Study in Dubai for Indian Students in 2026: Branch-Campus Tuition Fees

Study in Dubai for Indian Students
Study in Dubai for Indian Students

Dubai has become a serious study-abroad option for Indian students, and it already feels familiar. Indian students make up 43% of Dubai’s international higher-education population, the largest group of all, per Gulf News quoting KHDA figures for the 2024-25 academic year. The draw is the branch-campus model. You can earn a UK, Australian, or Indian-parent degree on a Dubai campus, a 3 to 4 hour flight from home, often for less than the same degree in London or Sydney. This guide gives you the honest numbers: real 2026 tuition and living costs in rupees, the visa steps, and the question most families get wrong, whether the degree will be recognised back in India. Start with the takeaways below, then the fees table.

Written by
Senior Counsellor for the Middle East and Asian countries
Nagesh Danagalla helps Indian students with university selection, admissions, and student visas for Middle East and Asian destinations at AOEC India. A B.Tech and M.Tech graduate of JNTU Hyderabad, he brings destination-specific expertise in admissions and visa documentation.
5 Years, 320 students counselled
Reviewed by
Managing Director
Mr. Kongara Sridhar, Director of AOEC India, has over 12 years of experience in overseas education consulting, admissions, and student visa guidance.
Over 12 years Experience

Key Takeaways

  • Dubai enrolled 42,026 students across 41 private higher-education institutions in 2024-25, its highest count to date.
  • Indian students are reported at 43% of Dubai’s international intake, the single largest national group.
  • 37 of those 41 institutions are international branch campuses, so your degree is awarded by the foreign or Indian parent university.
  • Branch-campus tuition runs roughly AED 50,925 to 82,400 a year (about ₹13.1 to 21.2 lakh).
  • The student visa is sponsored by your university and is valid for 1 year, renewable each year of study.
  • September is the main intake; there is no permanent-residency route, only post-study Job Seeker, Green, or Golden visas.

Dubai is a branch-campus study hub where most degrees are awarded by foreign or Indian parent universities. In the 2024-25 academic year, the Dubai Government Media Office recorded 42,026 students across 41 private higher-education institutions, the highest to date. For Indian families, this means a recognised foreign degree earned close to home.

42,026

Students in Dubai's private higher-ed sector KHDA, 2024-25

43%

Indian share of the international intake Gulf News / KHDA, 2024-25

37

International branch campuses (of 41) Gulf News / KHDA, 2024-25

AED 4,170

Monthly living cost, single, ex-rent (≈ ₹1.07 lakh) Numbeo, Jun 2026

1 year

Student visa validity, renewable GDRFA Dubai, 2026

September

Primary intake (Jan secondary) Per-campus, 2026

One honest framing up front: Dubai is one emirate, not the whole UAE. This guide stays inside Dubai. If you’ve seen names like NYU Abu Dhabi mentioned alongside Dubai, those sit in a different emirate with different campuses, so we leave them out to keep your shortlist clean.

Is Dubai the right fit for Indian students?

Dubai suits students who want a foreign-awarded degree near home in a tax-free, low-crime city. International students reached 35.2% of Dubai's private higher-education population in 2024-25, per Gulf News quoting KHDA. It is a weaker fit for families set on permanent residency or a large public-research-university system.

Dubai is a strong choice for some students and a poor one for others, so weigh the two columns below before you fall for the skyline. Fit beats brand-name FOMO every time.

This sounds like you
 
You want a UK, Australian, or Indian branch-campus degree close to home; you value a tax-free, safe city; you have family in the Gulf; you want lower total cost than London or Sydney; and a September start fits your timeline.
Pause and reconsider
 
You expect permanent residency (there is none); you want a large public-research scene; you are on a tight budget and assumed Dubai is cheap (private fees are premium); or you need guaranteed part-time income to fund the year.

Here is how Dubai stacks up against the usual Western options.

FactorDubaiUKCanada / Australia
Annual cost vs DubaiBaselineHigherHigher
Permanent-residency pathwayNoneLimitedYes, established routes
Flight time from India3 to 4 hours8 to 9 hours14 to 16 hours
Degree you earnUK, Australian, or Indian branch degreeHome UK degreeHome Canadian or Australian degree
Post-study workJob Seeker or Green Visa, no auto routeGraduate Route (time-limited)Longer post-study work options

If you are worried about picking wrong, a short, honest conversation usually settles it, and our team can map your grades and budget against the right campus. Our rundown of universities in Dubai can pressure-test your shortlist too.

