Two years is a long time to put your career, your income, and your life on hold. For most international students weighing a master’s degree abroad, the biggest hidden cost isn’t tuition, it’s the opportunity cost of two years away from the workforce, plus a second year of rent, food, and living expenses stacked on top of the first. That is exactly why the UK’s one-year taught master’s model, and the handful of comparably structured European programs, has become such a magnet for ambitious students: you get the same internationally recognized postgraduate degree, the same career pivot, and the same global alumni network, in roughly half the time and often at a fraction of the total cost of a two-year US or two-year European program.
The catch, of course, is that a one-year master’s still comes with a genuine price tag, and a fully funded scholarship that covers not just tuition but also living costs for that compressed year is what actually makes the math work. The good news is that some of the world’s most prestigious scholarships were built specifically around this one-year UK model, or offer a genuine one-year track within a broader European program.
This guide walks through ten of the best fully funded scholarships for one-year master’s study in the UK and Europe, what “one-year” actually means at each institution (because the fine print varies more than you’d expect), the real eligibility criteria, exactly what the funding covers, the documents you need, and the application sequence in order. After the list, we cover how to build a document package that works across multiple one-year programs at once, the mistakes that trip up applicants targeting compressed timelines specifically, and detailed answers to the questions students ask most about the one-year model.
A quick caveat: scholarship deadlines, stipend rates, and course durations are reviewed and adjusted annually, sometimes mid-cycle. Treat every figure and date here as a solid planning reference, and always confirm current details directly on the official scholarship or university website before you submit anything.
Why the One-Year Master’s Model Matters Right Now
The one-year taught master’s is, structurally, a British invention, and it remains one of the UK higher education system’s genuine competitive advantages over the US and much of continental Europe, where two-year master’s programs are the default. A one-year MSc, MA, LLM, or MBA at a UK university typically runs from late September through the following September, with coursework concentrated into two or three terms and a dissertation or capstone project completed over the summer.
For international students, the practical implications are significant. First, total cost: even without a scholarship, a one-year program at a comparable ranking to a two-year US master’s can cost 40–60% less in cumulative tuition and living expenses simply because you’re paying for one year of London or Manchester rent instead of two. Second, opportunity cost: a working professional taking a one-year sabbatical to retrain or pivot fields returns to the job market in roughly the time it takes a two-year program’s students to finish their first year. Third, visa and immigration timelines: the UK’s Graduate Route visa, which allows international graduates to remain and work in the UK for a set period after graduation, starts its clock at the same point regardless of whether your degree took one year or two, meaning a one-year graduate effectively gets more total time in the UK job market on that visa before it expires.
Consider a realistic scenario: a mid-career civil engineer in Vietnam wants to pivot into infrastructure policy. A two-year master’s in the US would mean two years of lost salary, US tuition in the $50,000–$70,000 range, and a visa process with its own separate complexities. A one-year MSc in the UK, fully funded by Chevening or Commonwealth, means one year of lost salary, zero tuition cost to the student, and a return to the workforce, ideally in a more senior policy-facing role, twelve months later rather than twenty-four. The degree, the credential, and the networking value are comparable; the time and money invested are not.
This is precisely why the scholarships in this guide deserve close attention. They were not built as generic “study abroad” funding; several were purpose-designed around the one-year UK model, and the European options included here either offer a genuine 12-month track or fund the standard length of a program that, in several Nordic and continental systems, can also run just one year for select subjects.
The 10 Best Fully Funded One-Year Master’s Scholarships in the UK and Europe
Below is a detailed profile of each scholarship, including exactly how the “one-year” element works at that specific program, since this is where the fine print matters most.
1. Chevening Scholarship (United Kingdom)
Overview: Chevening is the UK government’s flagship international scholarship, and it is structurally a one-year scholarship by design. It funds a single academic year of taught master’s study at any UK university and does not fund two-year programs at all.
The one-year structure: Chevening explicitly requires you to select a one-year, full-time taught master’s course; part-time, distance-learning, or programs exceeding 12 months are not eligible. This makes Chevening one of the cleanest “pure” one-year scholarship options on this list.
Eligibility: Citizenship of a Chevening-eligible country (over 160 qualify), an undergraduate degree completed at least two years before the deadline, and a minimum of 2,800 hours (roughly two years) of work experience. Chevening targets applicants who already have meaningful professional experience and demonstrated leadership potential, not fresh graduates.
