A “fully-funded” scholarship in 2026 means three things: tuition covered, monthly stipend, return airfare. Sometimes also health insurance and a settling-in grant. They exist in larger numbers than most students realize. Here’s where to find them and how the application game actually works.
The 10 Most Generous Fully-Funded Programs in 2026
1. DAAD (Germany)
Tuition + €992/month for Master’s, €1,300/month for PhD + travel + health insurance + family allowance. Open to almost every nationality. Deadlines typically September–November.
2. Erasmus Mundus Joint Masters (EU)
~€1,400/month + tuition + travel + installation grant. You study in 2–3 countries across one Master’s degree. Roughly 1,800 scholarships per year.
3. Chevening (UK)
UK Government scheme: full tuition + monthly stipend + return flights + arrival allowance. For one-year Master’s. Highly competitive — but a clear, predictable application process.
4. Fulbright (USA, for non-US citizens)
Tuition + living stipend + health + travel for Master’s or PhD in the US. Each country has its own commission and deadlines.
5. Australia Awards
Full tuition + stipend + return flights + establishment allowance + health insurance, for students from eligible developing countries.
6. Swiss Government Excellence Scholarships
~CHF 1,920/month + tuition waiver + health + housing allowance. Particularly strong for research Master’s and PhDs.
7. MEXT (Japan)
Japanese government scholarship: tuition + ~¥143,000/month + return airfare. Includes a free year of Japanese language training if needed.
8. KGSP / Global Korea Scholarship
Tuition + ~₩900,000/month + airfare + settlement allowance + one year of Korean language training.
9. Vanier Canada Graduate Scholarships
CAD 50,000/year for three years of doctoral study. Among the most generous PhD packages in the world.
10. Eiffel Excellence Scholarship (France)
€1,181/month for Master’s, €1,700 for PhD + travel + health + cultural activities. Tuition usually waived separately by the host institution.
The Real Application Calendar
The single biggest mistake students make: starting too late. The September intake for European programs has applications due the previous November–February. Plan 14–18 months ahead.
| When | What you should be doing |
|---|---|
| 18 months before | Shortlist 8–12 programs. Start studying for language tests. |
| 14 months before | Take IELTS/TOEFL/GRE. Begin requesting recommendation letters. |
| 12 months before | Draft statements of purpose. Get transcripts apostilled. |
| 10 months before | Submit applications. Most fully-funded deadlines are October–February. |
| 6 months before | Interviews, visa applications, accommodation. |
Statement of Purpose: The Brutal Truth
Selection committees read thousands of these. Three things separate winners from rejections:
- Specificity. Name the supervisor, the research group, the course code. Generic “I love your university” essays go in the bin.
- A “why this country” paragraph. Tie your goals to the country, not just the university.
- A return plan. Most government scholarships are soft-aid: they want you to bring skills home.
Hidden Programs Most People Miss
- NFP (Netherlands) — for mid-career professionals from 51 eligible countries.
- OFID Scholarships — full Master’s funding for developing-country students in any field.
- Türkiye Bürsları — Turkish government: tuition + stipend + accommodation + Turkish lessons.
- Hungarian Stipendium — full degree at any level in Hungary.
- Russian Government Quota — still operating, still generous, paperwork-heavy.
Browse the Schools
Use our directory of 10,200+ universities to find institutions that participate in the schemes above. Filter by country, then check the scholarship page on each university’s site for current deadlines.