
Study in Finland Requirements for Indian Students
Requirements to Study in Finland for Indian Students (2026) The study in Finland requirements for Indian students in 2026 come
Courses in Finland for Indian students cover more than 600 English-taught bachelor's and master's degree programmes across 35 institutions in 2026, according to the Finnish National Agency for Education (EDUFI) and Study in Finland ("Universities in Finland"). This means an Indian applicant can complete a full Finnish degree in English, spanning engineering, ICT, business, health and design, without learning Finnish before arrival.
Finland's higher-education system has two parts: 13 research universities and 22 universities of applied sciences (UAS), as of 2026, according to the Finnish National Agency for Education (EDUFI) and Study in Finland ("Universities in Finland"). Together they teach more than 600 English-taught degrees, so an international applicant can study almost any major field, from engineering to nursing, entirely in English.
Under the Finnish (Bologna) system, a research-university bachelor's degree is 180 ECTS (3 years) and a master's is 120 ECTS (2 years), totalling 300 ECTS; Medicine is 360 ECTS and Dentistry 330 ECTS, according to the European Commission's Eurydice ("Finland - Second-cycle programmes"). ECTS (European Credit Transfer System, the EU's standard study-workload unit) lets an Indian applicant compare programme length across countries directly.
Fees and living-cost snapshot (2026-27). Beyond the tuition band shown with the course table above, EDUFI and Study in Finland ("Fees and Cost of Living") recommend budgeting about €900-€1,200 a month (approx. ₹99,000-₹1.32 lakh) for living costs. They also note the residence-permit minimum set by the Finnish Immigration Service (Migri) is €800 a month, roughly €9,600 (approx. ₹10.6 lakh) for year one. A first study residence permit costs around €600 online or €750 on paper (approx. ₹66,250-₹82,800), according to Migri. On scholarships: for bachelor's and master's students, Finland's scholarships are usually university tuition-fee waivers applied for during admission; they are competitive and normally do not cover living costs. Scholarship size, eligibility and renewal rules vary by institution; our Finland scholarships guide covers the tuition waivers worth applying for.
The right course level in Finland is decided by one thing: the qualification you hold today. A 12th-pass student maps to a bachelor's programme, and a graduate with a recognised bachelor's maps to a master's programme. Settle the level first, because it sets the entire shortlist, the entry requirements and the documents you will gather.
Edge case worth knowing: A UAS master's typically asks for around two years of relevant work experience after the bachelor's, on top of the degree itself. If you're a fresh graduate, a research-university master's is usually the cleaner route. Check the exact eligibility, marks bands and English requirements on each programme's own listing before you shortlist.
Health and social services remain Finland's top labour-shortage occupations, covering registered and practical nurses, early-childhood and special-needs teachers, and doctors, with programmers and application developers also on the shortage list, according to Finland's Occupational Barometer published by the Finnish Government and corroborated by CEDEFOP's Finland mismatch-occupations data. A degree in a shortage field gives an international graduate a clearer path from study to employment, though a job is never guaranteed by the field alone.
Reality check on medicine. Doctors are a persistent shortage occupation, but that does not mean there's an easy course route in. English-taught medical degrees for non-EU applicants in Finland are very limited, and practising as a doctor needs a separate licensing process. Treat medicine as labour-market context, not a recommended course in Finland for most Indian applicants. Nursing and other health and social-care programmes are the realistic, English-accessible health route.
You can complete a full degree in Finland entirely in English: in the spring 2026 cycle, English-taught bachelor's and master's programmes admitted international applicants through the joint application, according to the Finnish National Agency for Education (EDUFI) admission report. Finnish or Swedish, the two national languages, is not required for admission to these programmes, though basic Finnish helps with daily life and certain clinical placements.
Studyinfo.fi is Finland's official portal for the joint application, the single system through which applicants apply to higher education. For an autumn 2026 start, the January 2026 joint application ran 7-21 January 2026 with almost 300 English-taught study options, and you can apply to up to six programmes on one form, according to EDUFI and Study in Finland's joint-application notice. This single-form design lets an applicant compare and shortlist efficiently.
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