Scholarships in Australia for Indian Students 2026: Amounts & Deadlines

Scholarships in Australia for Indian Students
Scholarships in Australia for Indian Students

Scholarships in Australia for Indian students mostly cover 15% to 50% of tuition, not the full bill, with a handful of larger and fully funded exceptions for research and need-based applicants. This 2026 guide opens with a verified comparison table of more than 20 awards, government, university, and India-based, showing the amount, who is eligible, whether you apply separately, and the current status. Then it answers the question no other list does: how a scholarship actually changes the money you must prove for your Subclass 500 student visa.

All INR conversions use the live Google-published rate captured on 2026-05-31: AUD 1 ≈ ₹68.48, US$1 ≈ ₹95.01. Rates fluctuate intraday; figures are indicative.

Key Takeaways

  • Most Australian university scholarships are partial fee reductions of 15% to 50%, not full rides. Budget for the balance.
  • Fully funded routes are mainly for research: the Research Training Program pays a stipend of about AUD 39,069 (approx. INR 26.75 lakh) a year for 2026, and Maitri fully funds around 45 Indian STEM PhD students.
  • The headline AUD 100,000 Sydney India Equity award is narrow and need-based (ASHA-nominated Delhi communities); most Indians should target the Sydney Scholars India Program instead (annual cycle; 2026 round closed 24 May).
  • Macquarie’s India Early Acceptance Scholarship gives Indian coursework students AUD 10,000 (approx. INR 6.8 lakh) a year.
  • A tuition scholarship lowers proven fees but not the AUD 29,710 (approx. INR 20.3 lakh) living-cost money proof for your Subclass 500 visa.
  • The Inlaks Foundation does not fund Australia; the J.N. Tata Endowment loan scholarship (up to Rs 20 lakh) does.

The best scholarships in Australia for Indian students in 2026 span government research funding, university merit awards, and India-based foundations. Most university awards reduce tuition by 15% to 50%, while research schemes can be fully funded and most others are partial fee reductions. The Australian Government's Study Australia scholarship search lists awards from government, providers, and private bodies. Use the table to shortlist, then read each section for eligibility detail.

Want the list first? Here it is, grouped by provider. “Apply?” shows whether you submit a separate application or your offer triggers automatic consideration; “Status” flags 2026 availability. Figures marked “check current intake” could not be re-verified live, so confirm those first.

ScholarshipProviderLevelValue (AUD / INR)India eligibilityApply?2026 status
Sydney Scholars India ProgramUniv. of SydneyUG / PG28 awards: 2 x 100% UG tuition, 10 x AUD 20,000 (₹13.7L), 16 x AUD 10,000 (₹6.8L)India-specificYes2026 round closed 24 May; check next cycle
Sydney India EquityUniv. of SydneyPG courseworkUp to AUD 100,000 (₹68.5L)Narrow: ASHA-nominated Delhi communitiesNominationNeed-based
Sydney International Student AwardUniv. of SydneyUG / PG20% of tuitionSelected nationalities incl. IndiaAutoOpen
Vice-Chancellor’s Intl (VCIS)Univ. of SydneyUG / PGUp to AUD 40,000 (₹27.4L)High-achieving internationalsAutoOpen
Chancellor’s International (India)ANUUG / PG25% fee waiver (India category)India = 25%; 50% only some regionsAutoOpen
RTP StipendANU / GovtPhD / researchAUD 39,069/yr (₹26.75L) + fee offsetOpen to internationalsYesOpen, 2026 rate
Academic Excellence (50%)Adelaide UniversityUG / PG50% of tuitionOpen to internationalsAutoOpen
Emerging Leaders / MeritAdelaide UniversityUG / PG25% / 15% of tuitionOpen to internationalsAutoOpen
India Early AcceptanceMacquarie UniversityCourseworkAUD 10,000/yr (₹6.8L)India-specificAutomatic after eligible offer acceptance + commencement fee by deadlineOpen, India only
Vice-Chancellor’s InternationalMacquarie UniversityUG / PGCheck current intakeHigh-achieving internationalsVariesCheck intake
International Merit / researchMonash UniversityUG / PG / PhDCheck current intakeOpen to internationalsVariesCheck intake
Graduate Research ScholarshipsUniv. of MelbournePhD / researchCheck current intake (fee offset + stipend)Open to internationalsYesCheck intake
International scholarshipsUNSW SydneyUG / PGCheck current intakeOpen to internationalsVariesCheck intake
International scholarshipsUQUG / PGCheck current intakeOpen to internationalsVariesCheck intake
International scholarshipsRMIT UniversityUG / PGCheck current intakeOpen to internationalsVariesCheck intake
International scholarshipsDeakin / GriffithUG / PGCheck current intakeOpen to internationalsVariesCheck intake
Maitri Scholars ProgramGovt (DFAT)PhD / researchShare of AUD 11.2M; ~45 scholarsIndia only, STEMYesBilateral, cyclic
Australia AwardsGovt (DFAT)PGFull tuition + allowancesIndia in S. Asia regionYesCurrent round closed; reopens early 2027
Destination AustraliaGovt (Education)Cert IV-PhDUp to AUD 15,000/yr (₹10.3L)Regional studyVia uniNo new rounds since Jul 2024
J.N. Tata EndowmentIndia foundationPG / PhDLoan up to Rs 20 lakhIndian citizensYesOpen, repayable