Financial coverage: Full tuition fees, a monthly stipend of around £1,347 (higher for scholars in London), economy return airfare, an arrival allowance, a homeward departure allowance, and one visa application fee.
Required documents: Two references (contact details submitted at application, full letters requested only if shortlisted), degree certificate and transcripts, a valid passport, and four mandatory essays of up to 300 words each covering leadership, networking, study plan, and career impact.
Application process: Apply online, selecting up to three eligible UK university courses. If shortlisted, you interview at a British embassy or high commission, then must secure at least one unconditional offer from your chosen universities by the specified deadline, typically July.
Deadline: Applications for the 2027–28 intake close 6 October 2026 at 11:00 UTC, with the portal opening in August 2026.
2. Commonwealth Master’s Scholarships (United Kingdom)
Overview: Funded by the UK’s Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office and administered by the Commonwealth Scholarship Commission (CSC), this program is, like Chevening, structurally tied to the UK’s one-year taught master’s model, but restricted specifically to citizens of low- and middle-income Commonwealth countries.
The one-year structure: The scholarship funds a one-year full-time taught master’s degree at a UK university; it does not extend to two-year programs, and applicants generally cannot use it for a second master’s degree without strong justification.
Eligibility: Citizenship of, or refugee status in, an eligible Commonwealth country; a first degree of at least upper second-class (2:1) honours standard, or a 2:2 with a relevant postgraduate qualification; and demonstrated financial need, you must be unable to afford UK study without the scholarship.
Financial coverage: Full tuition fees, a monthly stipend of £1,378 (£1,690 for London-based scholars), approved return airfare, a warm clothing allowance where applicable, a study travel grant, and a paid mid-term visit home for scholars not claiming dependent allowances.
Required documents: Degree certificates and transcripts, proof of Commonwealth citizenship, two references, a personal statement, and a detailed plan of study.
Application process: Apply through CSC Central, the CSC’s dedicated online system, selecting your preferred course and university alongside the scholarship application itself. Outcomes are typically communicated by July for a September start.
Deadline: Applications for 2026–27 entry closed October 2025; based on past cycles, expect the 2027–28 window to open around September 2026 with an October deadline.
3. Gates Cambridge Scholarship (United Kingdom)
Overview: Funded by a US$210 million donation from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, the largest single donation ever made to a UK university, this scholarship funds outstanding non-UK students at the University of Cambridge specifically. Around 80 scholarships are awarded annually.
The one-year structure: Gates Cambridge funds any full-time postgraduate course at Cambridge, which includes numerous one-year taught master’s programs (MPhil, LLM, MASt) alongside longer PhD study. If your chosen Cambridge course is a one-year program, your funding is calibrated to that single year; the maintenance allowance is explicitly pro-rated for courses shorter than 12 months and paid at the full annual rate for exactly 12-month courses.
Eligibility: Open to citizens of any country outside the UK, with a strong academic record, typically first-class or high second-class, and admission to a full-time postgraduate course at Cambridge.
Financial coverage: The full University Composition Fee, a maintenance allowance of £21,000 for 12 months, one economy return airfare, inbound visa costs and the Immigration Health Surcharge, and academic development funding of up to £2,000.
Required documents: Standard Cambridge postgraduate application materials plus a dedicated Gates Cambridge Statement of roughly 500 words addressing the scholarship’s four core selection criteria, along with a specific Gates reference.
Application process: Apply for Cambridge admission and Gates Cambridge funding simultaneously through the same portal; there is no separate scholarship application.
Deadline: October 16, 2026 for US citizens applying from the US; either December 3, 2026 or January 7, 2027 for all other applicants, depending on the specific course.
4. Marshall Scholarship (United Kingdom)
Overview: Funded by the UK government to strengthen US-UK relations, the Marshall Scholarship funds up to 50 young Americans annually for graduate study at any UK university, and it is one of the very few scholarships on this list that offers an explicit, named “one-year pathway” as one of several structured options.
The one-year structure: Marshall offers five distinct pathways, one of which is a single one-year master’s degree of at least 10 months’ duration. Applicants must choose the one-year or two-year track at the point of application and cannot apply for both; the Commission notes that most Marshall Scholarships awarded are actually two-year awards, so a one-year application should come with a clear, well-articulated rationale for why one year specifically fits your goals.
