Study abroad in Slovenia
Visa, costs, healthcare and the best cities for exchange students in Slovenia.
Capital
Ljubljana
Languages
Slovenian
Academic Year
Two semesters: winter (October to mid-February, with a January–February exam period) and summer (mid-February to June, with exams in June–July).
Population
Approximately 2.12 million
Typical Budget
EUR 600 - 1,000/month
Study Abroad in Slovenia: What to Expect
Study abroad in Slovenia should not be chosen by ranking or postcard alone: compare city, campus, language, rent and daily rhythm. Slovenia packs Alps, Mediterranean coast, karst caves and a compact, walkable capital into a country smaller than Switzerland — and it is one of the most affordable and safe destinations in the EU for exchange students. Compare Ljubljana, Maribor, Koper because housing, transport and social life change a lot by city.
Who loves this country?
Students who prefer a compact country, affordable routines, outdoor weekends and a calmer social rhythm than the largest Erasmus capitals.
What makes it special
Slovenia gives exchange students a rare mix of affordability, nature, safety and student benefits in a country small enough to understand quickly.
Newcomer shocks
- The country is small, so weekend travel can become part of the weekly routine.
- Student meal subsidies are genuinely useful, but require setting them up early.
- Housing supply is limited in Ljubljana before semester start, despite the city feeling relaxed.
Safety & Cost Indices
Source: Numbeo crowdsourced data. Lower crime = safer. Higher safety = safer.
Crime Index
Low
World avg: 44.7
Safety Index
Very safe
World avg: 55.3
Cost of Living
Moderate cost
EUR 600 - 1,000/month
The cost to study abroad in Slovenia is mostly shaped by rent, transport and weekly food routines. Use EUR 600-1000/month as a planning range, then add deposit money, insurance, local registration and first-week setup.
Safety: Slovenia is consistently one of the safest countries in Europe; violent crime is rare and Ljubljana is comfortable to walk at night. Normal petty-theft caution applies in tourist spots and on busy buses.
Big Cities vs Small Towns
Big Cities
- Ljubljana is the only true student metropolis — the largest university, most English-taught courses, the busiest Erasmus social scene and the best transport links.
- Maribor is the clear second city with the University of Maribor, a lively Lent riverside and lower costs than the capital.
Small Towns
- Koper on the coast offers a Mediterranean campus feel and proximity to Italy and Croatia.
- Smaller towns like Kranj or Nova Gorica are cheaper and quieter but have fewer English-taught courses and a thinner international scene.
Culture & student life in Slovenia
Student culture in Slovenia rewards adapting to schedules, local language and everyday etiquette. Treat the do and don't list as practical arrival advice, not tourist folklore.
Social Norms
Slovenes are reserved on first meeting but warm once you are introduced through friends, classmates or sports clubs. Punctuality is expected for classes, appointments and meetings. Outdoor life is central — hiking, cycling and weekend trips to the mountains or coast are a core part of social life. Recycling and waste separation are taken seriously; sort your rubbish correctly in dorms and shared flats.
Daily Rhythm
Local pace07:30–09:00
Morning
Lectures often start at 08:00 or 09:00. Students grab a coffee (kava) to go and commute by bus, bike-share (BicikeLJ) or on foot in compact Ljubljana.
12:00–14:00
Midday
The subsidised student lunch (boni) is the social heart of the day — students use meal vouchers at partner restaurants across the city for a cheap hot meal.
14:00–18:00
Afternoon
More classes and library or faculty study. In good weather the Ljubljanica riverbanks and Tivoli Park fill with students.
18:00–20:00
Evening
Dinner is usually at home or via boni; café culture along the river is strong, with long coffee and drinks rather than big meals out.
21:00–01:00
Night
Nightlife centres on the old town riverbanks, Metelkova autonomous zone and student clubs. Weeknights are calm; Thursday to Saturday are the social peak.
Food Culture
Potica
EUR 2-5 per slice / EUR 10-20 wholeThe national rolled cake, traditionally filled with walnuts (and also tarragon or poppy seed). A holiday staple sold year-round in bakeries.
Buy by the slice in bakeries rather than a whole roll; supermarket versions are cheapest.
Kranjska klobasa (Carniolan sausage)
EUR 4-8Protected-origin smoked pork sausage, usually served with mustard, bread and sauerkraut. A cheap, filling classic.
Klobasarna near the Central Market in Ljubljana serves it fast and cheap between classes.