One caution: the biggest numbers are the narrowest. The AUD 100,000 Sydney figure is a need-based award most applicants will never qualify for, as explained below. When your family builds a shortlist, weigh the realistic auto-considered 15-50% waivers far more heavily than the headline ones.

How much do Australia scholarships actually cover for Indian students in 2026?

Scholarships in Australia for Indian students mostly reduce tuition partially, typically by 15% to 50% rather than in full, with fully funded places largely limited to research. The Australian Government's Study Australia scholarships guide confirms awards come from government, providers, and private organisations, so a single award rarely covers a whole degree.

Here is the honest version most lists skip. The flashy headline numbers, AUD 40,000 here, AUD 100,000 there, are the top tier of competitive or need-based schemes that only a small fraction of applicants win. The everyday reality for a strong, fundable Indian student is a partial tuition reduction of 15% to 50%, applied automatically when the university makes your offer. That is genuinely useful money, but it is not a free degree.

Run the maths with your family first. In 2026, international tuition runs about AUD 17,000 to AUD 53,000 (approx. INR 11.6 lakh to INR 36.3 lakh) a year, undergraduate to master’s, according to Nomad Credit’s 2026 cost data; a taught master’s at a Group of Eight (Go8, Australia’s eight leading research universities) sits near the top of that band. A 30% scholarship on a AUD 45,000 course saves AUD 13,500 (approx. INR 9.2 lakh) a year, real relief, but you still fund the other AUD 31,500 plus living costs. Treat a scholarship as a discount, not a substitute for an education-loan conversation with HDFC Credila, Avanse, or a public-sector bank.

Timing matters too. In 2026, Australia’s National Planning Level (NPL, the government’s annual cap-style allocation for new international students) rose to 295,000, an extra 25,000 places versus 2025, per Study Australia. With more places drawing on the same scholarship pools, applying early to study in Australia is now part of your funding strategy, not just your admission one.

15-50%

Typical tuition cut from a uni scholarship University award pages, 2026

₹26.75L

RTP research stipend per year (AUD 39,069) ANU / Australian Government, 2026

₹20.3L

Living-cost money proof (AUD 29,710) ICEF Monitor, 2024-26

295,000

2026 international-student planning level Study Australia, 2026

Which Australian government scholarships can Indian students realistically win?

Australian government scholarships for Indian students are concentrated in research and bilateral schemes. The Research Training Program funds higher-degree research students with a fee offset plus a 2026 base stipend of AUD 39,069 (approx. INR 26.75 lakh) a year, per the Australian National University. These routes are competitive but genuinely fully funded, unlike most taught-degree awards.

If you are aiming at a PhD or a research master’s, the government-funded options are where the real money sits. Here are the three that matter for Indian applicants.

