After selecting your university and course, you might even be starting to daydream about moving to a new country. This is when the inevitable feeling of unease arises: “How will I afford all this?”
For most Indian families, funding education abroad is one of the biggest financial decisions they will ever make together. Tuition fees, accommodation, visa costs, airfare, health insurance, and daily living expenses all add up far more than most students initially expect. And unlike domestic education, there’s very little room to figure it out as you go.
Most Indian students fund their education abroad in one of two ways: family savings, fixed deposits, or liquidated investments, which we call self-funding, or an education loan from a bank or NBFC. Both options have worked well for thousands of Indian students who are now thriving in careers abroad. Both also carry real risks if chosen for the wrong reasons.
The problem is that most students make this decision based on what their relatives suggest, or simply out of fear of debt. Very few actually sit down and work through the numbers.
That’s exactly what this guide is here to help you do. No jargon, no sales pitch, just an honest, India-specific breakdown of both options so you can walk away knowing which one actually works for your situation.
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