Eligibility: Restricted to US citizens only. You must hold your first undergraduate degree from an accredited four-year US college or university, have a GPA of at least 3.7 on a 4.0 scale (unrounded), have graduated after April 2024 (for the 2027 cycle), and not already hold a British degree or UK-taken GCSEs/A-Levels.
Financial coverage: Full tuition and college fees, a personal stipend to cover accommodation and living expenses (£1,452 per month outside London, £1,781 in London, based on 2025–26 rates), plus additional allowances to support ambassadorial engagement during your scholarship tenure.
Required documents: Official academic transcripts (unofficial transcripts are explicitly not accepted and can render an application ineligible), a personal statement, letters of recommendation, and formal endorsement from your undergraduate institution.
Application process: Applications are submitted through the Marshall online application portal with your undergraduate institution’s formal endorsement; you apply in the region where you have your permanent residence or where you are currently based.
Deadline: For the 2027 cycle, national deadlines are 29 September 2026 (applicants and recommenders) and 1 October 2026 (institutional endorsement submission); regional interviews follow in November 2026.
5. Clarendon Scholarship (United Kingdom)
Overview: The largest single scholarship scheme at the University of Oxford, Clarendon offers around 140–200 new scholarships annually across every subject and degree level, with genuinely open eligibility: no restrictions by nationality or field of study.
The one-year structure: Clarendon funds Oxford’s full range of graduate courses, including numerous one-year master’s programs like the MSc, MSt, MBA, and MFE, alongside two-year and doctoral options. Funding is normally offered for your full period of fee liability, which for a one-year course means exactly one year of support.
Eligibility: Open to all nationalities and all subject areas at Oxford, at both master’s and doctoral level. There is no separate scholarship application; you are automatically considered when you apply for admission to an eligible Oxford graduate course by the relevant deadline.
Financial coverage: Full course and college fees, plus an annual living cost grant of at least £15,009 (2025–26 rate), sufficient to cover the living costs of a single student in Oxford.
Required documents: Whatever your specific Oxford course application requires, typically transcripts, letters of recommendation, a personal statement, and, for research-oriented courses, a research proposal. There is no separate Clarendon-specific document set.
Application process: Simply apply for admission to your chosen Oxford master’s course by the relevant December or January deadline; Clarendon consideration happens automatically as part of the departmental review.
Deadline: Course-specific admissions deadlines fall in December or January each cycle; for 2026–27 entry, key deadlines fell on 2 December 2025 and 8 January 2026, so expect a similar window for 2027–28.
6. Felix Scholarship (United Kingdom)
Overview: Funded by an anonymous donor and administered jointly by the University of Oxford, SOAS University of London, and the University of Reading, the Felix Scholarship supports Indian nationals (plus one non-Indian award per university, typically for candidates from specific low-income or conflict-affected countries) pursuing postgraduate study in the UK.
The one-year structure: Felix funds full-time master’s study for the full period of fee liability at each partner institution, which for most taught master’s programs at all three universities is one year. A separate PhD track exists for multi-year doctoral study.
Eligibility: Indian nationals ordinarily resident in India, holding at least a first-class undergraduate degree, who can demonstrate genuine financial need and have not previously studied for a year or more outside India (unless a returning Felix alumnus). One non-Indian scholarship per partner university is reserved for nationals of specific developing countries, primarily Afghanistan, Syria, Iran, Iraq, and the Palestinian territories at SOAS.
Financial coverage: 100% of tuition fees at the international rate, a living cost grant (£19,000 at Oxford, £17,894 at Reading, SOAS confirms amounts on award), one economy return airfare from India, and allowances for books and clothing. Pre-sessional English courses and spouse costs are not covered.
Required documents: A complete admission application to your chosen course, followed by a separate Felix application (at SOAS and Reading) or automatic consideration (at Oxford, alongside Clarendon).
Application process: At Oxford, apply for admission by the standard December/January deadline and you are automatically considered. At SOAS and Reading, submit your course application first, then complete a distinct Felix Scholarship form once you hold an offer.
Deadline: SOAS’s 2026 cycle closed 2 March 2026; expect a similar early-March window for 2027 entry, with Oxford and Reading following their own separate December–January and rolling schedules respectively.
