Can You Study Abroad in English? 2026 Guide to English-Taught Programs
You can study abroad in English in more destinations than most students expect — but you must verify the course catalogue, semester timing, language level and seat availability. An international university does not mean every module is taught in English.
In this guide
Quick answer
- This study abroad in english guide turns the decision into verifiable steps.
- Confirm academic rules and money first; compare destinations second.
- If it affects health, visas, credits or payments, use an official source.
How to Study Abroad in English: Verifying Course Languages
Studying in English can open more destinations, but it does not remove academic requirements or daily life in another language. Check courses, assessment, places and support before choosing.
| Timing | Action | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| 6 months before | confirm placement, credits and requirements | prevents late academic problems |
| 3 months before | secure housing, insurance and budget | these are the expensive failure points |
| 1 month before | organise documents, phone and arrival | reduces first-week friction |
| First week | register, confirm courses and join groups | turns logistics into routine |
Language Requirements for Studying Abroad in English
Language requirements vary by institution and program. Most English-taught exchange programs require:
- IELTS 6.0–7.0 or TOEFL iBT 80–100 for non-native speakers
- Proof of English-medium prior education (if you studied your bachelor’s in English, this usually suffices)
- Some institutions accept a letter from your home university confirming your language level
Important: Your overall academic transcript is usually in the language of instruction. If your home university teaches in English, your transcript implicitly confirms English proficiency. Confirm this with your host university’s international admissions team.
Countries with the Most English-Taught Exchange Courses
| Country | English Availability | Best for | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Netherlands | Very high | Business, tech, social sciences | Most bachelor’s and all master’s offered in English |
| Sweden | High | Engineering, environment, design | Most programs at international level are English |
| Denmark | High | Business, architecture, sustainability | CBS, DTU strong English offerings |
| Germany | High | Engineering, physics, computer science | TU Berlin, TU Munich, RWTH Aachen |
| Belgium | Moderate–High | Economics, law, international relations | KU Leuven, VUB, Ghent have English tracks |
| Finland | High | Technology, education | Aalto University, University of Helsinki |
| Spain | Low–Moderate | Business only | IE Business School, ESADE are exceptions; most universities teach in Spanish |
| France | Low | Business exceptions | Sciences Po (English track), ESSEC; most others require French |
| Italy | Moderate | Design, business, engineering | Bocconi (English), Politecnico di Milano (partial) |
Life Outside the Classroom When You Study Abroad in English
Will you need the local language for daily life? Almost never for English-speaking countries, and less than expected in the Netherlands, Scandinavia and Germany. In Spain, France, Portugal and Italy, basic local language skills significantly improve your daily experience — grocery shopping, transport apps, doctor visits, and making local friends all benefit from even a basic level.
What a low local language level means in practice:
- You will socialise primarily within the international student bubble
- Bureaucratic tasks (local registration, bank accounts) may require assistance
- Emergency situations can be stressful without any local language
Recommended minimum preparation:
- Learn 50–100 common phrases before arrival even if courses are in English
- Install Google Translate offline for the local language
- Attend one or two free conversation exchanges — most universities organise them
- Watch local TV shows or YouTube with subtitles for the first two weeks
The realistic English-only experience: In Amsterdam, Stockholm, Copenhagen, Berlin and Brussels, you can complete a full semester entirely in English and have a rich social life. In Paris, Madrid or Lisbon, English-only limits your social integration to the international student community — manageable but worth knowing before you choose.
Useful next links
Official sources and limits
Useful official sources: European Commission Erasmus+, Erasmus+ Programme Guide, European Health Insurance Card, ECTS and Spain’s SEPIE for Spain-specific Erasmus context.
We do not invent amounts, deadlines or requirements: when a figure or process depends on call year, country or university, the guide presents it as something to verify in the relevant official source.
Action checklist
- Keep one folder with acceptance letter, passport/ID, insurance, Learning Agreement, housing contract and payment receipts.
- Record amounts with currency and date: monthly rent, deposit, transport, insurance, flights and tuition if relevant.
- Check whether the destination requires local registration, tax number, residence card or immigration appointment.
- Define a 7-day housing backup plan if your contract starts after your arrival date.
- Build both a minimum and realistic budget; if only the minimum works, the destination may not be affordable.
- Get email confirmation for academic exceptions: credits, courses, language or semester changes.
Expensive mistakes
- Choosing a city from viral videos without checking real housing.
- Treating the grant as if it arrives fully before deposits and flights.
- Choosing modules before confirming ECTS equivalence.
- Not checking repatriation, liability or sports coverage in insurance.
- Paying for housing outside a platform without a verifiable contract.
Simple rule: if a decision affects money, legal status, health or academic recognition, informal advice is not enough. It needs an official source or written confirmation.
Frequently asked questions
When should I start?
Start 6 months ahead if you need a visa, face a tight housing market or target a high-demand city. For EU-to-EU Erasmus without a visa, 3 months can work, but housing should start earlier.
What should I confirm with my university?
Confirm placement, courses, Learning Agreement, grant, required insurance, calendar, recommended housing and emergency contacts. Get key decisions in writing.
Can I rely on student forums only?
Use student forums for practical signals, not rules. Grants, healthcare, credits and visas should be checked with official sources or your international office.
What if two sources disagree?
Prioritise the most specific official source: your home university first, then the host university, then the national agency or European Commission. If money, tuition or visa status is involved, email the international office.
How do I know the information is current?
Check the call year, academic year and review date. For 2026, do not reuse old PDFs unless the official page confirms they still apply.
Conclusion
The safest way to use this study abroad in english guide is to turn it into dated actions: what you decide today, what your university confirms and what you will verify before paying. Then compare destinations and universities in Odisea with city, country and campus data.
