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Erasmus guide Trinity College Dublin

Courses, housing, visa, campus life and exchange basics for studying at Trinity College Dublin in Dublin, Ireland.

City

Dublin

Country

Ireland

Snapshot

Ireland's highest-ranked university (QS top 90, founded 1592), set in a historic 47-acre campus in central Dublin — exceptional in humanities, sciences, engineering, and business with 700+ Erasmus partner institutions.

Why students shortlist it

City-centre Dublin university with a compact historic campus and strong options in humanities, social sciences, law, business, engineering and health-related fields. Good fit for students who want English-language study and a central Irish campus.

Medicine and Health Sciences Engineering and Computer Science Humanities and Social Sciences Law Business (Trinity Business School)

Teaching languages: English (sole teaching language)

Before You Land

A few practical setup details students usually sort before arrival

Connectivity, insurance, and secure public WiFi are the boring things you only notice when you need them. Keep them on your checklist, but keep the guide itself front and centre.

Arrival Connectivity

Sort an eSIM before you land

Maps, ride apps, 2FA codes, and WhatsApp are usually the first things students need from the airport.

Partner picks coming soon

Coverage Check

Confirm your travel insurance

Even when the university gives guidance, students usually need to double-check what is covered before departure.

Partner picks coming soon

Public WiFi

Have a backup for shared networks

Campus halls, airports, and cafés are convenient, but many students prefer an extra privacy layer when they first arrive.

Partner picks coming soon

Exchange Basics

Requirements

Partner nomination, online application, learning agreement, transcript, language proof if required, and proof of travel insurance or Irish private health insurance.

Nomination Process

Your home university international office submits nomination to Trinity by the published deadline. After nomination, Trinity sends direct application instructions.

Visa Support

EU/EEA students do not need a visa for Ireland. Non-EU students need an Irish student visa (Stamp 2) — apply through INIS (Irish Naturalisation and Immigration Service) at least 8 weeks before arrival.

Buddy System

Trinity International Student Buddy Programme pairs incoming exchange students with Trinity student volunteers before arrival.

Orientation Week

Trinity International Student Orientation runs before semester start — includes campus tours, admin setup, library registration, and social events. Attendance strongly recommended.

Semester Nomination Application
Autumn semester March 31 April 30
Spring semester October 31 November 30

Arrival Checklist

  • Arrange Irish private health insurance before arrival — GradGuard or Allianz Care widely used by students.
  • Register with the Garda National Immigration Bureau (GNIB) within 90 days if non-EU.
  • Open an Irish bank account (Bank of Ireland or N26) — needed for rent and direct debits.
  • Book Dublin accommodation well in advance — housing is competitive and expensive.

Academics

Course Registration

Module registration via Trinity's SITS system after admission. Some modules cap quickly — submit learning agreement early and include backup choices. Certain professional faculties restrict exchange student access.

Credit System

Ireland uses ECTS. Full-time semester = 30 ECTS. Trinity also uses its own credit weighting internally — conversion provided on transcripts.

Grading System

Trinity uses a percentage scale: 70%+ = First Class Honours, 60–69% = 2.1, 50–59% = 2.2, 40–49% = Pass. Grade conversion table available from Study Abroad office.

Exam Culture

Heavy reliance on end-of-semester written exams, especially in humanities and social sciences. Do not book return flights before the official exam timetable is published in October/March.

Library Access

Trinity Library — one of the largest research libraries in the British Isles, with 6.2 million items. Full access with student card including digital resources and special collections.

Tuition & Fees

EXCHANGE

€0 to Trinity (pay home institution fees only)

Exchange students pay no tuition fees to Trinity College Dublin. Erasmus+ grants apply for eligible EU students. Estimated living costs €1,500–2,200/month in…

Full degree – EU/EEA

€3,000–8,000/year

EU students pay Irish statutory rate (~€3,000/year contribution levy) plus programme-specific fees. Medicine and law programmes considerably higher. Check Tr…

Full degree – non-EU

€18,000–28,000/year

Non-EU undergraduate and postgraduate fees vary significantly by programme. Medicine top-end. Trinity Global Excellence Scholarship available for internation…

Fees change annually — verify current rates on the official exchange office page

Where to Stay

Insurance & Campus Support

Mandatory Insurance

Yes — required for visa (non-EU) and strongly recommended for all students.

EHIC Accepted

Yes

Campus Clinic

Trinity Health Service — GP service on campus, student counselling, and specialist referrals. Open to all registered students.

Mental Health

Trinity Student Counselling Service offers free confidential sessions. Student2Student peer support also available. High demand — book early.

EHIC

Home-country dependent

Useful for emergency/medically necessary public care for EU students.

StudentCare Ireland

~€180–300/year

Popular student plan covering GP visits, physiotherapy, dental, and hospital cover.

Campus Services

Study Abroad Office

Main contact for all exchange-related matters: admission, learning agreements, transcripts, and arrival guidance.

Visit

Trinity Accommodation

Apply immediately upon receiving admission — campus rooms are limited and exchange students compete with full-degree students.

Visit

Trinity Student Union (TCD SU)

Represents student interests, runs welfare services, campus shops, and social events.

Visit

Trinity Sport

Sports centre with gym, pool, courts, and over 50 athletic clubs — open to all students.

Visit

Disability Service

Support for students with disabilities, learning difficulties, or chronic conditions. Register at start of semester for academic accommodations.

Visit

Student Life

Student Clubs

  • Trinity College Dublin Students' Union
  • 200+ student societies
  • Trinity Sport
  • DU Drama

Buddy Program

Trinity International Student Buddy Programme pairs exchange students with local Trinity students before arrival.

Sports & Recreation

  • Trinity Sport Centre (gym, pool, courts)
  • 50+ athletic clubs from GAA to rowing
  • Phoenix Park runs and cycling

Your First 2 Weeks

  • Attend International Student Orientation — ID card, library access, and admin all handled here.
  • Register with Trinity Health Service and set up a GP on campus.
  • Sort Irish phone SIM (Three or Vodafone) — cheaper than international roaming.
  • Explore Dublin's cultural free spots: National Gallery, Natural History Museum, Phoenix Park — all free.

Key Dates

Before nomination

Confirm home university has active Trinity partnership in your subject area.

Nomination deadline (Autumn)

March 31

Home coordinator submits nomination to Trinity Study Abroad Office.

Application deadline (Autumn)

April 30

Complete online application and learning agreement via Trinity portal.

International Orientation

Early September

Attend orientation week — module changes, admin, and social events all happen here.

Exam period

December / May–June

Confirm exam schedule before booking return flights — written exams can run to mid-December/June.

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