Tuition Fees: A Critical Update for 2026–27
France’s tuition fee situation changed significantly in 2019 and is changing again for 2026–27. Here is the honest, current picture.
- For EU/EEA students: French and EU/EEA/Swiss students pay the national statutory rate of €178/year for bachelor’s, €254/year for master’s, €397/year for doctoral. The government sets these rates and apply uniformly across all public universities.
- For non-EU students: Since 2019, France has introduced “differentiated” fees. For 2026–27, French Higher Education Minister Philippe Baptiste announced on 21 April 2026 that almost all non-EU students coming to France for the 2026–27 academic year will be required to pay annual tuition of €2,895 for a bachelor’s programme and €3,941 for a master’s degree.
This is now effectively a national requirement, not just a recommendation. The minister has directed universities to implement these fees, removing the discretion that previously allowed some institutions to offer exemptions.
- Bachelor’s (Licence): €2,895/year
- Master’s: €3,941/year
- Doctoral (PhD): ~€397–€600/year
NOTE: Even at €2,895–€3,941/year, France remains dramatically cheaper than the UK (£22,000–£35,000/year), Australia (AUD 35,000–55,000/year), or the USA (USD 20,000–55,000/year) for comparable programmes. The French state still covers roughly two-thirds of your actual education costs; these fees represent only the student-facing portion. For students on a limited budget who want a European degree with genuine academic quality, France’s public university fees remain among the most competitive available.
Grandes Écoles and Business Schools (Private / Semi-Private)
Private and semi-private institutions set their own fees. Here is a realistic range:
- Sciences Po Paris: €7,000 – €16,000 (income-based sliding scale)
- HEC Paris MSc programmes: €18,000 – €30,000
- INSEAD MBA: €89,000+ (full programme)
- ESSEC / ESCP / EDHEC: €15,000 – €35,000
- Le Cordon Bleu: €15,000 – €30,000 (programme-dependent)
Living Costs
Cities like Lyon, Toulouse, and Montpellier generally offer lower living costs compared to Paris.
- Paris: €1,200 – €1,800
- Lyon: €900 – €1,300
- Bordeaux / Toulouse: €850 – €1,250
- Montpellier /Grenoble: €8000 – €1,200
- Lille / Nantes: €750 – €1,100
- Strasbourg: €800 – €1,200
The Housing Subsidy: What Has Actually Changed in 2026
This is one of the most important updates in this blog and one that is not yet reflected in most guides published before 2026.
France historically offered housing assistance (APL/ALS) through the CAF (Caisse d’Allocations Familiales) that could reduce a student’s rent by €100–€250 per month. For many non-EU international students, this subsidy was a genuine and significant part of their budget planning.
This has changed as of the 2026 Finance Act:
Effective from July 1, 2026, only students who have been awarded scholarships will qualify for accommodation support. Scholarship-less students will not qualify for accommodation assistance, even if they are validated for a VLS-TS student visa.
- EU/EEA students still eligible for APL/ALS
- Scholarship holders (any nationality) still eligible
- Non-EU students without a scholarship no longer eligible from July 1, 2026
The APL typically represented €100–€250/month. For a student studying for 2 years in Paris at €200/month, that is €4,800, a meaningful sum lost from the overall affordability calculation.
NOTE: If you are a non-EU student without a scholarship, do not factor CAF housing assistance into your budget for 2026–27 onwards. Plan your accommodation costs on full rent with no state subsidy. The practical implication: prioritise university residences (CROUS typically €300–€450/month), consider cities outside Paris where private rents are lower, and apply for Eiffel or institution scholarships that would restore your CAF eligibility.
Work Rights During Study
International students in France are allowed to work up to 964 hours per year during the academic year, approximately 20 hours per week, and full-time during official holiday periods.
At France’s minimum wage (SMIC), which is €11.88 per hour gross in 2026, working 20 hours per week generates approximately €950 gross per month during term. During summer holidays, full-time work can generate significantly more.
France’s job market for student workers is active, particularly in Paris, Lyon, and other major cities in hospitality, retail, tutoring, childcare (au pair), and language teaching. For students who speak French, the range of student employment is broader and pays better.
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