7. DAAD Study Scholarships (Germany)
Overview: The German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD) funds more than 100,000 international students and researchers annually, and while its flagship master’s program funds courses up to 24 months, a substantial share of eligible German master’s programs, particularly in technical and applied fields, run exactly one year.
The one-year structure: DAAD funding is calibrated to your specific program’s standard duration, which you declare at application. If your chosen German master’s program runs one year (common in specialized technical and management-oriented degrees), DAAD funds that single year in full; there is no requirement to select a longer program.
Eligibility: A bachelor’s degree completed within roughly the last six years and an above-average academic record; German public universities generally charge little to no tuition regardless of scholarship status.
Financial coverage: A monthly stipend of €992, a travel allowance, and full health, accident, and personal liability insurance.
Required documents: Academic transcripts, degree certificate, a CV, letters of recommendation, and a motivation letter specifying your chosen program and its duration.
Application process: Apply directly through the DAAD online portal for your specific program; deadlines vary but generally fall between July and November for an October start the following year.
Deadline: For the 2027–28 intake, deadlines fall between August 31 and mid-November 2026, depending on the specific program call.
8. Erasmus Mundus Joint Master’s Degrees (European Union)
Overview: Each Erasmus Mundus Joint Master (EMJM) is delivered by a consortium of at least three European universities, with over 100 active programs spanning nearly every academic discipline. Program length is set by ECTS credit load rather than a fixed EU-wide standard.
The one-year structure: EMJM programs run 60, 90, or 120 ECTS credits, corresponding to durations of roughly one to two years. A meaningful number of 60-ECTS EMJM programs are genuine one-year tracks, and the scholarship funds the actual duration of your chosen program up to a maximum of 24 months, so a one-year program receives one year of funding.
Eligibility: A bachelor’s degree or equivalent (at least 180 ECTS credits), open to all nationalities, with a maximum of three EMJM program applications allowed per year.
Financial coverage: Full tuition coverage, travel expenses, installation costs, and a monthly living allowance of EUR 1,400 for the duration of your specific program.
Required documents: Bachelor’s degree certificate and transcripts, a CV, motivation letter, letters of recommendation, and language proficiency proof as required by your chosen consortium.
Application process: Search the Erasmus Mundus catalogue specifically for 60-ECTS (one-year) programs if that is your priority, then apply directly through each program’s own website, since there is no centralized EU-wide application system.
Deadline: Most deadlines for the 2027 intake are expected to open between October and November 2026, though this varies significantly by individual consortium.
9. Eiffel Excellence Scholarship (France)
Overview: Created by the French Ministry for Europe and Foreign Affairs, the Eiffel program helps French higher education institutions attract top international master’s and PhD students, with applicants up to 29 years old eligible at the master’s level.
The one-year structure: For master’s applications, Eiffel funds stays of 12 to 24 months depending on your year of enrolment and program structure, meaning a genuine one-year French master’s (a growing category, particularly at grandes écoles and specialized business/engineering programs) receives a full 12-month funding package.
Eligibility: Applicants must be under 29 at the master’s level, and, importantly, you cannot apply directly; a French higher education institution must nominate you to Campus France, which means you need to already be in active contact with your target program before the nomination process can begin.
Financial coverage: A monthly stipend (commonly around €1,181 for master’s students under standard Eiffel rates), international travel costs, health insurance, and access to select cultural activities.
Required documents: Academic transcripts (many participating institutions expect at least a 15/20 average), a CV, letters of recommendation, and a motivation letter tailored to your specific French program.
Application process: First secure interest from a French institution, which then submits your application to Campus France on your behalf; individual departments typically set internal deadlines earlier than Campus France’s official cutoff.
Deadline: The 2026 cycle’s Campus France deadline was 8 January 2026, with individual institution deadlines, such as Sorbonne’s 28 November 2025 cutoff, falling even earlier.
10. Swedish Institute Scholarships for Global Professionals (Sweden)
Overview: Managed by the Swedish Institute, a Swedish government agency under the Ministry for Foreign Affairs, this program funds roughly 200–300 working professionals annually from a defined list of eligible low- and middle-income countries to pursue master’s study in Sweden.
The one-year structure: Sweden’s master’s programs are commonly structured as either one-year (60 ECTS, “magisterexamen”) or two-year (120 ECTS, “masterexamen”) degrees, and the SI scholarship funds whichever duration your specific eligible program requires, with no funding extension beyond your program’s standard length. A meaningful share of SI-eligible programs, particularly in specialized technical and policy fields, are genuine one-year tracks.
