Is France Good for Indian Students? An Honest 2026 Verdict

Is France Good for Indian Students
Is France Good for Indian Students

France is a strong, high-value choice for many Indian students, but it is the right call only when the budget, the language plan, and the career goal all line up. In 2024-25, Campus France reported in Nearly 445,000 international students in France in 2024-2025 that 443,500 international students were enrolled in French higher education, a 3% rise over one year. So the question “is France good for Indian students” already has a large, growing answer behind it. This 2026 verdict is deliberately honest: it gives you the real wins, the drawbacks no brochure prints, and the year-1 cost in INR so your family can decide with open eyes. Skim the Key Takeaways first, then dig into the section that matters most to you.

INR conversions use live Google-published rates: €1 ≈ ₹108.37 (captured 2026-06-20); the comparison table also uses £1 ≈ ₹125.19 and C$1 ≈ ₹66.73 (2026-06-21). Cross-country figures were verified from official sources (gov.uk, DAAD, UCC, educanada.ca) on 2026-06-21. The “80 files” figure below is our own counselling observation, not an official statistic. Rates fluctuate intraday; figures are indicative.

Written 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
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
Last updated on 22 Jun 2026

Key Takeaways

  • France hosts world-leading business schools, with HEC Paris ranked #1 globally for the Masters in Management in 2026 and 1,600-plus English-taught programmes.
  • Public-university tuition for non-EU students stays modest at roughly €2,895-3,941/year (about ₹3.1-4.3 lakh), far below the UK or USA.
  • You must show about €615/month (about ₹66,650) in living funds for the visa; proof of funds is where most refusals happen.
  • From 1 July 2026, non-scholarship non-EU students are set to lose APL housing aid under the 2026 budget measure, raising real monthly costs.
  • You can study in English, but client-facing jobs after graduation usually need B2-level French.
  • Master’s graduates get a job-search permit: the standard RECE runs 12 months, while Indian graduates may use the APS route, renewable once to 24 months, still tighter than some rivals’ multi-year stay-back.

France suits Indian students who want recognised degrees at modest public-university tuition and can plan around French-language and funding hurdles. In 2024-25, Campus France recorded 443,500 international students in French higher education, a 3% annual rise. This scale signals a tested, well-supported system, not an experimental destination, which lowers the risk for a first-time international applicant.

So here is the plain verdict you came for: whether France is good for Indian students depends entirely on the student, and the gap between a great fit and a costly mistake is wide. If you and your family can plan the money early and you are open to learning some French, the value is real. If you want an English-only campus with a fast permanent-residency route, France is not built for that. That is why this is a verdict, not a sales pitch.

The families we counsel in Hyderabad and Tirupati rarely struggle with whether France looks attractive. They struggle with whether it fits their child’s budget, board background, and end goal. That is the real question, and it deserves the INR-quantified downsides you will see below, not just the highlights. For the full country picture, our study in France guide walks through routes, intakes, and documents in one place.

  • Good fit: value-focused families, students open to French, business or engineering goals.
  • Weak fit: English-only-forever students, anyone needing a quick PR pathway.

What France genuinely gets right for Indian students

France offers globally ranked institutions, low public tuition, and broad English-taught access. In the QS Masters in Management ranking 2026, HEC Paris placed #1 worldwide, with five of the top six schools located in France. This concentration of elite management education, paired with public-university affordability, gives Indian applicants a rare mix of prestige and price that few destinations match at the same cost.

Let’s start with what actually earns France its reputation, because the upside is genuine. According to QS (TopUniversities), in its QS World University Rankings for Masters in Management 2026, HEC Paris is ranked #1 in the world, with five of the top six schools located in France. If your goal is a Master in Management or an MBA, that is a serious draw for you and your family to weigh.

Worried that everything is taught in French? It is not. As of 2026, Campus France’s Taught in English catalogue lists more than 1,600 higher-education programmes taught wholly or partly in English, which is why English-taught study in France is now realistic for Indian students who have not studied a word of French. The Grandes Écoles (France’s selective elite institutions) and public universities both run such tracks.

