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Study abroad in Chile

Visa, costs, healthcare and the best cities for exchange students in Chile.

Capital

Santiago

Languages

Spanish

Academic Year

Most universities run first semester from March to July and second semester from August to December. Exact orientation and exam dates vary by institution.

Population

19,000,000+

Typical Budget

CLP 650,000 - 1,300,000/month

Overview

Spanish immersion, strong universities, Pacific-coast cities and a more orderly study-abroad experience than many students expect from Latin America.

Country Overview

What student life feels like in Chile.

Chile is a strong fit for exchange students who want Spanish immersion, reputable universities and access to very different landscapes without leaving one country. Santiago is the academic and institutional center, Valparaiso gives a coastal arts-and-port student experience, and Concepcion is a classic university city in southern Chile. Most undergraduate exchange is in Spanish, so B1-B2 Spanish is important for class participation, housing and daily life. Chile is generally easier to navigate than many Latin American destinations, but students still need city-safety habits, earthquake awareness and realistic budgeting because Santiago can be expensive by regional standards.

Quick answer: Chile is a strong Spanish-speaking exchange destination for students who want serious academics, Andes access, urban culture and a safer-feeling Latin American base than many alternatives. The real planning issues are visa or residence instructions, RUT/local-ID needs, private health insurance, earthquakes, long commutes and fast Chilean Spanish. Chile works best when students plan by city rhythm. Santiago gives the broadest academic choice, internships and Metro access, but housing and commute decisions matter a lot.

Valparaiso is more cultural and coastal, with hill logistics and neighborhood-specific safety. Concepcion is the strongest campus-city option, especially for students who want a lower-cost semester with UdeC and a clearer university routine. The practical arrival stack is private insurance, Bip!/local transport, Chilean Spanish listening practice, earthquake habits and checking whether visa, residence or RUT steps apply to your exact stay.

Country Framework

What shapes student life in Chile.

Use this page to understand the legal context, budget baseline, safety feel, and everyday rhythm before comparing cities or universities.

Safety Snapshot

Main student districts in Santiago, Valparaiso and Concepcion are workable for exchange students, but phone theft, nightlife routes, protests, earthquakes and coastal evacuation awareness should be taken seriously.

Editorial view of Chile

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

Safety & Cost Indices

Source: Numbeo crowdsourced data. Lower crime = safer. Higher safety = safer.

61

Crime Index

High

World avg: 44.7

39

Safety Index

Be cautious

World avg: 55.3

39

Cost of Living

Very affordable

CLP 650,000 - 1,300,000/month

Crime factors measured

General perception of crime levels Perceived safety during daylight and nighttime Concerns about specific crimes (mugging, robbery, car theft, physical attacks, harassment, bias-motivated incidents) Property crime severity (burglary, theft, vandalism) Violent crime severity (assault, homicide, sexual offenses)

Culture

Social Norms

  • Chile can feel more reserved at first than Colombia, Mexico or Spain. Friendships often warm up through repeated plans rather than instant openness.
  • Chilean Spanish is fast and full of local slang. Even students with classroom Spanish need adjustment time.
  • University life is serious and attendance/assessment expectations vary by faculty. Do not assume an exchange semester is academically light.
  • Punctuality is more flexible socially than academically. Deadlines and administrative windows should be treated carefully.
  • Earthquake readiness is normal life, not panic. Learn what your campus and housing expect during tremors.

Food Culture

Empanada de pino

Empanada de pino

CLP 2,000-4,500

Classic Chilean baked empanada with beef, onion, egg and olive.

Student hack:

Good cheap lunch around campuses, bus terminals and Fiestas Patrias events.

Cazuela / menu del dia

Cazuela / menu del dia

CLP 5,000-9,000

Homestyle filling lunch; a practical visual stand-in for everyday student set lunches.

Student hack:

Look for neighborhood lunch spots near campus before defaulting to expensive areas.

Completo

Completo

CLP 2,500-5,500

Chilean hot dog with avocado, tomato, mayo and variants.

Student hack:

Cheap social food after class, especially around late-night student areas.