Research Training Program (RTP)

The Research Training Program is the Australian Government’s flagship support for Higher Degree by Research (HDR) students, meaning PhD and research-master’s candidates. For 2026, the base full-time stipend is AUD 39,069 (approx. INR 26.75 lakh) a year, and most universities add a fee offset that covers tuition. That AUD 39,069 is a floor, not a fixed figure; top universities like Sydney and Melbourne top it up further. If your goal is research, this is the closest thing to a fully funded degree Australia offers.

Maitri Scholars Program

The Maitri Scholars Program is a bilateral India-Australia scheme, and it is the standout government route built specifically for Indian students. It commits AUD 11.2 million (approx. INR 76.7 crore) to fund around 45 PhD and research students over four years, prioritising STEM fields such as advanced manufacturing, critical technology, critical minerals, and clean energy, per the Australian Minister for Education. If you are a high-achieving Indian researcher in one of those sectors, this is the single most valuable scholarship to target.

Australia Awards and Destination Australia

Two more government schemes get mentioned constantly. Australia Awards Scholarships (run by the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, DFAT) are development-focused. India sits within the Australia Awards South Asia and Mongolia region, but the current round is closed and is expected to reopen in early 2027, so check the India page before relying on this award. Destination Australia offers up to AUD 15,000 (approx. INR 10.3 lakh) a year for regional study, but as of 2026 there are no new funding rounds, with existing recipients funded to completion, per the Department of Education. Treat it as background, not a plan.

Which university scholarships pay the most at Australia’s top universities?

University scholarships fund most Indian students, usually as partial fee reductions of 15% to 50%. The University of Sydney's India-specific route is the Sydney Scholars India Program, offering 28 annual awards: two covering 100% of undergraduate tuition, plus AUD 20,000 and AUD 10,000 awards, per the University of Sydney's India scholarships page. The far larger AUD 100,000 India Equity award exists but is narrow and need-based, not a general option.

This section decides funding for most families, because almost every Indian student who wins a scholarship gets it from the university, not the government. The pattern is consistent across the leading Australian universities: one or two India-specific awards, then a wider band of automatic partial fee waivers.

University of Sydney: the India Equity trap

Read this carefully, because the internet gets it wrong. The Sydney India Equity Scholarship is worth up to AUD 100,000 (approx. INR 68.5 lakh) and covers tuition, living costs, flights, textbooks, and health cover, but it is extremely narrow. Applicants must be Indian citizens who are current residents of slum communities in Delhi where ASHA Society works, and nominations are made by ASHA, per the University of Sydney’s India scholarships page cited above.

Most Indian coursework applicants should instead treat the Sydney Scholars India Scholarship Program (28 awards a year: two covering 100% of undergraduate tuition, ten worth AUD 20,000, sixteen worth AUD 10,000), the Sydney International Student Award (20% of tuition), or the Vice-Chancellor’s scheme (up to AUD 40,000) as the realistic options. The India Program runs an annual cycle (open 1 April, close 24 May in 2026), so a closed window means waiting for the next intake.

ANU, Adelaide and Macquarie

The Australian National University keeps it simple. In 2026, the ANU Chancellor’s International Scholarship gives Indian applicants a 25% fee waiver of tuition for the whole degree, with automatic consideration, per the ANU Chancellor’s International Scholarship page; the higher 50% band applies only to some other regional categories, not India. Adelaide University rebuilt its suite, so ignore older posts citing a “Global Citizens” award; the current international set runs an Academic Excellence Scholarship (50%), an Emerging Leaders Award (25%) and a Merit Scholarship (15%), per Adelaide UniversityMacquarie University is worth a hard look for Indian coursework students: its India Early Acceptance Scholarship is AUD 10,000 (approx. INR 6.8 lakh) per year, applied when you accept an early offer, per Macquarie University.

Monash, Melbourne, UNSW, UQ, RMIT and more

Beyond those, every Go8 and large metro university runs its own international awards: Monash (International Merit and research scholarships), the University of Melbourne (Graduate Research Scholarships for PhD applicants), UNSW Sydney, the University of QueenslandRMITDeakin, and Griffith. We mark these “check current intake” because each revises its figures every cycle; we pull the live value for your course when we build your shortlist.

Can India-based scholarships and external funds pay for your Australian degree?