Jota
EUR 4-7Hearty stew of sauerkraut or sour turnip, beans and potato, often with smoked pork. Common cheap canteen and gostilna dish in winter.
Order it as the daily special (dnevno kosilo) in a gostilna — best value hot meal of the day.
Idrijski žlikrofi
EUR 6-10Slovenia's first protected dish — small potato-filled dumplings from Idrija, served with sauce or as a side with meat.
A great-value plate in traditional restaurants; pair with the lunch menu for the cheapest version.
Prekmurska gibanica
EUR 3-6 per sliceLayered pastry from Prekmurje with poppy seed, walnut, apple and cottage-cheese fillings. Rich and protected-origin.
Find it at bakeries and markets; one slice is filling enough as a dessert to share.
Blejska kremšnita (Bled cream cake)
EUR 4-6Iconic custard-and-cream slice from Lake Bled, a must-try on any day trip from Ljubljana.
Cheaper at lakeside cafés away from the most touristy terraces; one slice is plenty.
Cultural dos & don'ts in Slovenia
Do
Register for the subsidised student-meal scheme (boni) — it is the single biggest daily saving in Slovenia.
Greet with a handshake and use surnames with professors until invited to switch to first names.
Take your shoes off when entering someone's home.
Learn a few Slovenian phrases (dober dan, hvala, prosim) — locals genuinely appreciate the effort.
Carry a refillable bottle; Ljubljana tap water is excellent and free public fountains are common.
Join a sports or hiking club early — it is the fastest way into local friend groups.
Don't
Do not assume Slovenia is 'Slovakia' or part of the former-Yugoslav stereotype — Slovenes are proud of their distinct identity.
Do not skip the recycling rules in dorms; fines and landlord complaints are real.
Do not be loud or rowdy in residential streets late at night — Ljubljana's old town is small and people live there.
Do not expect shops to stay open late on Sundays; many close or run short hours.
Do not rely only on taxis — they are pricier than the cheap bus network and bike-share.
Things to do in Slovenia as a student
The semester works best when you build repeatable routines: cheap food, transport, student groups and realistic weekend trips. Slovenia rewards students who solve housing early and avoid improvising admin.
Row to Bled Island
Take a traditional pletna boat or rent a rowboat to the island church, then hike up to Bled Castle for the classic view. The easiest iconic day trip from Ljubljana.
Learn more
Postojna Cave
One of the world's most famous show caves, explored partly by underground train — and home to the olm, Slovenia's 'baby dragon'. Easy by bus from Ljubljana.
Learn more
Predjama Castle
A dramatic Renaissance castle built into the mouth of a cave cliff — usually combined with Postojna Cave on the same trip.
Learn more
Hiking in Triglav National Park
Alpine lakes, gorges and Slovenia's highest peak. University and ESN outdoor clubs run cheap group hikes through the season.
Learn more
Rafting the Soča River
The emerald Soča is one of Europe's best whitewater rivers; rafting, kayaking and canyoning trips are popular student weekend adventures.
Learn more
Explore the Adriatic coast in Piran
A perfectly preserved Venetian-Gothic town on a narrow peninsula — swim, eat seafood and watch the sunset over the Adriatic, under two hours from the capital.
Learn moreFestival Calendar
Travel Tips
- Distances are tiny — Bled, the coast and the Soča Valley are all under two hours from Ljubljana by bus or train.
- Slovenia is a hub for cheap regional travel: Venice, Vienna, Zagreb and Salzburg are all easy weekend trips.
- Use the cheap intercity bus network (Arriva, Nomago) and student rail discounts.
- Buy a vignette only if you rent a car for the motorways; otherwise public transport covers most student needs.
Scholarships & student benefits in Slovenia
Student benefits in Slovenia can reduce transport, meals, culture and activities if you activate them in week one. Carry proof of enrolment and check youth, university and local discount schemes.
Useful either way
Support and discounts that still matter even if you are not in a strict incoming or outgoing case.
Subsidised student meals (boni)
Slovenia's nationwide subsidised meal scheme lets registered students eat at hundreds of partner restaurants for a few euros per meal — the single most valuable everyday student benefit.
Študentska prehrana (national scheme)
Official sourceDiscounted public transport
Subsidised monthly student passes on Ljubljana city buses (LPP) and on intercity routes make commuting very cheap.