The momentum is real, too. In 2024-25, Campus France reported that 9,100 Indian students were enrolled in France, making India the 11th-largest country of origin, up 17% year on year. Under the Franco-Indian roadmap, France has set an official target of 30,000 Indian students by 2030, signalling smoother visa processing and more India-facing support over the next few years.

#1

HEC Paris, QS Masters in Management QS, 2026

1,600+

English-taught programmes Campus France, 2026

9,100

Indian students enrolled Campus France, 2024-25

Two more practical wins matter to families. France sits inside the Schengen Area, so your student residence permit lets you travel across most of Europe without separate visas. And master’s graduates can stay on to look for work through a dedicated permit, covered further down. Add the official 30,000-student push, and the direction of travel clearly favours Indian applicants.

The drawbacks no France brochure shows you

France carries real friction for Indian applicants: language barriers, bureaucracy, and a 2026 cut to housing aid. From 1 July 2026, non-EU students without a French government social scholarship are set to lose eligibility for APL housing aid, raising monthly living costs. These frictions do not cancel the upside, but they reshape the budget and the timeline that families must plan around well before any deposit is paid.

Now the part most promotional pages skip. The biggest day-to-day drawback is the paperwork. The carte de séjour (French residence permit) renewals, the OFII (French immigration office) validation, and the preuve de ressources (proof of resources) checks all take patience. None of it is impossible, but it is slow, and rushing it is how students slip into legal-status gaps.

The 2026 housing-aid change stings. From 1 July 2026, non-EU students who do not hold an eligible higher-education social scholarship are set to lose access to APL/ALF/ALS housing aid (the CAF benefits that previously trimmed rent) under Article 179 of the 2026 finance law, with implementation details to be clarified by decree. For a non-boursier (non-scholarship) student, that is real money gone from the monthly budget. If you are chasing aid, our overview of scholarships to study in France explains which awards keep boursier (scholarship-holder) status and the housing benefit attached to it.

Here is what we see firsthand, and it is the drawback families underestimate most. Across 80 Campus France files we handled for the September 2025 intake, the single biggest refusal driver was proof of funds, specifically how the money was accumulated and how parental income was justified. This is our own counselling data, not an official statistic, but the pattern is consistent: a strong admit does not save a weak funds file. Parents, this is the line that matters most for you.

The honest warning: a recent lump sum parked in an account rarely convinces a visa officer. Build and document the attestation de prise en charge (financial sponsorship undertaking) and the funds trail months ahead, not days.

Is France actually affordable once you add the hidden 2026 costs?

France stays affordable at public universities even after mandatory fees, though Paris housing pushes totals higher. For 2026-27, non-EU public-university tuition is set around €2,895 (bachelor's) and €3,941 (master's) per year, pending the final ministerial amount. Compared with UK or USA tuition, this keeps the French degree within reach for middle-income Indian families, provided living costs and one-off administrative charges are budgeted realistically from the start.

Money is where most family conversations get real, so let’s add the figures the brochures separate out. The cost of studying in France for Indian students is not just tuition; it is tuition plus mandatory fees plus living funds. According to ICEF Monitor, for the 2026-27 academic year, non-EU families should budget at least the differentiated rates of EUR 2,895/year (about INR 3,13,700) for a bachelor’s and EUR 3,941/year (about INR 4,27,100) for a master’s, with the final ministerial figure still to be confirmed. A 2026 decree also caps how many non-EU students each public university may exempt from these fees, so do not assume the old reduced EU rate; confirm the exoneration (fee exemption) status per university.

Then come the smaller charges that families forget. For 2026-27, the CVEC (student-life contribution) is €105 (about ₹11,380), unchanged from the previous year. Campus France lists a stay tax of €50 (about ₹5,419) to validate the VLS-TS (your long-stay student visa acting as a residence permit) on arrival, paid online through the OFII portal. For Indian applicants, the Campus France Études en France (the compulsory pre-application procedure for Indian students) procedure fee is ₹18,500.

The big budget line is living funds, not tuition. For the 2026 intake, Indian applicants must show a minimum of €615 per month (about ₹66,650) in living funds for the French student visa, roughly €7,380 (about ₹8.0 lakh) for a 12-month stay. Treat this preuve de ressources as the visa floor, not a realistic living budget: Paris rents alone often exceed it, so plan well above this number rather than to it.

