Introduction: Why Romania and Bulgaria Are Your Hidden Gateway to a Fully Funded European Education
When most international students think about fully funded scholarships in Europe, their minds jump immediately to Germany, the Netherlands, or the UK. And while those destinations are excellent, they’re also extraordinarily competitive — and expensive to live in if your funding falls short.
Here’s what the scholarship world doesn’t always advertise loudly: Romania and Bulgaria offer some of the most accessible, genuinely fully funded scholarship programs in Europe, including opportunities backed by national governments, the European Union, and top-ranked universities — with lower cost-of-living expenses, English-taught programs, and welcoming policies toward African students and other international applicants.
If you’re an African student, a career-focused postgraduate candidate, or a competitive scholarship applicant searching for a realistic pathway into European academia in 2026, this guide was written specifically for you.
In this post, you’ll discover:
- The top fully funded scholarships available in Romania and Bulgaria for 2026
- Exact funding coverage details — what’s paid and what isn’t
- Eligibility requirements and who qualifies
- Application timelines and deadlines
- Common mistakes to avoid
- A downloadable checklist to keep your application on track
Let’s open the door to your European education.
Why Romania and Bulgaria? The Case for These Two Underrated European Study Destinations
Before diving into specific scholarships, let’s establish why these two countries deserve a serious place in your scholarship strategy.
Romania:
- Member of the European Union since 2007
- Home to over 90 higher education institutions, including internationally ranked universities
- Cost of living is approximately 40–60% lower than Western European countries
- Bucharest, the capital, is consistently ranked among Europe’s most affordable major cities for students
- Growing number of English-medium programs at bachelor’s, master’s, and PhD levels
- No IELTS required for many government-funded programs (proof of English proficiency through other means accepted)
Bulgaria:
- Also an EU member since 2007
- Sofia University and the Medical University of Sofia maintain strong international reputations
- Average student living costs: €400–€600/month — among the lowest in the EU
- Bulgarian government scholarships specifically target developing-nation students, including African applicants
- Strong programs in medicine, engineering, and IT — fields with global career demand
- Growing bilateral scholarship agreements with African countries
Together, these two countries represent a compelling combination: EU-recognized degrees, affordable living, inclusive scholarship programs, and lower competition than flagship Western European destinations.
SECTION 1: Fully Funded Scholarships in Romania 2026
1. Romanian Government Scholarships for Foreign Citizens (Offered by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs)
Overview:
This is the flagship scholarship program offered by the Romanian Government through the Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MFA) and administered by Study in Romania. It is one of the most significant fully funded opportunities for international students, including those from African nations, and it is renewed annually with 2026 applications expected to follow the same structure as recent cycles.
Funding Coverage:
- ✅ Full tuition waiver
- ✅ Monthly stipend (approximately RON 900–1,100/month, roughly €180–€220)
- ✅ Free accommodation in university dormitories (or housing allowance)
- ✅ Medical insurance coverage
- ❌ Flights to Romania are typically not covered — budget accordingly
Available Study Levels:
- Bachelor’s degree (undergraduate)
- Master’s degree (postgraduate)
- PhD (doctoral studies)
- Postdoctoral research
Eligible Countries:
The scholarship is open to citizens of countries that do not have EU/EEA status and are not citizens of countries with which Romania has bilateral cooperation agreements that cover different scholarship schemes. African students are specifically included. Countries from Sub-Saharan Africa, North Africa, and other developing regions consistently appear on the eligible list.
Fields of Study Available:
Virtually all disciplines are available, including medicine, engineering, humanities, social sciences, natural sciences, arts, law, and economics. Instruction can be in Romanian (with a free preparatory year included) or in English, depending on the university and program.
Key Eligibility Requirements:
- Must not be a Romanian citizen or hold permanent residence in Romania
- Academic transcripts showing strong performance
- Age limit: typically under 35 for master’s/PhD (varies slightly)
- Language proficiency documentation (for English-taught programs)
- Medical fitness certificate
- No criminal record
Application Timeline (Based on Recent Cycles — 2026 Expected Similar):
| Phase | Period |
|---|---|
| Application portal opens | January–February 2026 |
| Submission deadline | March 1 – March 31, 2026 |
| Results notification | May–June 2026 |
| Enrollment/academic year begins | October 2026 |
How to Apply:
- Visit the official portal: Study in Romania — Romanian Government Scholarships
- Create an account and complete the online application form
- Upload all required documents (see checklist below)
- Select up to 3 universities and programs in order of preference
- Submit before the deadline and save your confirmation number
Official Source: Romanian Ministry of Foreign Affairs — Scholarships
📸 Content Image Suggestion #1: An infographic showing the Romania scholarship funding breakdown — tuition, stipend, housing, and medical coverage — as a color-coded pie chart or checklist visual. Title: “What the Romanian Government Scholarship Actually Covers.”