Pastel de choclo

Pastel de choclo

CLP 6,000-10,000

Corn pie with beef, chicken, onion, egg and olive, usually served hot in traditional restaurants or family-style lunch spots.

Student hack:

Best as a weekend meal rather than a quick campus lunch; look for it in markets and traditional restaurants.

Mote con huesillo

Mote con huesillo

CLP 1,500-3,500

Cold Chilean drink-dessert made with wheat berries and dried peaches, common in warm months.

Student hack:

A low-cost summer option in parks, street stands and central markets.

Dos and Don'ts

Do

  • Arrive with at least B1 Spanish and learn Chilean expressions early; listening practice matters as much as grammar.

  • Choose housing around commute, daylight route and campus access, not just monthly price.

  • Use host-university orientation and buddy networks for first housing, transport and nightlife advice.

  • Learn the earthquake routine in your building and campus: safe zones, evacuation stairways and where not to stand during a tremor.

  • Save emergency numbers and campus security contacts offline before your first week of classes.

  • Test the Santiago Metro/Bip! or local bus route to campus in daylight before relying on it for exams or early classes.

  • Carry a light rain/wind layer and plan by microclimate: Santiago, Valparaiso and Concepcion feel very different.

Don't

  • Do not underestimate Chilean Spanish speed and slang; ask classmates to repeat rather than pretending you understood housing, medical or admin details.

  • Do not ignore earthquake, tsunami or coastal evacuation instructions, especially in Valparaiso, Vina del Mar and Concepcion-area coastal trips.

  • Do not display phones casually in crowded streets, nightlife zones, buses, Metro platforms or around bus terminals.

  • Do not choose housing only by price; a cheap room with a long late-night commute can be worse than a smaller room near campus or Metro.

  • Do not leave visa, residence, RUT/local-ID or insurance paperwork until the final weeks.

  • Do not walk alone after nightlife in unfamiliar areas; use trusted transport and agree on pickup/drop-off points with friends.

Lifestyle & Travel

Learn Santiago from Cerro San Cristobal

Learn Santiago from Cerro San Cristobal

Santiago Sep-May

A low-cost first view of the capital, Metro geography and Andes backdrop before choosing everyday routes.

Learn more
Cajon del Maipo day trip

Cajon del Maipo day trip

Santiago Region Spring-autumn; verify mountain conditions

The easiest Andes contrast from Santiago. Use an established operator and check weather and road alerts.

Learn more
Ride Valparaiso's historic ascensores

Ride Valparaiso's historic ascensores

Valparaiso Year-round in daylight

The practical way to understand the port city's hills, street art and why housing routes matter.

Learn more
Experience Concepcion's campus city

Experience Concepcion's campus city

Concepcion Mar-May or Sep-Dec

UdeC's Campanil, parks and repeat campus routines show a calmer Chilean student experience outside the capital.

Learn more
Atacama desert weekend

Atacama desert weekend

San Pedro de Atacama Year-round; cold nights

A major north-Chile landscape trip. Budget flights and tours early and prepare for altitude and temperature swings.

Learn more
Patagonia trekking

Patagonia trekking

Torres del Paine Nov-Mar; book ahead

World-class hiking, but not an improvised student trip: reserve transport, campsites and park access before travelling.

Learn more

Festival Calendar

Fiestas Patrias
hype

Around 18-19 September

Fiestas Patrias

Nationwide

tradition food cueca

Chile's main national celebration: fondas, cueca, food and changed transport or opening hours. Plan return routes and campus closures.

Santiago a Mil
medium

January

Santiago a Mil

Santiago and participating regions

theatre public art summer

Theatre, dance and public-space programming; check the official programme each year.

Vina del Mar International Song Festival
hype

February

Vina del Mar International Song Festival

Vina del Mar

music coast major event

Large televised music event with high demand and busy coastal transport. Book only through official channels.

REC Festival
hype

Dates announced annually

REC Festival

Concepcion

live music students Biobio

Concepcion's large public music festival and a strong introduction to the city's cultural identity.

Valparaiso summer cultural season
medium

December-February

Valparaiso summer cultural season

Valparaiso

street art port culture day trips

Outdoor culture and busy hill routes. Use current municipal listings rather than assuming an old event date.