India-based scholarships can fund an Australian degree, but the rules are specific. The J.N. Tata Endowment offers a loan scholarship of up to Rs 20 lakh for overseas postgraduate study, and Australia is eligible, per the J N Tata Endowment. The widely cited Inlaks Foundation, however, funds only the UK, Europe and the USA, so it cannot pay for Australia.

Let’s clear up the single most common myth first, because it wastes weeks of effort. The Inlaks Shivdasani Foundation is one of India’s most prestigious scholarships at up to USD 120,000 (approx. INR 1.14 crore), and plenty of “top scholarships for Australia” lists wrongly imply it is a route there. It is not. In 2026, Inlaks funds study only across the United Kingdom, Europe and the United States of America, per the Inlaks Foundation. If Australia is your destination, cross it off your list now.

What does work for Australia is the J.N. Tata Endowment. It awards a loan scholarship of up to Rs 20 lakh for overseas master’s, PhD and post-doctoral study across all streams, plus a criteria-based travel grant and gift award for selected scholars. Parents reading this: note the word “loan”. It is repayable after your course, so it behaves more like a soft education loan than a grant, but the terms are far gentler than a commercial loan, which makes it a smart layer underneath a partial university scholarship.

How families usually stack it. A realistic Indian funding plan for Australia rarely rests on one award. Most families we counsel combine a partial university scholarship (say 25-50% off tuition) with an education loan for the balance, and a strong research candidate adds the RTP or Maitri on top. Stacking a J.N. Tata loan scholarship under a university fee waiver is a common, sensible structure.

How do you match your marks and course level to the right scholarship?

The right Australia scholarship depends on your study level, not your ambition alone. Research candidates target the Research Training Program and Maitri; coursework applicants from India target the Sydney Scholars India Program or Macquarie's India award; strong undergraduates target automatic merit waivers such as Adelaide's 50% Academic Excellence award. Matching your profile to the correct anchor award beats applying scattershot to everything.

So which one is actually for you? Most students lose time chasing awards they were never eligible for. Use these profile groups as your starting filter, then refine the exact universities and courses, such as a funded masters in Australia, with us.

Auto merit waivers
 
Adelaide Academic Excellence (50%), ANU India (25%), Macquarie India Early Acceptance (AUD 10,000/yr). No separate form; your offer decides it. Two Sydney Scholars India awards even cover 100% of UG tuition.
India-specific awards
 
Sydney Scholars India Program (up to AUD 40,000), Macquarie India Early Acceptance, plus 15-50% merit waivers across Go8 and metro universities. Apply for admission early to trigger them.
RTP or Maitri
 
Fully funded routes. RTP pays about AUD 39,069 (₹26.75L) a year plus fees; Maitri targets Indian STEM PhDs. Line up a supervisor first, then apply.
Equity and India funds
 
Sydney India Equity (need-based, ASHA-nominated) for eligible Delhi-community applicants; J.N. Tata loan (up to Rs 20 lakh) as a soft-loan top-up for any stream.

Notice the pattern? The biggest determinant is whether you are a research or a coursework student. Research candidates have the genuinely full-funding routes; coursework students build a package from a partial waiver plus loans. If you’re the parent researching this for your child, that single distinction tells you which column of the budget to plan around.

How do scholarships change the AUD 29,710 student-visa money proof?

A tuition scholarship reduces the fees you must prove for an Australian student visa, but it does not remove the separate living-cost requirement. A single Subclass 500 applicant must still show about AUD 29,710 (approx. INR 20.3 lakh) for 12 months of living costs, according to ICEF Monitor reporting the Department of Home Affairs change. Scholarship letters serve as evidence of reduced tuition liability.

This is the part no other scholarship list explains, and it trips up families every intake. Winning a scholarship feels like the money problem is solved. It is not, because the Subclass 500 (Australia’s student visa) financial test has two separate parts, and a scholarship only touches one of them.

Part one is tuition. A scholarship letter directly lowers the tuition figure you must show funds for, so a 50% fee waiver halves that component. Part two is living costs, and this is the trap. Since 10 May 2024, a single primary applicant must prove at least AUD 29,710 (approx. INR 20.3 lakh) in available funds for 12 months of living costs, according to ICEF Monitor reporting the Home Affairs change. A tuition scholarship does not reduce that AUD 29,710 at all. You can read the wider Australia student visa requirements for how this fits the full application.