Eligibility: Citizenship of one of roughly 34 eligible countries (including Bangladesh, Kenya, Nigeria, Vietnam, and others across Africa, Asia, and Latin America), at least 3,000 hours of documented professional work experience, and demonstrated leadership experience through employment or civil society engagement.
Financial coverage: Full tuition fees paid directly to your university, a monthly stipend of SEK 12,000, a one-time travel grant of SEK 15,000 (SEK 10,000 for applicants from several Eastern European and Central Asian countries), and membership in the SI Network for Global Professionals.
Required documents: An SI-specific CV template (maximum three pages), a signed and stamped proof-of-work-and-leadership-experience form, two letters of reference from different referees (using SI’s own template), and a photocopy of your valid passport or national ID.
Application process: First apply to an SI-eligible master’s program through Sweden’s centralized University Admissions portal, then, separately, submit your SI scholarship application through SI’s own dedicated portal during a narrow two-week window; you are only considered for the scholarship if admitted to an eligible program by the specified date.
Deadline: For 2026–27 entry, the University Admissions program deadline was 15 January 2026, with the SI Scholarship application window running 9–25 February 2026 and results announced in late April 2026.
Required Documentation & Preparation Strategy
Because one-year programs compress your entire application-to-arrival timeline, having your documentation genuinely ready in advance matters even more here than for two-year programs, where a slower document turnaround has more room to be absorbed.
Academic transcripts and degree certificates. Nearly every program on this list requires official transcripts, and several (Marshall in particular) explicitly reject unofficial copies outright. Request certified copies from your university’s registrar at least six to eight weeks before your earliest target deadline, since processing times, especially for degrees completed several years ago, can run longer than expected.
Letters of recommendation. Two is the standard requirement across most programs here, though the specific format varies considerably: Chevening asks only for referee contact details upfront, while the Swedish Institute requires letters submitted on SI’s own signed and stamped template. Read each program’s exact formatting requirements before approaching your recommenders, since a generic letter often needs to be reformatted or resubmitted to fit a specific portal’s rules.
A tightly focused statement of purpose or personal statement. For a one-year program specifically, admissions committees and scholarship panels want to see a clear, realistic plan for what you’ll accomplish in a compressed timeline. Vague statements about “exploring options” read very differently in a one-year context than a two-year one; be specific about the concentration, dissertation topic, or practical outcome you’re targeting.
Proof of work experience, where required. Chevening (2,800 hours), the Swedish Institute (3,000 hours), and several other programs on this list require documented professional experience, often via formal employment letters on company letterhead. Start gathering these letters early, since former employers can take weeks to respond to a formal documentation request.
English language proficiency proof. Most UK and European one-year programs require IELTS (commonly 6.5+) or TOEFL, though several accept a Medium of Instruction certificate if your previous degree was taught in English. Book any required test at least three months ahead of your target deadline to allow time for a retake if needed.
Start building this document package at least four to six months before your earliest target deadline, and note that Chevening, Commonwealth, and several others require you to secure a separate, standard university admission offer on top of the scholarship application itself, so track both timelines on a single calendar.
Common Mistakes to Avoid & Insider Tips
Mistake 1: Assuming every “prestigious UK scholarship” funds one year. Gates Cambridge and Clarendon fund both one- and two-year courses, and the funding period follows your specific course’s length, not a fixed scholarship default. Confirm your chosen course’s actual duration before assuming your funding timeline.
Mistake 2: Applying for Marshall’s one-year pathway without a strong rationale. The Marshall Commission has stated explicitly that most Marshall Scholarships are two-year awards, and applicants should only pursue the one-year pathway in specific, well-justified circumstances. A one-year application that doesn’t clearly explain why a compressed timeline fits your goals will read as underprepared rather than efficient.
Mistake 3: Missing the separate university admission deadline. Chevening, Commonwealth, and Marshall all require you to secure a UK university offer separately from, and often on a different timeline than, the scholarship application itself. Missing the university deadline can disqualify an otherwise successful scholarship application even after conditional selection.
Mistake 4: Treating a one-year program as a “lighter” application. Because the degree itself is shorter, some applicants mistakenly submit a thinner, less-developed statement of purpose. Scholarship panels read a compressed timeline as requiring more, not less, clarity about your specific goals, since there is genuinely less time within the program itself to figure things out once you arrive.