Your real year-1 cost in INR

₹4.27L

Master's tuition (public) ICEF Monitor, 2026-27

₹8.0L

Living funds, 12 months Campus France, 2026

₹11,380

CVEC fee CROUS, 2026-27

₹5,419

VLS-TS stay tax Campus France, 2026

Add those and a master’s year-1 lands near ₹12.5 lakh before flights and Paris-premium rent, which is modest by global standards. This is a summary, not a full ledger; for the line-by-line breakdown and city-by-city living bands, see our detailed cost of studying in France for Indian students guide.

Can you study and work in France without speaking French?

Studying in France without French is possible through English-taught degrees, but part-time work and employment increasingly need French. Student visa holders may work up to 964 hours per year, about 60% of full-time. English-medium classrooms remove the entry barrier, yet daily life, internships, and most client-facing roles still reward conversational French, so a language plan remains part of any realistic France decision.

Can you really do this in English? For coursework, yes. With 1,600-plus English-taught courses in France, you can complete an entire master’s without French in the classroom. But work is a different story, and this is where students who skipped a language plan get stuck. On a VLS-TS, student visa holders may work up to 964 hours per year (60% of full-time), which funds part of your living costs but is capped by law.

How far does that money go? From 1 June 2026, France’s minimum wage (SMIC) is €12.31 gross per hour (about ₹1,334), so legal part-time work helps, but it cannot replace your visa proof of funds. The preuve de ressources still has to be shown separately; earnings are a top-up, not a substitute.

  • Classroom: English-taught study in France works without any French.
  • Part-time jobs: 964 hours/year cap; many roles still ask for basic French.
  • Internships: the stage (work placement) often needs workable French.

Our straight advice to families: treat DELF/B2 (an upper-intermediate French certification) as a career investment, even on an English-taught course. If you want to map English-medium options first, our list of English-taught courses in France is a practical starting point before you commit to a language track.

Jobs and ROI after graduation: does the payoff justify it?

France offers a structured post-study route whose length depends on the permit and nationality. Master's-level graduates can apply for a job-search and business-creation permit; the standard RECE runs 12 months, while Indian graduates may also use the APS route under the France-India migration agreement, which prefectures can renew. Client-facing and regulated roles typically expect B2-level French, which shapes the real return on investment.

Is the money you spent worth it in the end? That depends on the stay-back permit and your language level, so let’s be precise. After graduating, master’s-level graduates can apply for a job-search and business-creation permit. The standard RECE permit is valid for 12 months and non-renewable, but India is among the countries with a migration-flow agreement, so Indian graduates may instead use the APS route, which Campus France India describes as a 12-month permit renewable once, up to 24 months in total. Verify the current option with your prefecture before applying, because the rules shift, but even at its best it is tighter than the multi-year stay-back some rival destinations offer.

What actually helps you get hired? Two things stand out from what we see. First, the stage de fin d’études (final-year internship) often converts into a job offer, so treat it as the real interview. Second, hiring reality is blunt: technical and research roles hire in English, but most client-facing and many regulated roles expect B2 French. If you and your parents are weighing return on investment, the post-study work visa in France is generous enough to matter, and our guide to the post-study work visa in France explains the timing and conversion rules in full.

Stay-back factorWhat France offers
Permit optionsRECE (standard) or the APS route for Indian graduates
ValidityRECE 12 months, non-renewable; APS route: 12 months, renewable once, up to 24 months total (verify with your prefecture)
EligibilityMaster’s-level graduates
Hiring realityEnglish for tech/research; B2 French for client-facing roles

How does France compare with Germany, the UK, Ireland and Canada?

For Indian students weighing destinations, France pairs low public tuition with a 12-month standard stay-back, extendable to 24 months for master's graduates via the 12+12 APS route. Germany keeps tuition near a semester fee, the UK and Ireland teach in English at higher fees, and Canada offers a longer permit with a clearer permanent-residency route.

Still weighing France against the usual alternatives? This is the comparison families ask us for most. The table sets the headline trade-offs side by side; the figures for the other countries were verified from official sources in June 2026.

