France operates one dominant September intake and a limited January intake offered mainly by select private and business schools. The national admission platforms run September-only cycles. In 2024-25, Campus France reported 9,100 Indian students in France, per its release Nearly 445,000 international students in France in 2024-2025. For most Indian applicants, September is the only realistic start.
The September rentree opens the full set of French university intakes; the January intake in France opens mainly at select private and business schools. In 2024-25, universities hosted 63% of international students, per Campus France enrolment data, and they admit through September alone. The implication: programme choice in January is far narrower than in the Fall intake.
From India, most applicants apply through Etudes en France, not Parcoursup or Mon Master. The official Mon Master platform states that candidates whose country of residence is covered by Etudes en France are not concerned by it, per the Mon Master eligibility page. The implication: for an India-resident applicant, Etudes en France is the route, and the platform calendars are reference dates.
Parcoursup is the national platform for first-year Bachelor (Licence) admission in France. For the 2026 cycle, the catalogue opens 17 December 2025 and wishes close 12 March 2026, per the Universite de Rennes Parcoursup 2026 key-dates page. The implication: a Licence applicant must enter voeux (course wishes) within a tight winter window.
Mon Master is the national platform for first-year Master's (M1) admission in France, but it does not cover applicants resident in Etudes en France countries such as India. For the 2026-27 cycle, applications run 17 February to 16 March 2026, with results from 3 June 2026, per the service-public.gouv.fr notice Mon Master 2026: admission results from 3 June. The implication: India-resident applicants follow Etudes en France, not Mon Master.
Campus France is the official body managing French study applications for Indian students, and Etudes en France (EEF) is its online platform. The EEF procedure is mandatory for applicants from 73 countries including India, per the Campus France Etudes en France procedure. The implication: study in France intakes for Indians run through EEF, not through Parcoursup or Mon Master.
The January (Spring) intake in France is offered mainly by select private and business schools, with no national-platform cycle. According to Paris School of Business, its Spring MSc students graduate in July, per its page The Spring Intake at Paris School of Business. The implication: a Spring intake in France means a private ecole de commerce, applied to directly.
The best intake to study in France depends on three factors: your final-exam timing, your course type, and your funding readiness. In 2024-25, France hosted 443,500 international students, a 3% rise per Campus France enrolment data, mostly through September. The implication: aligning your profile to the right intakes in France for Indian students decides whether you start in 12 months or 24.
Planning for the September rentree should begin around 12 months ahead. For the 2026-27 cycle, the DAP registration closes 15 December 2025, per the Campus France Etudes en France procedure. The implication: an Indian applicant aiming for the September 2026 intake must open the process in the autumn of 2025 to clear documents, the interview and the visa.