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Data reported relate to public higher education institutions and courses under the responsibility of the Ministry for higher education and research (MESR) and regulated by the Order of 19 April 2019. Fees applied for school or university diplomas (Diplômes d'Etablissement and DU-Diplômes universitaires), and by government-dependent private higher education institutions vary from one HEI to another and are not accounted for. Regarding short cycle programmes, answers refer to short-cycle higher education programmes carried out in public upper secondary schools (STS- sections de technicien supérieur) which are free of charge.
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Part-time student status does not exist.
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Short cycle programmes refer to short-cycle higher education programmes carried out in public upper secondary schools (STS- sections de technicien supérieur) which are free of charge. The same rule applies to international students.
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Students also pay an annual Student Life and Campus Contribution - Contribution annuelle de vie étudiante et de campus/CVEC - to co-finance their social, cultural and sports activities, as well as the provision of health care in addition to the above fees. In 2023-24, it amounts to EUR 100. Recipients of grants based on social criteria (Bourses sur critères sociaux/BCS) and the annual specific aid (aide spécifique annuelle) are exempted from tuition fees and the CVEC contribution (the latter is also not paid by several other categories of students, including students in STS's short-cycle programme, refugees and asylum seekers). International students who come to France under an inter-university partnership are not subject to CVEC.
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Academic performance or length of studies have no impact on the amount of fees.
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The specific discipline has impact on the amount of fees:
- Fees for students in paramedical programmes (for ex: Diplôme d'Etat de psychomotricien) are higher than those applying to other 1st cycle programmes
- Fees for students preparing engineering diplomas (i.e. second cycle programmes) are higher than those applying to Master's degrees.
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International students (non-EU/EEA citizens) who are not coming to France under an inter-university partnership are required to pay differentiated (i.e. higher) fees if: a) they don't have a permanent residence in France; b) it is their first enrolment for bachelor's, master's degree or for an engineering programme (2023/2024); c) the degree is followed in a higher education establishment that falls within the scope of the Ministry of higher education and research (MESR). Besides, some non-EU students pay registration fees identical to those paid by French and EU students based on their status and the degree for which they are studying. The state covers two-thirds of the study cost. The total registration fee that they are required to pay is:
- EUR 2 770 per year at the licence (bachelor) level
- EUR 3 770 per year at the master level
- Additional fees for students studying in foreign language programmes decided by HEIs may apply but are not regulated.