CountryTuition / year (international)LanguagePost-study stay-backPR route
FranceEUR 2,895-3,941 public (₹3.1-4.3L)French; English growing12 months standard; Indian master’s grads up to 24 months (12+12 route)Limited
GermanySemester fee EUR 70-430 (₹7,600-46,000); a few states EUR 1,500-3,000/semGerman; English growing~18-month job-seeker permitStrong
UKGBP 11,400-38,000 (₹14-48L)EnglishGraduate Route 2 years (apply by 31 Dec 2026; 18 months after)Moderate
IrelandEUR 18,130-51,000 (₹19.6-55L)English1 year (bachelor’s) / 2 years (master’s)Moderate
CanadaVaries by province and programmeEnglish (French in Québec)PGWP up to 3 yearsStrong

Read it by your priority. Lowest sticker price points to Germany, where public universities charge only a semester contribution. English-only teaching with a long stay-back points to the UK, whose Graduate Route runs two years for 2026 applicants, or to Ireland at higher non-EU fees per the UCC fee schedule. A firm permanent-residency goal points to Canada, where the PGWP can run up to three years. France wins when you want recognised degrees at low public tuition and can plan around French and the funds file.

Who should choose France, and who should pick another country?

Here is the triage we run with every family before they commit, because France rewards some profiles and punishes others. Treat this as a decision filter, not a verdict on the country. The same France that is a brilliant call for a value-focused engineering or management student can be the wrong call for someone who needs an English-only environment and a fast PR route.

You value price plus prestige
 
Public tuition near €3,941 (about ₹4.3 lakh) for a master’s, with elite Grandes Écoles in reach, fits value-focused Indian families well.
You will learn French
 
Open to DELF/B2 over two years? You unlock internships, part-time work, and the full job market after the RECE permit.
You need near-zero tuition
 
If even €3,941 strains the budget, a country like Germany, with near-zero tuition at most public universities, may suit better.
You want English-only and PR
 
Set on an English-only path or a faster permanent-residency route? Ireland (English-only) or Canada (PR pathway) deserve a closer look.

One filter we apply early comes straight from our own files: if a family cannot cleanly document the preuve de ressources trail, we slow the France decision down rather than risk the refusal we saw drive most of our September 2025 rejections. France can be right for you and your family, but only when the funds story is as strong as the admit. Run that honest check before you fall in love with the brochure.

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Frequently Asked Questions

No, not for the classroom. Over 1,600 programmes are taught in English, so you can finish a degree without French. But daily life, internships, and most client-facing jobs reward B2-level French, so a language plan still pays off across your two years there.

For the 2026 intake, you must show about €615 per month (about ₹66,650), roughly €7,380 (about ₹8.0 lakh) for a year. Just as important is how the money was accumulated; an unexplained recent deposit is the most common reason we see funds files questioned.

Yes, at master’s level. Graduates can apply for a job-search permit: the standard RECE runs 12 months, while Indian graduates may also use the APS route, which can be renewed once for up to 24 months total, so confirm the current option locally. Converting it into longer-term work depends on landing a role and, for many sectors, reaching B2 French.

On tuition, clearly yes. Public master’s tuition is about €3,941 (about ₹4.3 lakh) a year, a fraction of UK or US fees. Living costs in Paris narrow the gap, and from 1 July 2026 non-scholarship students are set to lose APL housing aid under the 2026 budget measure, so budget the city premium carefully.

In 2024-25, 9,100 Indian students were enrolled, up 17% in a year, making India the 11th-largest origin country. France targets 30,000 Indian students by 2030 under the Franco-Indian roadmap, which points to smoother processing and more India-facing support ahead.

France can be the right call, with eyes open

So, is France good for Indian students? For value-focused families who plan the money early and stay open to French, yes, the degrees are recognised, the public tuition is modest, and the stay-back route is workable. For students set on English-only campuses or a fast PR pathway, another destination may serve you better. The honest verdict is not “yes” or “no”; it is “yes, if the budget and language plan fit your goal.”

Ardent Overseas has counselled Indian students and parents from our Hyderabad and Tirupati offices, and France is one of the destinations our advisers handle end to end, from the Études en France procedure to the funds file that decides most outcomes. You can read how we verify every figure on our editorial standards page before you trust a single number here.