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🇩🇰 Study in Denmark

Danish Government
Scholarships

Fully or partially funded study at Danish universities for non-EU/EEA students. No central application — each university runs its own process. Here's what you need to know.

DKK 72K–130K/yr
Tuition (non-EU/EEA)
DKK 6,090–8,000
Monthly stipend
8+ Universities
Participating
Non-EU/EEA
Eligible students only
Free
Application fee
Home Denmark Scholarship
Overview

What Are Danish Government Scholarships?

Based on Section 19(6) of the Danish Act on Universities, Danish higher education institutions can award scholarships to highly qualified non-EU/EEA students. These aren't handed out broadly — each participating university receives a limited annual allocation, and competition is serious. The scholarship exists because Denmark wants to attract outstanding international talent and charges non-EU/EEA students substantial tuition fees to fund its higher education system.

The scholarship can be a full tuition waiver, partial tuition waiver, a monthly living grant, or a combination of both. What you actually get depends entirely on which university and faculty admits you. A scholarship at CBS comes with DKK 8,000 per month plus tuition. A scholarship at DTU may be tuition only, with no stipend at all. A scholarship at SDU includes both tuition and DKK 6,090 per month. Don't assume any uniform package — read the specific university's offer carefully.

This is probably the most important thing to understand upfront: there is no central portal. The Danish Government Scholarship is not one program with a single application. Each university manages its own allocation, sets its own criteria, has its own deadline, and makes its own decisions. Your job is to get admitted to a university that offers the scholarship — and to make your application strong enough that the scholarship committee takes notice. Some universities consider all applicants automatically; others require a separate statement or form.

Eligibility

Who Can Apply?

Who Is Eligible
  • Non-EU/EEA citizens enrolled or applying for full-degree programs at participating Danish universities
  • Swiss citizens — explicitly eligible despite not being in the EU or EEA
  • Applicants to full Master's or Bachelor's degree programs (not exchange or short programs)
Who Is Not Eligible
  • EU/EEA citizens (including Norwegians, Icelanders, and Liechtensteiners)
  • Students who qualify for SU (Danish State Educational Support) — regardless of citizenship
  • Students at artistic higher education institutions (music academies, etc.)
The SU Exclusion — Often Misunderstood

If you already qualify for SU — Denmark's state educational support, typically accessible through a Danish spouse, long-term Danish residency, or similar ties — you are excluded from the government scholarship entirely, regardless of your citizenship. This catches some applicants by surprise. SU eligibility is a disqualifier, not just a separate option.

Funding Reality

Is It Really "Fully Funded"?

Scholarship aggregator sites frequently label this program "fully funded." That is often misleading and depends heavily on which university awards you the scholarship. There is no single standard package.

The honest bottom line

Even with a DKK 8,000/month stipend, living costs in Copenhagen are high. Rent alone averages DKK 6,000–8,500/month for a single room. The stipend helps — significantly — but it rarely covers everything without careful budgeting. Outside Copenhagen (Aarhus, Odense, Aalborg), costs are lower and the stipend goes further.

Universities

Participating Universities

Seven institutions are actively known to participate. Each manages its own scholarship process, award count, and deadline.

Competition

The Reality of the Competition

The numbers are unambiguous. UCPH Faculty of Science scholarship recipients in 2025 had undergraduate GPAs at or above 98% — meaning near-perfect academic records from their home institutions. At Aarhus, 1–2 scholarships exist per Master's program, drawn from a pool of dozens of admitted non-EU applicants, all of whom met the program's admission standard. CBS awards roughly 25 scholarships across all its graduate programs combined — in a school that admits several hundred international students each year.

This is genuinely very competitive. But the important practical detail is this: at most universities, the scholarship application is bundled with your regular university application. You're not paying a separate fee, writing an entirely different set of materials, or going through a separate portal. You apply to the university and automatically receive consideration. The marginal cost of "applying for the scholarship" is often just a stronger personal statement or a more focused motivation letter.

≥98%
UCPH Science recipients' GPA (2025)
1–2
Scholarships per AU Master's program
~25
CBS total awards per year
Free
Additional cost to apply at most universities
Application

What Makes a Strong Application?

The primary differentiator is academic record — consistently, across every participating university. Beyond that, the weight of other factors varies by institution.

The Guide

Navigate the Guide

Everything you need to apply, in one place.