Why do Indian students choose Dubai?

Indian students choose Dubai for proximity, a large Indian community, tax-free living, and recognised foreign degrees. In 2024-25, the Dubai Government Media Office reported total enrolment grew 20% and international enrolment grew 29%, signalling fast-rising demand. For families, this combines Western-curriculum quality with home being a short flight away.

Distance is the first reason, and it matters to both student and parent. A flight home is roughly 3 to 4 hours, far easier on a family’s first semester apart than a 9-hour haul to the UK. The rest of the pull comes down to the points below.

  • A large Indian diaspora. Familiar food, festivals, and community mean less culture shock in your first months.
  • Tax-free income. The UAE charges no personal income tax, so any post-study salary stretches further.
  • Safety and parent comfort. Dubai’s low street-crime reputation is a recurring reason parents in our briefings name first.
  • Recognised foreign degrees, earned locally. You graduate with a UK, Australian, or Indian university’s name on the certificate.
  • Government momentum. Under the Education 33 strategy, Dubai targets international students at 50% of higher-education enrolment by 2033, so the sector is investing, not shrinking.

That last point matters more than it looks. The Education 33 target tells you the city is committed to growing as a study destination through 2033, which usually means more campuses, more courses, and steadier visa rules, the kind of stability a parent wants before committing three years of fees.

How does Dubai’s higher-education system work?

Dubai's higher education runs mainly on international branch campuses licensed locally and accredited federally. In the 2025-26 academic year, the Dubai Government Media Office confirmed three new universities opened, including IIM Ahmedabad. For students, this means choosing between branch campuses, local private universities, and free-zone institutes, each with a different awarding body.

Two terms trip up almost every family we counsel, so get the vocabulary right before you compare universities. KHDA (Knowledge and Human Development Authority) is a Dubai operating licence, while CAA (Commission for Academic Accreditation) is the UAE-wide federal accreditor. A campus can hold a KHDA licence to operate yet still need CAA accreditation for a federally valid degree. Keep that difference in mind; section nine returns to why it decides India recognition.

Institution typeWhat it means for you
International branch campusA Dubai campus of a foreign or Indian parent university; the degree is awarded by the parent (most of Dubai’s institutions).
Local private universityA UAE-based private university awarding its own CAA-accredited degree.
Free-zone instituteCampuses clustered in Dubai International Academic City or Dubai Knowledge Park, education free zones built for higher-ed providers.
KHDA licencePermission to operate a campus in Dubai; it is not, on its own, India recognition.
CAA accreditationFederal academic accreditation that makes a degree valid UAE-wide.

The system keeps adding names you’ll recognise. For 2025-26, IIM Ahmedabad opened a Dubai presence alongside two other new international universities, a signal that even top Indian institutions now see value in a Gulf campus.

Which universities in Dubai are best for Indian students?

Dubai hosts branch campuses of UK, Australian, and Indian universities plus regional private institutions. In the latest QS edition, QS ranks the parent Heriot-Watt University among the global top few hundred, with campuses in the UK, Dubai, and Malaysia. For students, the awarding parent, not a separate branch rank, signals the degree's standing.

Start your shortlist from the parent country and what each campus is known for. One note to set expectations: QS ranks parent universities, not Dubai branches separately, so treat any “Dubai campus ranked #X” claim with care.

University (Dubai campus)Parent countryDegree recognised asEntry routeBest for
Heriot-Watt University DubaiUKUK degreeIELTS or MOIEngineering, business, built environment
University of Birmingham DubaiUKUK degreeIELTS or MOIBusiness, computer science, research-led teaching
Middlesex University DubaiUKUK degreeIELTS or MOIBusiness, media, psychology, law
University of Wollongong DubaiAustraliaAustralian degreeIELTS or MOIIT, engineering, business
Murdoch University DubaiAustraliaAustralian degreeIELTS or MOIMedia, business, IT
BITS Pilani DubaiIndiaIndia (UGC via parent)12th marks; BITSAT optional for merit/scholarshipEngineering, India-recognised degree
MAHE Dubai (Manipal)IndiaIndia (UGC via parent)Parent norms / MOIEngineering, business, design, media
Amity University DubaiIndiaIndia (UGC via parent)Parent norms / MOIBusiness, engineering, broad UG choice
SP Jain School of Global ManagementIndia / globalVerify separately (not UGC-equivalence)Entrance plus interviewMulti-city business and management degrees

On fees and scholarships: verified 2026 tuition sits between AED 50,925 and 82,400 a year across these campuses (per-campus figures are in the cost table below), and merit waivers commonly range from 10% to 50%, with some route-specific higher awards. Confirm the exact figure for your course with the campus, and shortlist by fit rather than headline fee.