2. Erasmus+ Scholarships — Romania as Host Country
Overview:
The Erasmus+ programme, funded by the European Union, supports student and staff exchanges across Europe and partner countries globally. Romania, as an EU member state, hosts thousands of incoming Erasmus+ students each year. For African students enrolled at universities that have signed Erasmus+ Inter-institutional Agreements (IIAs) with Romanian institutions, this is a powerful pathway.
Funding Coverage:
- ✅ Monthly living allowance (€700–€850/month for students from partner countries outside Europe)
- ✅ Travel grant (based on distance from home country)
- ✅ Tuition fees waived (paid by the EU programme)
- ✅ Possible top-up grants for students from disadvantaged backgrounds
- ❌ Does not cover full degree programs — typically 1 or 2 semesters
Who Can Apply:
Students who are enrolled at a university that has an active Erasmus+ agreement with a Romanian host university. This is a mobility scholarship, meaning you apply through your home institution, not directly to Romania.
How to Access It:
- Check with your home university’s international/Erasmus office to see if they have agreements with Romanian universities
- Apply through your university’s internal Erasmus+ selection process
- Receive placement confirmation and EU funding package
Key Romanian Universities Participating in Erasmus+:
- University of Bucharest
- Babeș-Bolyai University (Cluj-Napoca)
- Alexandru Ioan Cuza University (Iași)
- Polytechnic University of Bucharest
- Transilvania University of Brașov
Official Erasmus+ Info: erasmus-plus.ec.europa.eu
3. University-Specific Scholarships in Romania
Several Romanian universities offer their own merit-based and need-based funding for international students. While not always 100% fully funded, these can be combined with other grants for comprehensive coverage.
Babeș-Bolyai University (BBU) — Cluj-Napoca
- Offers international excellence scholarships for high-achieving incoming students
- Partial tuition reductions and housing support available
- Strong English-language master’s programs in computer science, business, and environmental studies
- Website: www.ubbcluj.ro
University of Bucharest
- PhD funding through research projects and faculty grants
- Some faculties offer full funding for doctoral candidates attached to EU-funded research projects
- Website: www.unibuc.ro
Polytechnic University of Bucharest (UPB)
- Engineering and technology scholarships for international students
- Partners with industry sponsors who fund specific programs
- Website: www.upb.ro
SECTION 2: Fully Funded Scholarships in Bulgaria 2026
4. Bulgarian Government Scholarship Program for Foreign Students
Overview:
The Bulgarian Government, through the Ministry of Education and Science, offers scholarships annually to students from countries with which Bulgaria maintains diplomatic relations — including a wide range of African nations. The program is administered in cooperation with Bulgarian universities and covers multiple levels of study.
Funding Coverage:
- ✅ Full tuition fees covered
- ✅ Monthly stipend (approximately BGN 350–500/month, roughly €175–€255)
- ✅ Subsidized university dormitory accommodation
- ✅ Health insurance
- ❌ International travel not included
Available Study Levels:
- Bachelor’s (undergraduate) — 4 years
- Master’s (postgraduate) — 1–2 years
- PhD (doctoral) — 3 years
- Specialized medical/dental training
Eligible Countries:
Primarily open to citizens from developing countries including Sub-Saharan African nations, North Africa, the Middle East, Asia, and Latin America. Applicants must apply through their home country’s Ministry of Education or through the Bulgarian Embassy in their country.
