Germany saw 370% rise in Indian applications
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Applications by Indian students to study in Germany increased by 370% in early 2026, with surging interest in AI and data science programs. Germany’s attractiveness as a study-to-work destination is growing due to favorable visa policies, labor shortages, and affordable public universities.
New Delhi: Applications by Indian students to Germany between January and June grew 370 per cent compared to the same period last year, with artificial intelligence and data-led programmes recording the fastest growth in student interest, according to a new report.The report by Leap Scholar, a study abroad platform, is based on an analysis of counselling and application data from over 1,24,000 Indian study-abroad aspirants between January and June 2026. Internal data includes formal university admissions submissions, inbound course inquiries, counselling sessions referencing specific programmes and university offer decisions.Also read: US colleges report fall in international applications; India among hardest-hit countriesThe report also used secondary data from sources including the Federal Employment Agency, LinkedIn Salary Insights, Glassdoor Germany, BAMF, DAAD and Destatis.The report indicates that Indian students are no longer looking at Germany as only a low-cost education destination; they are evaluating it through a more outcome-led lens, including public university affordability, AI and technology-linked course demand, post-study work options, visa pathways, language readiness and projected career returns.Interest in MSc artificial intelligence programmes rose 600 per cent, while postgraduate programmes accounted for 82 per cent of all Germany applications in the first half of 2026, the report said. Course interactions for Germany also increased 72 per cent year-on-year, indicating that Indian students are moving from broad destination exploration to more targeted, programme-led decision-making.The report comes at a time when Germany is facing a significant labour shortage. The Federal Employment Agency recorded around 6.3 lakh open vacancies in early 2026, with demand concentrated in technology and healthcare.For Indian students, this is strengthening Germany's position as a study-to-work destination, supported by public university affordability, the 18-month post-study job-seeker visa, the EU Blue Card pathway and the newer Opportunity Card route for skilled candidates.Also read: New Zealand expands Pathway Student Visa from July 20; more flexibility for international students"Germany is becoming a clear study-to-work corridor for Indian students. The important shift is not just that more students are choosing Germany, but also how they are choosing it."They are looking at ROI, job markets, language readiness, visa pathways and long-term mobility before making a decision. That tells us the Indian study-abroad market is becoming far more informed and outcome-led. Germany is benefiting because it offers a compelling mix of affordability, skills demand and career visibility," Arnav Kumar, co-founder, Leap Scholar, said.The report noted that students' interest in computer science grew 273 per cent, while data science and AI combinations grew 173 per cent. MBA interest, by contrast, declined 13 per cent, reflecting a sharper preference for technical and employability-linked programmes.The report also highlighted that the application funnel remains selective. Only 12 per cent of H1 (first half of the year) applicants received a university offer, pointing to the need for stronger programme fit, higher-quality documentation and earlier preparation.According to Leap Scholar's counselling data, students are evaluating Germany through a more financial and outcome-led lens. Four of the 12 most-asked questions in H1 were linked to total cost, education loans, blocked account (special German bank account required for international students) requirements, scholarships and tuition waivers. Students also asked more specific questions on visa approval, part-time work, public versus private university value and course-level return on investment.The report noted that public universities typically charge low semester or administrative fees, while private university tuition can range between 10,000 and 20,000 euros per year. For public university students, Leap Scholar estimates a financial break-even period of 1.5 to 2.5 years after graduation, supported by lower education debt and projected first-contract salaries averaging around 53,000 euros per year for tech-weighted roles in primary cities.