Fit over brand: a higher-ranked parent is not automatically the right pick. If your goal is an India-recognised engineering degree, an Indian-parent campus may serve you better than a higher-ranked UK one. Match the campus to your course and your home plans first.

What are the best courses to study in Dubai for Indian students?

Dubai's strongest programmes cluster in business, engineering and computing, media and design, and hospitality. In 2024-25, Gulf News, quoting KHDA, noted new-intake international share rose from 25.3% to 29.4%, reflecting wider course demand. For students, the best courses to study in Dubai align with the city's finance, tech, and tourism economy.

Pick the stream that matches your strengths and Dubai’s job market, whether you want a bachelor’s or a masters in Dubai. Our overview of courses in Dubai maps each stream to why Indian students choose it.

StreamWhy Indian students pick it
Engineering and computer scienceStrong Indian-parent options (BITS, MAHE) and clear links to Dubai’s tech and construction sectors.
Business and MBADubai is a regional finance and trade hub; a masters in Dubai in management plugs into local employers fast.
Medicine and health sciencesGrowing private-healthcare sector; new medical colleges expand options.
Media and designDubai Media City and a design-led economy make portfolios employable locally.
Hospitality and tourismOne of the world’s busiest tourism economies offers placements and internships on your doorstep.

If you are still unsure, run your choice through four questions:

  1. Does the stream match your 12th subjects or your bachelor’s background?
  2. Does Dubai’s economy hire for it locally, or would you need to move?
  3. Is the degree from an India-recognised parent if you plan to return?
  4. Can your family fund the full tuition plus living, not just year one?

What is the cost of studying in Dubai for Indian students?

Branch-campus tuition in Dubai runs roughly AED 50,000 to 82,400 a year for most programmes. For September 2025 entry, Middlesex University Dubai set undergraduate tuition at AED 62,982 a year. For Indian families, this means a Western-style degree at a lower headline cost than studying in the UK or Australia directly.

The cost splits into two buckets: tuition and living. Take tuition first, drawn straight from official campus fee pages. Some quoted tuition fees already include the UAE’s 5% VAT (value-added tax), flagged where it applies.

Campus and programmeAnnual tuition (AED)Approx. INR
BITS Pilani Dubai, B.E.AED 55,500≈ ₹14.3 lakh
MAHE Dubai, B.Tech CSE (incl. 5% VAT)AED 57,750≈ ₹14.8 lakh
MAHE Dubai, BBA (incl. 5% VAT)AED 50,925≈ ₹13.1 lakh
Middlesex University Dubai, UGAED 62,982≈ ₹16.2 lakh
Middlesex University Dubai, MBAAED 82,400≈ ₹21.2 lakh

Living costs are the second bucket, and they swing sharply with housing, so plan around how you’ll actually live. Day-to-day spending excluding rent is about AED 4,170 a month (≈ ₹1.07 lakh), per Numbeo’s June 2026 estimate; housing is what you add on top.

Housing scenarioTypical rent/month (AED)All-in/month incl. day-to-day (AED)Approx. INR per year (10 to 12 months)
University hostel or shared roomAED 2,500 to 4,500*AED 6,700 to 8,700≈ ₹17 to 27 lakh
Shared flat, own roomAED 3,500 to 5,500*AED 7,700 to 9,700≈ ₹20 to 30 lakh
Private 1-bed apartmentAED 5,269 to 8,893AED 9,400 to 13,000≈ ₹24 to 40 lakh

The all-in picture is a range, not one number, so budget for your housing tier. Parents, one thing to get right: your proof-of-funds figure for the visa is this living-cost money you must show, not an extra fee on top. Add tuition plus 10 to 12 months of living, then check the math against an education loan from HDFC Credila, Avanse, or SBI. Our full breakdown of the cost of studying in Dubai walks through how families structure that funding.

Scholarships to study in Dubai for Indian students

Dubai scholarships for international students are university merit tuition waivers, commonly 10% to 50% with some higher route-specific awards, not government cash grants. The UAE runs no central cash-scholarship scheme for foreign students. For Indian families, this means scholarships to study in Dubai for Indian students lower tuition directly but rarely cover living costs, so budget for the full year regardless.