Then there are the costs a scholarship never touches. From 1 July 2025, the Subclass 500 visa application charge alone is AUD 2,000 (approx. INR 1.37 lakh) for a primary applicant, per Study Australia, on top of Overseas Student Health Cover (OSHC), your Confirmation of Enrolment (CoE, the enrolment proof your university issues for the visa), and your Genuine Student (GS) requirement evidence. Worried about whether your file will clear the GS test? The fix is to present the scholarship as part of a coherent, well-documented funding story, not to assume it speaks for itself.

What won’t a scholarship cover, and how do families close the gap?

Australian scholarships rarely cover living costs, the visa fee, health cover, or airfare, so a funding gap is normal. With partial awards covering 15% to 50% of tuition and a AUD 29,710 living-cost proof required, most Indian families bridge the rest with an education loan and family savings. Planning the gap up front prevents a visa-stage scramble.

Let’s be straight about the honest funding gap, because pretending it away helps no one. Even a strong scholarship package usually leaves four things unfunded:

  • Living costs: the living-cost sum you must prove for the visa, plus real day-to-day spending beyond that in cities like Sydney and Melbourne.
  • The visa charge: AUD 2,000 (approx. INR 1.37 lakh) for the Subclass 500 application, payable upfront.
  • Health cover and travel: OSHC for the whole stay, plus airfare and initial setup costs.
  • The tuition balance: whatever a partial waiver leaves behind, often more than half the fee.

So how do most families close it? They combine three layers. First, the largest scholarship the student’s profile can realistically win. Second, an education loan from HDFC Credila, Avanse, or a public-sector bank to cover the tuition balance and living costs; with tuition alone running AUD 17,000 to AUD 53,000 (approx. INR 11.6 lakh to INR 36.3 lakh) a year, this is where most of the funding comes from. Third, family savings for the deposit, visa fee, and first months on the ground. Compare the full picture against the cost of studying in Australia before you commit, and the whole plan gets far less stressful.

If you want a second pair of eyes on the maths, that is exactly the kind of plan our counsellors build with families day in and day out. We work across the full picture, from shortlisting eligible awards to timing your loan, as part of helping students study in Australia without nasty surprises at the visa stage.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Yes, but they are rare and mostly for research. The Research Training Program funds PhD and research-master’s students with a fee offset plus a stipend of about AUD 39,069 (approx. INR 26.75 lakh) a year for 2026. The Maitri Scholars Program fully funds around 45 Indian STEM PhD students. For taught degrees, expect a partial award and plan a top-up.

No. Although it is worth up to AUD 100,000 (approx. INR 68.5 lakh), it is a narrow, need-based award tied to ASHA-supported Delhi slum communities, with nominations made by ASHA. Most Indian coursework applicants should instead target the Sydney Scholars India Program, the Sydney International Student Award, or the Vice-Chancellor’s scheme.

Most international scholarships are partial, with tuition reductions of 15% to 50%. ANU’s Chancellor’s International Scholarship gives Indian applicants a 25% fee waiver, and Adelaide University’s current suite tops out at a 50% Academic Excellence award. Full-tuition awards for taught degrees are uncommon, so families should budget for the remaining balance plus living costs.

A tuition scholarship lowers the fees you must prove, but it does not remove the living-cost requirement. A single Subclass 500 applicant must still show about AUD 29,710 (approx. INR 20.3 lakh) for 12 months, according to ICEF Monitor reporting the Department of Home Affairs change. Your scholarship letter is useful evidence of reduced tuition liability.

Yes. The J.N. Tata Endowment offers a loan scholarship of up to Rs 20 lakh for overseas postgraduate study, and Australia is eligible. Remember it is a loan, repayable after study. The Inlaks Shivdasani Foundation, by contrast, funds only the UK, Europe and the USA, so it cannot pay for an Australian degree.

Ardent Overseas has guided Indian students and their families on overseas admissions since 2014, with offices in Hyderabad and Tirupati and counsellors who track Australian visa and scholarship changes intake by intake. Read more about our team and review process on the AOEC India page.