Indian students in Germany have doubled in five years: Shweta Guru, Auxilo
July 17, 2026
Ahmedabad: The United States, the United Kingdom, Canada and Australia still take the bulk of India’s outbound students. But the old pecking order is loosening. With rising costs and tighter visa rules, Indian student interest is spilling toward emerging education destinations like Ireland, France, the Netherlands and Germany.
In the last 5 years, the number of Indian students in Germany has more than doubled from 28,905 in 2020 to 59,419 in the 2024-25 academic year. India has now passed China to become the country’s single largest group of international students, with Turkey a distant third.
The Institute for Employment Research projects Germany will need around seven million skilled workers by 2035,” informed Shweta Guru, CBO: GlobalEd, Auxilo Finserve.
Low-cost education is the single biggest pull for Indian students. A 2025 Leap Scholar survey of more than three million student interactions found about 75% naming cost and affordability as their top concern, ahead of scholarships at 70% and career prospects at 58%; university rankings did not make the top five.
Public universities in Germany charge no tuition, even to students from outside the country, leaving little more than a semester fee of ₹16,000 to ₹38,000 (€150 to €350) that usually bundles in a local transport pass. The language barrier, long a deterrent, has largely fallen: close to 2,400 degrees are now taught entirely in English, including at master’s level.
The cost of living is where the money goes, and it is imperative for students to have a full year’s living expenses in a dedicated account, as proof they can support themselves, before arriving in Germany. For 2026, that sum is roughly ₹12.9 lakh (€11,904) and is released to the student in 12 equal monthly instalments of about ₹1.08 lakh once they land. A two-year master’s course with living expenses would cost an Indian student between ₹22 and ₹28 lakh. The same degree in Britain or the United States can cost ₹45 lakh to ₹70 lakh, sometimes more.
Salaries for fresh engineering and IT graduates usually start on ₹49 lakh to ₹70 lakh a year (€45,000 to €65,000). International professionals on a work visa who earn more than about ₹49 lakh (€45,300) can qualify for the EU Blue Card, which speeds up their work permit and, in time, facilitates permanent residency.
“For Indian families, Germany has changed the maths of studying abroad. Germany offers an 18-month window to find work in Europe’s largest economy. For a student in engineering, IT or data science, that is a clear path from classroom to career,” added Ms. Guru.
Germany ranks among the safer, steadier places for students, with low crime rates, compulsory health cover and public services that work.
Source:
DAAD (German Academic Exchange Service):
https://www.daad.in/en/2025/09/22/indian-students-in-germany-at-an-all-time-high/
https://www.daad.de/en/press-releases/erneut-hohe-zahl-an-internationalen-studierenden-in-deutschland/
Leap Scholar, “Beyond Borders: A New Chapter in Global Student Movement” (2025): https://news.careers360.com/study-abroad-75-indian-students-use-ai-tools-choices-university-rankings-lose-priority-leap-scholar-report-chatgpt-gemini-grok
https://www.thehansindia.com/hans/young-hans/indian-students-opt-for-value-and-careers-over-rankings-survey-shows-1033315
Institute for Employment Research (IAB): https://iab.de/en/publications/publication/?id=2902495
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