A lot of pages overpromise this. There is no UAE government cash-scholarship scheme for international students. What you’ll find instead are merit-based tuition waivers from individual universities, scaling with your 12th or bachelor’s marks.

Waiver typeWhat it usually covers
Merit tuition waiver10% to 50% off tuition, scaled to marks; entrance-based routes can award more, with caps and conditions.
Early-application or sibling discountSmaller percentage off for applying early or having family enrolled.
Sport or talent waiverSelective, programme-specific, varies by campus.

Improve your odds by applying early, keeping transcripts strong, and asking each campus which waiver tier your marks qualify for. The waiver percentage changes your loan size, so get it in writing before you accept, and an Ardent Overseas adviser can compare offers across campuses with you.

Will your Dubai degree be recognised in India?

This is the question that decides whether a Dubai degree is worth it for a returning student, and most pages skip it. The short answer: it depends entirely on how your campus is structured, not on its KHDA licence or its skyline. Get this wrong and a returning graduate can struggle to get a degree treated as equivalent for jobs or further study in India.

Under the UGC’s 2025 equivalence regulations, degrees obtained through franchising arrangements are not recognised in India, according to The PIE News. That single rule is the fork in the road. A franchise arrangement, where a local operator runs a foreign brand under licence, falls outside recognition. An offshore campus of an Indian parent is treated differently: campuses of BITS Pilani, MAHE, and Amity are recognised through their parent institutions’ UGC (University Grants Commission) status, because the parent itself is UGC-recognised in India.

It also helps to separate three bodies families mix up constantly. As The PIE News and accreditation guidance explain, KHDA is only a Dubai operating licenceCAA is the federal accreditor that makes a degree valid across the UAE; and India recognition runs through the UGC, not either Dubai body. A KHDA licence tells you nothing about whether India will treat the degree as equivalent.

Quick rule for returning students: if you plan to work or study further in India, pick an offshore campus of a UGC-recognised Indian parent, or a foreign-parent degree you'll get assessed for equivalence, and avoid pure franchise models. Confirm the campus structure in writing before you accept an offer.

Regulated professions are separate: for medicine, law, architecture, nursing, pharmacy, and similar fields, UGC equivalence does not apply. Check the relevant Indian statutory council (for example the NMC, BCI, or PCI) before you enrol, whatever the campus structure.

Body / routeWhat it actually decides
KHDADubai operating licence only; not India recognition.
CAAFederal UAE accreditation; makes the degree valid UAE-wide.
UGC (India)Decides India equivalence; excludes franchise-model degrees.
Indian-parent offshore campusRecognised via the parent’s UGC status (BITS, MAHE, Amity).

Admission requirements to study in Dubai for Indian students

Dubai admission needs your 10+2 or bachelor's marks, English proof, and standard documents. According to BITS Pilani Dubai, engineering entry follows the parent's academic standards, with the university's own visa service charge of AED 2,900 on top of the government permit fee. For Indian students, requirements mirror the parent university's norms, so bands vary by campus and course rather than by a single national rule.

Two things drive whether you get in: your academic band and your English proof. The tables below show typical bands; your specific campus may set higher or lower. If you’re applying to study in Dubai after 12th, the undergraduate row is your starting point.

LevelTypical academic requirement
UndergraduateCompleted 10+2 (CBSE, ISC, or state board) with subject marks meeting the course cut-off.
PostgraduateA relevant bachelor’s degree with the minimum aggregate the parent university requires.
English routeTypical expectation
IELTS or TOEFLCommon band of IELTS 6.0 to 6.5; campus and course set the exact score.
Medium of Instruction (MOI)Many campuses accept an MOI certificate, letting eligible students study in Dubai without IELTS.

You can often skip the test. Many campuses let you study in Dubai without IELTS if your school confirms English-medium teaching, so check whether a Medium of Instruction certificate meets your course rule before you book an exam. Our full list of the requirements to study in Dubai covers the academic bands, English routes, and documents each campus expects.

Keep this document checklist ready before you start an application:

  1. Valid passport (6+ months validity).
  2. 10+2 marksheet or bachelor’s degree and transcripts.
  3. IELTS or TOEFL scorecard, or an MOI certificate.
  4. Statement of purpose (SOP) and letters of recommendation (LORs).
  5. Passport-size photographs to UAE specifications.
  6. Financial proof for the visa, plus attestation of academic documents where required.