Fields of Study:
- Medicine and Dentistry (highly popular among African applicants)
- Engineering (civil, electrical, mechanical, computer)
- Natural Sciences
- Agriculture and Veterinary Sciences
- Humanities and Social Sciences
- Economics and Management
Key Eligibility Criteria:
- Citizens of eligible developing countries
- Age limit: typically under 35 for postgraduate applicants
- Strong academic record (equivalent to Bulgarian high school diploma or higher for undergrad)
- Health certificate
- Language proficiency (Bulgarian language preparatory year available, or English-medium programs)
- No criminal conviction
Application Timeline (2026 Expected Cycle):
| Phase | Period |
|---|---|
| Applications open (via embassies) | January–March 2026 |
| Embassy submission deadline | March–April 2026 |
| MES review and selection | April–June 2026 |
| Notification of results | June–July 2026 |
| Academic year begins | September/October 2026 |
How to Apply:
- Contact the Bulgarian Embassy in your home country to request the scholarship application form and list of required documents
- Alternatively, check the Ministry of Education and Science Bulgaria portal: www.mon.bg
- Submit your application through your national Ministry of Education or directly at the Bulgarian Embassy
- Include all required documents (see checklist below)
- Universities in Bulgaria will contact shortlisted candidates for interviews or additional review
🔗 Official Source: Bulgarian Ministry of Education and Science
5. Sofia University “St. Kliment Ohridski” Scholarship Programs
Overview:
Sofia University, Bulgaria’s leading research university established in 1888, offers several scholarship opportunities for international students, particularly at the postgraduate and doctoral level. It consistently ranks among the top universities in Eastern Europe.
Funding Coverage (varies by program):
- ✅ Tuition fee waivers for selected doctoral programs
- ✅ Research stipends for PhD students attached to faculty grants
- ✅ Partial funding available for master’s students in priority disciplines
- ❌ Living costs often need to be self-funded (though very low in Sofia)
Popular Programs for International Students:
- MSc in Computer Science (English-taught)
- MA in International Relations
- PhD in Physics, Chemistry, Mathematics
- MBA programs (partially funded)
Website: www.uni-sofia.bg
6. Medical University of Sofia — International Student Funding
Overview:
The Medical University of Sofia is one of the most prestigious medical schools in Eastern Europe and attracts a significant number of African students each year — particularly from Nigeria, Ghana, Ethiopia, Kenya, and Egypt — who are drawn by its internationally recognized medical degrees.
Scholarship Opportunities:
- Bulgarian Government Medical Scholarships (covered under #4 above) — most medical applicants from Africa access funding through this channel
- Partial tuition reductions for academically excellent international students
- Some students access funding through bilateral agreements between Bulgaria and their home governments
Why It Matters for African Students:
Many African countries recognize the Medical University of Sofia’s MBBS/MD degree, and graduates can return home or pursue further licensing in other countries. The program is taught in English (after a Bulgarian/English foundation year), making it accessible without deep prior language knowledge.
Website: www.mu-sofia.bg
7. Erasmus+ Scholarships — Bulgaria as Host Country
Similar to Romania, Bulgaria participates in the Erasmus+ programme, and several Bulgarian universities host incoming international students through inter-institutional agreements with partner universities in Africa and elsewhere.
Key Bulgarian Universities with Erasmus+ Exchange Programs:
- Sofia University “St. Kliment Ohridski”
- Technical University of Sofia
- University of National and World Economy (UNWE)
- Plovdiv University “Paisii Hilendarski”
- Varna University of Management
Funding: Same structure as Romania Erasmus+ scholarships — monthly stipend (€700–€850), travel grant, and tuition waiver for the exchange period.
How to Apply: Through your home institution’s Erasmus+ office, if your university has an active agreement with a Bulgarian partner institution.

SECTION 3: Eligibility Requirements — What You Actually Need to Qualify
This section summarizes the core eligibility requirements that apply across both Romanian and Bulgarian fully funded government scholarship programs, so you can assess your readiness before investing time in applications.
Academic Requirements
- Undergraduate applicants: High school diploma with strong grades (equivalent to the host country’s leaving certificate standard). Science-heavy programs (medicine, engineering) typically require demonstrated strength in mathematics and sciences.
- Master’s applicants: Recognized bachelor’s degree with a strong GPA (typically 3.0/4.0 or equivalent — check program-specific requirements)
- PhD applicants: Master’s degree in a relevant field; a research proposal is usually required
Language Requirements
- Romanian scholarships: For Romanian-taught programs, a free one-year language preparatory course is included in the funding. For English-taught programs, English proficiency documentation is required — but many programs do not require IELTS and accept university-issued English medium instruction letters, institutional tests, or national exam results.
- Bulgarian scholarships: Similar structure — Bulgarian language preparation year included for non-English programs. English-taught programs require proof of proficiency, and no IELTS is required by many programs if you can demonstrate your previous education was conducted in English.
💡 No IELTS Scholarships: Both Romania and Bulgaria offer multiple pathways that don’t require IELTS scores, which is a significant advantage for applicants from countries where test access is limited or costly. This is one of the most searched long-tail scholarship criteria for African students.
