Study abroad in Greece
Visa, costs, healthcare and the best cities for exchange students in Greece.
Capital
Athens
Languages
Greek
Academic Year
Most universities run winter semester from September or October to January/February and spring semester from February to June.
Population
About 10.4 million
Typical Budget
EUR 750 - 1,250/month
Overview
A warm Mediterranean exchange option with strong culture, lower daily costs than much of Western Europe, and admin that needs patience.
Country Overview
What student life feels like in Greece.
Greece is attractive for students who want Mediterranean daily life, history, warm weather, and a social exchange semester without Northern European prices. Athens and Thessaloniki are the main student centres; Crete and Patras can also work well depending on the university agreement. The tradeoff is administrative rhythm: paperwork can feel slower, so keep documents organised and ask the host international office early.
Country Framework
What shapes student life in Greece.
Use this page to understand the legal context, budget baseline, safety feel, and everyday rhythm before comparing cities or universities.
Safety Snapshot
Greece is generally manageable for students. Watch petty theft in busy Athens areas, heat in summer, and late-night transport planning.
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.
Coverage Check
Confirm your travel insurance
Even when the university gives guidance, students usually need to double-check what is covered before departure.
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.
Safety & Cost Indices
Source: Numbeo crowdsourced data. Lower crime = safer. Higher safety = safer.
Crime Index
Moderate
World avg: 44.7
Safety Index
Moderate
World avg: 55.3
Cost of Living
Moderate cost
EUR 750 - 1,250/month
Crime factors measured
Big Cities vs Small Towns
Big Cities
- Athens combines affordability, history, and a growing startup ecosystem. Rent has risen but remains far below Western European capitals.
- National and Kapodistrian University of Athens and Athens University of Economics attract domestic and Erasmus students.
- Athens nightlife, food scene (especially street food), and cultural access are first-rate — world-class museums, beaches within 30 minutes.
- The city can feel chaotic and infrastructure is inconsistent, but the energy and warmth are unmatched.
Small Towns
- Thessaloniki is the undisputed student capital of Greece — enormous student population, excellent food culture (widely considered Greece's best food city), low costs, and a famously social atmosphere.
- Patras and Heraklion (Crete) have universities and coastal settings with very low costs.
- Smaller Greek cities move at a relaxed pace — closer to authentic Greek daily life away from tourist infrastructure.
- Island-based study (e.g. Crete) offers an extraordinary lifestyle but limited professional networking.
Culture
Social Norms
- Daily life is warm and social, with later meals and later nights than much of northern Europe.
- Admin can be relationship-based; polite persistence helps.
Daily Rhythm
Local pace09:00–11:00
Morning
Late starts. Breakfast is light — Greek coffee (frappé or ellinikos) and a koulouri (sesame bread ring) or pastry. Many cafés function as all-morning office spaces.
14:00–16:00
Midday
Lunch is late and substantial — the main meal of the day. Tavernas fill up at 14:30. A siesta follows in summer; cities genuinely go quiet 15:00–17:00 in August.
17:00–21:00
Afternoon
Second wind in the late afternoon. Shopping, errands, and socialising. Greeks have coffee again at 18:00. Streets become lively after 19:00.
21:00–23:00
Evening
Dinner starts at 21:00–22:00. Eating before 20:00 marks you as a tourist. Long meals with wine, mezedes, and conversation are the norm.
00:00–05:00
Night
Athens nightlife starts at midnight. Clubs in Gazi and Psyrri open at 01:00 and close at dawn. Summer nights in the islands are legendary — parties go until sunrise.
Food Culture

Souvlaki or student meal
EUR 3-8Eating simply can be affordable outside tourist corridors.
Use local bakeries, campus canteens, and neighbourhood tavernas.
Spanakopita (spinach and feta pie)
EUR 1.50–4Flaky phyllo pastry filled with spinach and feta cheese — a staple Greek street food sold at bakeries and kiosks across the country.
Buy from a local bakery (φούρνος) rather than a tourist café — you will pay half the price for the same quality.
Horiatiki (Greek salad)
EUR 5–10Tomatoes, cucumbers, olives, green pepper, red onion, and a large slab of feta with olive oil and oregano. No lettuce in the authentic version.