If you’re not sure how to sequence all this, the step-by-step application walkthrough in the next section lays out the order so nothing slips.

What are the intakes in Dubai for Indian students?

Dubai universities run a primary September intake, a secondary January intake, and limited summer entries. For the 2026 cycle, Manipal University Dubai lists fees for students enrolling in September 2026 alongside earlier September 2025 to February 2026 entries. For Indian students, September offers the widest course choice and the strongest scholarship cycle.

Target September if you can. The intake you pick shapes your whole timeline, and most families aim for September because that’s when course choice and waiver cycles peak.

September
 
The main intake. Widest course choice and the strongest scholarship cycle. Start your application 6 to 9 months ahead.
January / February
 
A solid second window for many programmes if you missed September or finished 12th late.
May to July
 
A smaller summer window with fewer courses; confirm availability for your specific programme.

Quick choice: aim for September if you can; take January only if your results or paperwork run late.

How do you apply to study in Dubai from India?

Applying to a Dubai campus from India runs in a direct sequence: shortlist, check eligibility, submit documents, receive an offer, pay a deposit, then start the visa. Most branch campuses admit on 10+2 or bachelor's marks plus English proof, without a central entrance exam. For Indian students, the university handles the offer and the residence permit together, so the route is simpler than a Western embassy application.

Here is the realistic path from India to a Dubai campus. Start early, because scholarship cycles and September seats fill first.

  1. Shortlist campuses. Match parent country, course, and budget using the university table above.
  2. Check eligibility. Confirm your 12th or bachelor’s marks and your English route, IELTS or a Medium of Instruction certificate.
  3. Prepare documents. Passport, marksheets, transcripts, English proof, statement of purpose, and reference letters.
  4. Apply and pay the application fee. Most campuses accept direct online applications, with no common central portal.
  5. Receive your offer. Conditional or unconditional, usually within a few weeks.
  6. Accept and pay the deposit. This locks your seat and triggers the residence-permit process.
  7. Complete the permit and travel. The university sponsors your residence permit, covered next, then you arrange flights and accommodation.

How does the Dubai student visa process work for Indian students?

A Dubai student visa is a residence permit that your licensed university sponsors and guarantees. According to GDRFA Dubai, the student residence permit carries a fee of AED 200, with the educational institution acting as host and guarantor, alongside a medical fitness test, Emirates ID, and health insurance. For Indian students, the university arranges this permit rather than you applying independently.

Parents, good news: your university drives the visa. You don’t lodge a separate embassy application as you would for some Western countries, because a full degree needs the residence permit, not a short study-visit visa. Here’s the realistic sequence.

  1. Accept your offer and pay the required deposit or first-semester fee.
  2. The university sponsors your student residence permit through GDRFA (General Directorate of Residency and Foreigners Affairs) as your host and guarantor.
  3. Pay the residence-permit fee of AED 200 (≈ ₹5,100) plus the standard government service charges (Knowledge and Innovation Dirham, an in-country fee, and delivery). Universities usually bundle the whole process and add their own visa service charge, for example BITS Pilani Dubai lists AED 2,900 (≈ ₹74,500).
  4. Complete biometrics and apply for your Emirates ID through the ICP (Federal Authority for Identity and Citizenship).
  5. Pass the mandatory medical fitness test and hold valid health insurance.
  6. Get the student residence permit stamped, valid for 1 year and renewable each year you study.

Along the way, officials mainly check your offer letter, financial proof, passport validity, and medical fitness. Because the residence visa is tied to your sponsor, keep your enrolment active to keep the visa valid. Our step-by-step guide to the Dubai student visa walks through the permit, medical, and Emirates ID stages in order.

Part-time work and post-study options in Dubai

Students in Dubai may work part-time only with university permission and a permit, and there is no automatic post-study work visa. As of 2025, Fragomen confirmed students need a No-Objection Certificate plus a temporary work permit to work. For Indian students, income is permit-dependent, and post-study residency runs through Job Seeker, Green, or Golden visas.

You can fund part of the year by working, but read this carefully before you bank on it. To work part-time you must be 18 or over and hold a university NOC (No-Objection Certificate) plus a MOHRE (Ministry of Human Resources and Emiratisation) temporary work permit. Some UAE free zones also allow short-term internship authorisations through the employer.