University welcome weeks
medium

March and July-August

University welcome weeks

Host universities

clubs buddies orientation

The most useful student event: course help, clubs, campus services and trusted contacts appear here first.

Travel Tips

  • Use established bus companies or flights for long-distance travel.
  • Check weather and route conditions for Andes or southern trips.
  • Follow official alerts for earthquakes, wildfire smoke and coastal risks.

Benefits & Scholarships

Personalize this layer

Add where you currently study in your profile to separate incoming support from outgoing scholarships.

Support is clearer once we separate incoming help from outgoing mobility money.

If you are coming to this country

Grants, discounts, and student support you can unlock once you study here.

Host university ID and campus services

Incoming exchange

Your host-university ID is the everyday key for libraries, Wi-Fi, orientation, sports, cafeterias, exchange events and faculty services. It matters more than a national discount card for many short exchange stays.

Typical amount

Usually included in enrolment; discounts vary

Duration

Exchange semester/year

Apply when

Activate during orientation week

Who it is for

Students formally enrolled or accepted by a Chilean host university.

How to unlock it

Collect student credentials through the host international office after enrolment.

Often stackable with

Libraries Sports Campus wellbeing Buddy programmes

Host universities

Official source

Exchange tuition-waiver logic

Partner exchange

Many partner exchanges mean tuition is paid at the home university, not again in Chile. This is agreement-specific: confirm what is waived, what administrative fees remain and whether course materials or insurance are separate.

Typical amount

No fixed amount; depends on the agreement

Duration

Approved exchange period

Apply when

Before nomination and course registration

Who it is for

Students nominated through an official bilateral or network agreement.

How to unlock it

Ask both universities for written fee confirmation before budgeting.

Often stackable with

Home university grants Faculty mobility aid

Home and host university exchange offices

Official source

Bip! card and student commute setup

Santiago commuters

In Santiago, Bip! is the standard card for Metro and RED buses. Exchange students should set it up in week one even if they are not eligible for a special fare, because it prevents daily commute friction.

Typical amount

Pay-as-you-go fares

Duration

As needed

Apply when

Week one

Who it is for

Students living or studying in Santiago.

How to unlock it

Buy and load the card at official points, then test campus routes before classes.

Often stackable with

Offline maps Campus commute rehearsal

Metro de Santiago / RED Movilidad

Official source

TNE / student-fare eligibility check

Check eligibility

Chile's student transport benefits are not something short exchange students should assume. If your stay is longer or your host university registers you locally, ask whether TNE or any student fare route applies before counting on it.

Typical amount

Eligibility-dependent

Duration

Academic year/semester if approved

Apply when

Ask before or during orientation

Who it is for

Students whose host institution confirms local student-fare eligibility.

How to unlock it

Do not self-assume; ask the host university mobility office what applies to exchange status.

Often stackable with

Bip! card Metro/bus commute planning

JUNAEB / host university

Official source

Campus mental-health, sports and orientation support

Settling in

Chile can feel academically serious and socially reserved at first. Orientation, buddy programmes, sports and wellbeing services are practical benefits, especially for students adapting to Chilean Spanish, earthquakes and new safety routines.

Typical amount

Usually included or subsidised

Duration

Semester/year

Apply when

Join during orientation

Who it is for

Exchange students during the first month and exam periods.

How to unlock it

Register through the international office, sports office or student wellbeing service.

Often stackable with

Buddy programme Campus clubs Private insurance

Host universities

Official source

If you study here and want to go abroad

Mobility money and scholarships tied to your home institution in this country.

Home-university mobility funding

Outgoing mobility

Students from Europe, Latin America or partner networks may have home-university, faculty or national mobility funding. Chile does not make one universal incoming grant automatic, so the safe source is your own sending institution.

Typical amount

Varies by home institution

Duration

Usually exchange semester/year

Apply when

Before nomination or acceptance

Who it is for

Students whose home institution offers exchange mobility aid.

How to unlock it

Check your home university international office and faculty grant calendar.

