taught, engineering german taught with exceptions in both.

Where are you interested in going btw? Youre an engineer IIRC, where I studied literally next door to the Ruhr Universität in Bochum was Germany's number 1 engineering university IIRC. One thing I'd say, I met a fair few Indians on my times there but never a Pakistani. Dunno if that'd make it harder for you to adapt but, no harm in knowing.

Und ich muss sagen, die Sprache klingt viel besser als es oft dargestellt wird.
 
What are you planning to study? I heard the German engineering program is quite comprehensive. Students do two years of apprenticeship program as a mechanic, electrician etc to get practical know-how plus three years of course-work. This produces well rounded engineers.

I did a Tandemsprache thing with a German student (met once a week, 1 hour of English convos and 1 hour of German) and the guy was insanely educated. Mid 20's, masters degree done, was employed by the university had his own office where he assisted the engineering faculty and was as I left working with a leading engineer on a massive highway near Hamburg. Guy was gonna start a doctorate in 2 years as well.

Germany literally has ATG engineers growing in trees like Pakistan does fast bowlers.
 
What are you planning to study? I heard the German engineering program is quite comprehensive. Students do two years of apprenticeship program as a mechanic, electrician etc to get practical know-how plus three years of course-work. This produces well rounded engineers.

I am currently doing my bachelors in Chemical Engineering from NUST(No1 University in Pakistan) and I am planning to do my ms from Germany.
 
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