Honest caution on hours: the permitted weekly hours are permit-dependent and sources conflict, so do not budget your year around a fixed number of work hours. Confirm the exact limit with your university before you rely on any part-time income.

RouteThe rule
Part-time work while studyingAge 18+, university NOC plus a MOHRE temporary work permit; hours permit-dependent.
Free-zone internshipShort-term work authorisation via the free-zone employer.
Job Seeker entry permitPost-study entry permit of 60, 90, or 120 days to find a job, issued by the UAE’s ICP.
Green VisaSelf-sponsored residence for up to 5 years if you meet the income and qualification criteria.
Golden VisaLong-term residence for high achievers and specified categories.

One firm line for families: there is no permanent-residency or citizenship pathway through study in the UAE, and no automatic post-study work visa. From visa briefings we delivered this year, this is the single fact that most surprises parents, so plan your return or your next-country move rather than assuming Dubai becomes home.

Common mistakes Indian students make when choosing Dubai

The costliest Dubai mistakes are assuming PR exists, confusing a KHDA licence with India recognition, and budgeting tuition only. According to The PIE News, India's UGC 2025 framework excludes franchise-model degrees. For Indian families, avoiding these errors protects both the budget and the degree's value back home.

We’ve counselled enough families to see the same avoidable slip-ups again and again. Read this list before you sign anything; most of these cost money or peace of mind later.

  • Assuming a KHDA licence equals India recognition. It does not; check UGC equivalence and the campus structure.
  • Confusing Dubai with Abu Dhabi options. They are different emirates with different campuses; keep your shortlist to Dubai if Dubai is your plan.
  • Expecting permanent residency. There is none; plan your post-study route in advance.
  • Budgeting tuition only. Rent in AED is the figure that breaks budgets; add 10 to 12 months of living cost.
  • Assuming guaranteed part-time income. Work needs a permit and the hours are not fixed; don’t fund the year on it.
  • Picking a brand over recognition. For returning students, an India-recognised parent often matters more than a glossy name.
  • Applying late. September fills first and the best waivers go early.

Get in Touch

Frequently Asked Questions

It’s worth it if you want a UK, Australian, or Indian branch-campus degree close to home, a tax-free city, and a large Indian community. It’s a weaker fit for families chasing permanent residency or a deep research-university scene. Indian students are reported to make up 43% of Dubai’s international intake, so you won’t feel isolated.

A branch-campus degree from an Indian parent like BITS Pilani, MAHE, or Amity is recognised through that parent’s UGC status. India’s UGC 2025 framework does not recognise franchise-model degrees, so confirm in writing that your campus runs as a recognised offshore campus rather than a franchise before you accept the offer.

No. The UAE has no permanent-residency pathway. Graduates use a Job Seeker entry permit of 60 to 120 days or apply for a 5-year Green Visa or a Golden Visa if eligible. None of these convert automatically into citizenship or PR, so plan your next step before you graduate.

Yes, from age 18, but only with a university No-Objection Certificate plus a temporary work permit; some free zones allow short-term internships. The permitted weekly hours depend on the permit and sources conflict, so confirm the exact limit with your university and don’t budget your year around part-time income.

It depends heavily on housing, so plan in two parts. Tuition at Dubai branch campuses runs about AED 50,925 to 82,400 a year (₹13.1 to 21.2 lakh). Living adds roughly AED 67,000 to 156,000 a year depending on whether you use hostel/shared housing or a private apartment. A realistic all-in year is roughly ₹28 lakh on a shared budget and ₹37 to 60 lakh with private housing, depending on tuition and lifestyle.

Often yes. Many Dubai campuses accept a Medium of Instruction certificate from your English-medium school or run their own English test instead of IELTS or TOEFL. Rules vary by university and course, so confirm the English requirement for your exact programme before you book any exam.

Ardent Overseas has counselled Indian students and families on overseas admissions since 2014, with offices in Hyderabad and Tirupati and partnerships across UK, Australian, and Gulf campuses. Kongara Sridhar has guided 2,500+ students through admissions and visa briefings. Read how we verify fees and rules in our editorial standards.

Sources

Official sources first, then reputable third-party.

Everything you need to study abroad, in one place.

Explore articles and guides that help you prepare with confidence, covering scholarship applications, financial planning, and tips for adapting to a new culture. We have built comprehensive resources to get you ready for your educational adventure.