Often stackable with

Exchange tuition waiver Host university services

Home university / sending programme

Visa Requirements

Difficulty: Moderate
Short-stay students <=90 or 180 days depending on case
Official source

Permanencia transitoria / visitor status for short study stays where eligible

Some short exchange stays may use transitory stay routes, but eligibility depends on nationality, length and host-university guidance. Confirm before travel with SERMIG and the host university.

Fee: CLP 0 Entry process plus any required extension where eligible Short stay; confirm nationality-specific rules
All nationalities >90 or semester year exchange when required
Official source

Residencia Temporal permit, student subcategory

SERMIG states that the student temporary residence permit is for foreigners who want to reside in Chile to study at state-recognized establishments. The application is made from outside Chile through SERMIG digital procedures and requires passport, criminal record certificate for applicants over 18, photo, enrollment or regular-student certificate, and proof of income or livelihood.

Apply early; processing and document legalization can take weeks Temporary residence, student subcategory; confirm duration in the official approval

Application Checklist

9 steps
  1. 1
    Ask the host university whether your exchange should use transitory stay or student temporary residence.
  2. 2
    If applying for student temporary residence, start from outside Chile through the SERMIG digital platform.
  3. 3
    Prepare passport, photo, criminal record certificate if over 18, proof of enrollment or regular student status, and proof of funds.
  4. 4
    Apostille or legalize documents where required and translate documents not in Spanish or English.
  5. 5
    Buy health insurance that covers medical care, repatriation and the full exchange period.
  6. 6
    Confirm whether your exchange duration requires a student visa or residence process.
  7. 7
    Ask whether you need RUT/Cedula steps after arrival.
  8. 8
    Carry insurance certificate in Spanish or English.
  9. 9
    Recheck official Chile migration and consular instructions before booking non-refundable flights.

Regional Variations

Coastal cities

Health & Healthcare

Student Needs

Keep insurance documents accessible, ask the host university which clinics international students use, and check whether your policy covers emergency care, repatriation and civil liability.nnExchange students should normally arrive with international health insurance that covers private clinics and emergency care. Chile has public and private systems, but visiting students should not assume they can use local coverage like residents without checking visa/status and university instructions.

Emergency vs Clinic

For urgent medical emergencies call 131. For non-urgent issues, start with university health services or a private clinic covered by your insurance.

Public Coverage Notes

  • Insurance is commonly required by universities for incoming exchange students.

  • Private clinics in Santiago are easier for international students but can be expensive without coverage.

  • Earthquake-related emergency procedures should be learned during orientation.

Emergency

133 police, 131 ambulance, 132 firefighters

EXTRA: Culture Shock & Apps

Moderate Culture Shock Expected

This destination may feel different from Western campus routines. The apps and advice below are high-impact setup items for everyday student life.

WhatsApp
Critical

Default channel for class groups, housing leads, plans and daily coordination with local students.

Tip: Have an active number before joining housing or exchange groups.
Google Maps
Critical

Useful for checking real travel times between housing, campus, Metro and RED buses.

Tip: Save campus, housing and frequent routes offline.
Metro / RED Santiago
Recommended

Route planning and service disruption checks in Santiago.

Tip: Check rush-hour timing before signing housing far from campus.
Bip!
Critical

Transport card for Santiago Metro and RED buses.

Tip: Buy and top up during your first week if studying in Santiago.
SENAPRED
Critical

Official alerts for earthquakes, fires, rain and emergencies.

Tip: Follow official alerts plus your university safety channel.
Uber / Cabify
Recommended

Useful for night arrivals or routes where public transport is awkward.

Tip: Do not rely only on apps: ask about safe routes by area and hour.

Cities to Explore

Santiago

Santiago

Chile's academic and transport hub: serious universities, mountain views, higher costs and the easiest city for exchange logistics.

Open City Guide
Valparaiso

Valparaiso

A coastal, hilly, arts-heavy student city for Spanish immersion, PUCV-style exchange and a very different rhythm from Santiago.

Open City Guide
Concepcion

Concepcion

A classic Chilean university city: greener, rainier, cheaper than Santiago and strongly anchored by Universidad de Concepcion.

Open City Guide