Ljubljanski potniški promet (LPP)
Official sourceStudent work scheme (študentsko delo)
Registered students can take flexible part-time work through student employment agencies at favourable tax terms.
Student employment agencies
Official sourceCulture and museum discounts
Student and under-26 discounts apply at many museums, galleries and cultural events; an ISIC card unlocks further reductions.
National and municipal cultural institutions
Official sourceSlovenia student visa requirements
Difficulty: EasyFor study abroad in Slovenia, separate EU/EEA/Swiss students, short stays and non-EU routes before booking flights. Admission letter, insurance, funds, housing proof and local registration are the paperwork stack to prepare early.
National ID card or passport; certificate of residence registration if staying over 90 days
EU/EEA/Swiss citizens do not need a visa or residence permit. For stays over 90 days you must register your residence and apply for a registration certificate at the local administrative unit (upravna enota).
Temporary residence permit for studies (degree-seeking); Visa D for short mobility/exchange stays
Non-EU/EEA/Swiss students apply for a temporary residence permit for studies before arrival at a Slovenian diplomatic mission, or in Slovenia at the administrative unit. Proof of sufficient means is currently EUR 484.88 per month. Passport must remain valid at least 3 months beyond the planned stay. Apply 3–6 months before arrival.
Application Checklist
8 steps-
1
Confirm your nationality group: EU/EEA/Swiss (no visa) versus non-EU (residence permit required).
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2
Non-EU: gather your university acceptance/enrolment letter before booking the consulate appointment.
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3
Prove sufficient financial means — currently EUR 484.88 per month — via bank statements, scholarship letter or sponsor declaration.
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4
Ensure your passport is valid at least 3 months beyond your planned departure from Slovenia.
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5
Budget for permit costs: EUR 50.00 permit fee, EUR 4.50 application fee, EUR 15.47 card printing, plus certified translations.
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6
Apply 3–6 months before arrival; processing time depends on the administrative unit or diplomatic mission.
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7
EU/EEA/Swiss staying over 90 days: register your residence at the local administrative unit (upravna enota) within the legal deadline.
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8
Arrange health insurance valid in Slovenia before you travel (EHIC for EU students; private/SSN-equivalent for non-EU).
Regional Variations
Slovenian Istria (coast) and Prekmurje
Officially bilingual municipalities: Italian is co-official on the coast (Koper, Izola, Piran) and Hungarian in parts of Prekmurje. Public signage and some administrative services run in both languages.
None specific to students
Same national health rules apply; proximity to the Italian and Hungarian borders makes cross-border travel easy.
Healthcare for international students in Slovenia
How It Works
Slovenia has a strong public health system run by the national health insurance institute (ZZZS). EU/EEA/Swiss students use their European Health Insurance Card (EHIC) for medically necessary care. Non-EU students must arrange health insurance valid in Slovenia — either private cover or enrolment in the Slovenian scheme where eligible. Care quality is high and Ljubljana has a large university medical centre (UKC Ljubljana).
Student Needs
Carry your EHIC (EU) or proof of valid insurance (non-EU) from day one. Register with a chosen general practitioner (osebni zdravnik) for non-urgent care. Pharmacies (lekarna) handle minor issues and are widely available.
Emergency vs Clinic
Dial 112 for medical emergencies. For non-urgent issues use your GP or a health centre (zdravstveni dom); UKC Ljubljana emergency handles serious cases.
Public Coverage Notes
EU/EEA/Swiss students: EHIC covers medically necessary public treatment on the same terms as locals.
Non-EU students: confirm whether private insurance or local enrolment is required for your permit and for full coverage.
Private Coverage
Non-EU students should buy comprehensive cover before arrival, including hospitalisation and repatriation.
Even with EHIC, complementary private insurance (dopolnilno zavarovanje) is common in Slovenia to cover co-payments — useful for longer stays.
Best cities to study in Slovenia
Ljubljana, Maribor, Koper are not interchangeable. They offer different budgets, campus scales and social rhythms, so choose by academic fit and housing reality rather than the most famous name.
Ljubljana
Slovenia's compact, green and car-light capital — a walkable student city on the Ljubljanica river, cheap by EU standards and within two…
Open City Guide
Maribor
Slovenia's affordable, laid-back second city — a wine-country capital on the Drava with the country's most international university and ski slopes on…
Open City GuideKoper
Slovenia's Adriatic university town — a Venetian-Gothic old port with a Mediterranean climate, the University of Primorska, and Piran and Italy on…
Open City Guide