Mistake 5: Overlooking European one-year options in favor of only UK programs. Because the UK’s one-year model is so well known, many applicants never check whether their target European program is a 60-ECTS one-year track. Erasmus Mundus and the Swedish Institute both fund genuine one-year options that receive far fewer applications than their UK equivalents, simply because fewer students know to look.
Insider tip: For Oxford’s Clarendon and Felix Scholarships, since there is no separate scholarship application, the entire process rides on the strength of your standard graduate course application. Invest your full effort there rather than assuming a separate scholarship essay will let you compensate for a weaker course application later.
Insider tip: When researching Erasmus Mundus or Swedish programs, filter directly by ECTS credit count (60 versus 120) in each catalogue rather than relying on a program’s name alone, since naming conventions for one-year versus two-year tracks are not standardized across consortiums or universities.
Comprehensive FAQ Section
Is a one-year master’s degree from the UK viewed the same way by employers as a two-year degree from elsewhere?
Generally, yes, particularly for taught (as opposed to research) master’s degrees, since UK one-year programs pack the same total credit and contact hours into a more condensed academic calendar rather than covering less material. Employers familiar with the UK education system, and increasingly employers globally, treat a UK MSc or MA as equivalent in depth to a two-year program elsewhere.
Can I extend a one-year scholarship if I want to continue into a second year or a PhD?
It depends entirely on the specific scholarship. Marshall explicitly allows a one-year master’s followed by a PhD start in year two, with guaranteed two-year funding for that pathway. Chevening and Commonwealth, by contrast, do not fund extensions or subsequent degrees under the same award. Always check your specific program’s extension policy before assuming continuation is possible.
Do one-year scholarships require less work experience than longer programs?
Not necessarily; several one-year scholarships, including Chevening (2,800 hours) and the Swedish Institute (3,000 hours), have substantial work experience requirements precisely because they target early- to mid-career professionals rather than students moving directly from undergraduate study.
Is it harder to get a dissertation or research project done well in just one year compared to two?
It is more compressed, certainly, but UK and European one-year programs are structured specifically around this timeline, typically with taught coursework concentrated in the first two terms and a dedicated summer period for the dissertation or capstone project. Success depends more on selecting your topic and supervisor early than on the calendar length itself.
Can I apply to more than one of these scholarships simultaneously?
In most cases, yes, since these are independently administered programs, though a few (like Erasmus Mundus’s own internal three-program cap, and Marshall’s one-track-only rule) impose limits within their own systems. Applying to several different scholarships in parallel is standard practice and significantly improves your overall odds.
What happens to my visa timeline if I choose a one-year program instead of a two-year one?
In the UK specifically, the Graduate Route visa period begins after you complete your studies, regardless of whether your program took one or two years, meaning a one-year graduate has more total combined study-plus-work time in the UK on that visa pathway before needing a different visa category. Confirm current visa rules directly with UK Visas and Immigration, since policy details can change.
Are one-year programs less competitive than two-year programs because they’re shorter?
No; if anything, several one-year scholarships, Chevening and Marshall in particular, rank among the most competitive on this list, with acceptance rates in the low single digits. Duration and competitiveness are unrelated variables.
Conclusion & Next Steps
A one-year master’s degree, fully funded, offers something genuinely rare: the full weight of an internationally respected postgraduate credential without asking you to put two years of your life and career on hold to get it. The ten scholarships in this guide represent some of the most well-established, well-funded pathways to that outcome across the UK and Europe, each with its own specific eligibility profile and application rhythm.
Your immediate next step is to shortlist two or three programs from this list whose eligibility criteria, field, and funding model genuinely fit your background, then build a single calendar tracking every deadline, document, and reference request across them. Because several of these programs require a separate university admission offer on a different timeline than the scholarship itself, starting early, ideally six months before your earliest target deadline, gives you the room to do both processes justice rather than rushing either one.
Bookmark this guide, since deadlines and funding figures are reviewed annually and you’ll likely want to double-check details as your target dates approach. And if you’re weighing which specific path, or which country, fits your goals best, explore the other scholarship and study-abroad guides on mcqsworld.com for more detailed, field-specific funding breakdowns.








