Study in Europe can make an international education or career plan more achievable when the program fits the applicant rather than merely sounding attractive. This page is designed for students comparing European scholarships, exchanges, fellowships, internships, and research opportunities. This collection currently contains 43 matching opportunities from the OpportunityNest database. Each listing is connected to an official provider page and presents the country, funding position, study or career level, field, and deadline in a consistent format. That structure helps applicants compare realistic options without opening dozens of unrelated search results or relying on copied announcements whose dates may no longer be current.
43 matching listings.
What applicants can gain
The practical value of these opportunities may include cross-border study options, public and university funding, research networks, cultural experience, and international mobility. The exact package always depends on the provider, and a prominent funding label should never replace a careful reading of the award terms. Applicants should check whether tuition, travel, insurance, accommodation, research expenses, or family costs are included. OpportunityNest keeps these details visible beside each listing so that students can compare the likely value of an award and decide which official pages deserve a deeper review.
Who should apply
A strong candidate normally matches the published eligibility before investing time in an application. Important checks include destination rules, degree level, nationality, language evidence, institutional admission, and funding conditions. Requirements can change between annual calls, even when a program name stays the same, so the official source remains authoritative. Read both the eligibility section and any exclusions, then confirm that your qualification dates, location, experience, and proposed start period fit. A well-matched application is usually more competitive than a generic submission sent to every available program.
A reliable application process
A sensible workflow is to compare countries and providers, confirm official requirements, prepare translated documents where needed, and apply directly. Create a calendar that records the deadline in the provider's time zone and works backward through references, document certification, language tests, essays, and institutional nominations. Save the final eligibility page and application instructions for your records. Where admission and funding use separate systems, complete both processes and do not assume one submission automatically covers the other. Never pay an unofficial agent for a form that the provider makes available directly.
How to improve your shortlist
For a more focused search, check country-specific visa rules, distinguish EU and non-EU eligibility, and verify whether programs cover travel or living costs. Compare the purpose of each program with your own academic or professional direction, then rank options by fit, funding, deadline, and preparation time. Keep a base CV and document folder, but tailor motivation statements to the selection criteria of each provider. Clear examples of achievement, responsibility, research, or community contribution are stronger than broad claims. Always proofread names, dates, degree titles, and uploaded files before the final submission.
How OpportunityNest helps
OpportunityNest organizes study in europe into searchable, related collections so applicants can move between category, country, funding, degree-level, and individual opportunity pages without losing context. Use the links below to broaden or narrow your search, and return to an opportunity page when you need its specific deadline and official application route. Listings are a discovery aid, not a substitute for provider rules. Confirm the latest details on the official website before applying, especially when a deadline, funding amount, or eligibility condition affects your decision.
Current study in europe
Fellowship - π France
10 Sep 2026
OECD Co-operative Research Programme Fellowship
Field: Agriculture, fisheries, food, forests, trade, water, biodiversity, climate change, and sustainable development