Greek salad at a neighbourhood taverna is much cheaper than at tourist waterfront restaurants; the quality is usually better too.
Moussaka
EUR 8–14Layered casserole of minced meat, aubergine, and béchamel sauce — Greece's most iconic baked dish, widely available at traditional tavernas.
Look for the dish of the day at neighbourhood tavernas — moussaka appears as the daily special and is significantly cheaper than à la carte.
Gyros
EUR 2.50–5Pita bread wrapped around spit-roasted pork or chicken, tzatziki, tomato, onion, and fries. Probably the most accessible and beloved Greek fast food.
Gyros shops open late and are significantly cheaper than sit-down restaurants — perfect for a post-study or post-nightlife meal.

Loukoumades (honey doughnuts)
EUR 3–6Small, crispy fried dough balls drizzled with honey and sprinkled with cinnamon. One of the oldest street foods in Greece, sold at dedicated shops and fairs.
A small plate of loukoumades makes an excellent cheap dessert or afternoon snack near university areas.
Dos and Don'ts
Do
Keep copies of every admin document.
Learn basic Greek greetings — 'kalimera' (good morning), 'efharisto' (thank you), 'parakalo' (please/you're welcome) open doors and make admin interactions warmer.
Plan for heat if arriving in August or September — carry water, wear light clothing, and avoid midday outdoor plans in the first weeks.
Register at your university international office within the first week — they handle most admin steps and clinic referrals for exchange students.
Buy an Ath.ena transport card (Athens) or equivalent pass immediately — reloadable and works on all buses and metro.
Use neighbourhood bakeries (φούρνος) and local tavernas instead of tourist-area restaurants — you will spend half as much for equal or better food.
Bring your EHIC card and keep it accessible — public hospitals and university clinics will ask for it.
Check your host university's student clinic (ιατρείο) location early — it handles non-emergency consultations and referrals for free.
Don't
Do not expect offices to move at Northern European speed.
Do not rent without checking commute and neighbourhood at night.
Do not underestimate island/ferry travel costs during peak season.
Do not leave housing search until after arrival — Athens rooms near campuses book up months in advance.
Do not rely on credit cards in smaller shops, markets, or neighbourhood tavernas — carry some cash for daily use.
Do not photograph military installations or individuals without consent — it is a legal offence and police enforce it.
Do not walk in tourist areas (Monastiraki, Plaka) with visible valuables — pickpocketing is the most common risk for students in Athens.
Do not underestimate summer sun on day trips — heatstroke is a real risk on island visits in July and August without sunscreen and water.
Lifestyle & Travel
Acropolis and Athens historic walk
Acropolis student entry EUR 10 (free first Sunday Nov-Mar). Plaka neighbourhood has cheap tavernas. Combine with Athens National Museum (EUR 10 student).
Learn moreGreek island hopping
Ferry passes for island hopping from EUR 40-80/hop. Budget options: Naxos and Paros over Mykonos. Student hostels from EUR 15. Once-in-a-lifetime experience.
Learn more
Santorini sunset
One of the most famous sunsets in the world — the Oia view across the caldera. Free to watch from the castle ruins. Arrive 1h early for a good spot.
Learn moreMeteora monastery visit
UNESCO monasteries built on vertical rock pillars. Six monasteries open to visitors (EUR 3 each). Hiking trails connect all six. Otherworldly landscape.
Learn moreGreek street food tour
Souvlaki EUR 2.50, spanakopita EUR 1.50, gyros EUR 3. Athens has some of the cheapest and best street food in Europe. Monastiraki flea market on Sundays.
Learn moreThessaloniki gastronomy tour
Thessaloniki is widely considered the food capital of Greece. Bougatsa (cream pastry) EUR 2, meze culture, excellent wine. More authentic and cheaper than Athens.
Learn more
Delphi archaeological site
Ancient oracle site with theatre, Temple of Apollo, and Castalian Spring. Student entry EUR 6. Combined site and museum EUR 9. Spectacular mountain setting.
Learn more
Crete road trip
Samaria Gorge hike (16km, EUR 5), Palace of Knossos (EUR 8 student), Balos lagoon. Budget car hire EUR 20-30/day split between 3-4 students.
Learn moreFestival Calendar
Travel Tips
- OASA transport card (Athens) monthly pass EUR 30. Buy at metro stations. Taxis cheap but always use the meter or Beat app.
- InterRail or ferry passes for island hopping — buy in advance for summer (July-August ferries sell out weeks ahead).
- Avoid dining at restaurants directly on Plaka or near major tourist sites — walk 2 streets back for half the price and better food.
- Greek pharmacies (farmakeia) are well-stocked and pharmacists give free basic medical advice — good alternative to a GP visit.
- EU EHIC covers public healthcare (IKA/EOPYY system). Register with local health center (kentro ygeias) soon after arrival.
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.
Useful either way
Support and discounts that still matter even if you are not in a strict incoming or outgoing case.
Student meals
University canteens can be a major budget support where available.
Host universities
Official sourcePublic transport discounts
Student discounts can apply to urban transport and some travel routes depending on status.
Local transport providers
Official sourceCultural access
Museums and archaeological sites often have student or youth reductions; carry student ID.
Greek culture authorities
Official sourceVisa Requirements
Difficulty: EasyPassport or national ID, with local registration where required
EU/EEA/Swiss students do not need a student visa, but longer stays may require residence formalities.
National visa or residence route for studies depending on stay length
Non-EU students should confirm requirements with the Greek consulate and host university before booking travel.
Application Checklist
4 steps-
1
Confirm whether your nationality needs a visa.
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2
Keep admission letter, insurance, funds proof, and housing evidence ready.
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3
Ask the host university about residence steps for stays over 90 days.
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4
Plan extra admin time before semester start.
Health & Healthcare
How It Works
Greece has a public healthcare system (ESY — Ethnikó Sýstima Ygeías) funded by the state and social insurance contributions. EU/EEA students with a valid EHIC card are entitled to medically necessary treatment at Greek public hospitals at no cost. Non-EU students must hold private health insurance that meets both Greek visa and university enrolment requirements before arrival. Healthcare quality varies: Athens and Thessaloniki have large, well-equipped university hospitals (AHEPA, Laiko, Evangelismos), but waiting times in public facilities can be long. English is spoken by most hospital doctors in major cities, especially in university clinic settings.
Student Needs
EU students: bring EHIC and keep it accessible throughout your stay. Register with your host university's student health clinic (ιατρείο) in the first week — it handles non-emergency consultations and referrals at no cost. Non-EU students: arrange compliant private insurance before departure and carry the policy document at all times; ask the international office for a list of accepted insurers. All students: pharmacies (φαρμακείο) are widely available, often open late, and pharmacists handle minor illness advice well — a useful first stop for colds, minor injuries, and prescription-light issues.
Emergency vs Clinic
Call 112 for all emergencies (ambulance, fire, police). For urgent medical advice outside clinic hours, go to the nearest public hospital emergency department (τμήμα επειγόντων περιστατικών) — all patients are treated regardless of insurance status. EKAB (Greek ambulance service) can also be reached directly on 166 in some regions. For non-urgent care, use your campus student clinic first, then a GP referral for specialist access.
Public Coverage Notes
EHIC covers medically necessary treatment at Greek public hospitals and clinics for EU/EEA students.
Non-EU students: budget approximately EUR 150-350/year for a compliant private health insurance policy meeting Greek visa requirements.
Campus student clinics (ιατρείο) at major Greek universities are free for enrolled students regardless of nationality — register immediately after arrival.
Emergency
112Cities to Explore
Athens
Greece's biggest academic and cultural base: historic streets, major universities, late social life, metro access, and strong value if students avoid tourist…
Open City Guide
Thessaloniki
Greece's most student-feeling big city: a waterfront lifestyle, Aristotle University scale, lower pressure than Athens, and nightlife that is easy to join.
Open City Guide
Patras
A lower-cost Greek student city with a serious university, port energy, carnival culture, and easier daily routines than Athens or Thessaloniki.
Open City Guide