Documentation Typically Required
- Certified copies of academic transcripts and certificates
- Certified English/French/Romanian/Bulgarian translations (where applicable)
- Birth certificate (certified copy)
- Valid passport (copy)
- Medical fitness certificate from a licensed physician
- Certificate of good conduct / police clearance
- Passport-sized photos
- Personal statement or motivation letter
- Letters of recommendation (2–3, usually academic)
- Research proposal (for PhD applicants)
- Proof of language proficiency
Age Requirements
- Most programs: Under 35 for postgraduate applicants
- Undergraduate: Typically fresh from high school, but mature students may also apply
- PhD programs: Some flexibility up to age 40 depending on the program
SECTION 4: Application Timelines and Deadlines for 2026
Planning your scholarship application around the right calendar is critical. Miss a deadline and you wait another year. Here’s a consolidated view:
| Scholarship | Application Opens | Deadline | Notification |
|---|---|---|---|
| Romanian Government (MFA) | Jan–Feb 2026 | March 31, 2026 | May–June 2026 |
| Erasmus+ Romania | Varies by home university | Usually Oct–Jan (for next Sept) | 3–4 months after |
| Bulgarian Government (MES) | Jan–March 2026 | March–April 2026 | June–July 2026 |
| Sofia University Scholarships | Rolling / program-specific | Check university website | 6–8 weeks after |
| Medical University of Sofia | Jan–April 2026 | April 30, 2026 | June 2026 |
| Erasmus+ Bulgaria | Varies by home university | Usually Oct–Feb (for next Sept) | 3–4 months after |
⚠️ Note: These timelines are based on recent cycles and confirmed information available at time of writing. Always verify current deadlines at official portals as the 2026 cycle opens. Scholarship calendars can shift by 2–4 weeks.
📸 Content Image Suggestion #3: A visual 12-month scholarship calendar graphic (January–December 2026), with color-coded markers for each scholarship’s open/close dates, notification period, and enrollment start. This is highly shareable and bookmarkable.
SECTION 5: How to Apply — Step-by-Step Process
Applying for the Romanian Government Scholarship (Step-by-Step)
Step 1: Verify Your Eligibility
Visit studyinromania.gov.ro and confirm your country of citizenship is on the eligible list. Review the specific requirements for your desired level of study.
Step 2: Choose Your Programs
Research Romanian universities and programs that align with your academic background and career goals. You’ll select up to 3 preferences, ranked in order. Use the Romanian university search tool at the same portal.
Step 3: Prepare Your Documents
Using the checklist at the end of this post, gather all required documents. Get originals certified and translated into Romanian or English as required. This step takes the most time — start at least 8–10 weeks before the deadline.
Step 4: Complete the Online Application
Navigate to the official application portal at studyinromania.gov.ro, create an account, and fill in the application form in full. Upload scanned copies of all required documents in the specified formats (usually PDF, under specific file size limits).
Step 5: Submit and Confirm
Submit your application before March 31, 2026. Save your application reference number. You will receive an automated confirmation email.
Step 6: Monitor Results
Check your email and the portal regularly from May 2026 onward. Successful candidates receive admission letters from their assigned universities and instructions for visa application and enrollment.
Step 7: Apply for Your Romanian Student Visa
Once you receive your admission letter, apply for a Type D long-stay student visa at the Romanian Embassy in your country. Present your scholarship award letter, admission letter, and supporting documents.
Applying for the Bulgarian Government Scholarship (Step-by-Step)
Step 1: Contact the Bulgarian Embassy in Your Country
The Bulgarian Government scholarship is primarily embassy-channeled — meaning your first point of contact is the Bulgarian Embassy or the Ministry of Education in your home country. Use the embassy finder at www.mfa.bg to locate your nearest Bulgarian diplomatic mission.
Step 2: Request Application Materials
Ask the embassy for the official scholarship application form, the list of available universities and programs, and the complete list of required documents for the current cycle.
Step 3: Prepare and Certify Your Documents
Gather all required documents (see checklist below). Get academic documents officially certified and notarized. Translations into Bulgarian or English may be required.
Step 4: Submit Through Official Channels
Submit your completed application either:
- Directly to the Bulgarian Embassy in your country, or
- Through your national Ministry of Education (if your country has a bilateral agreement with Bulgaria that routes applications this way)
Step 5: Wait for Selection and Notification
The Bulgarian Ministry of Education reviews all applications submitted through embassies. Shortlisted candidates are notified by June–July 2026 and receive placement offers from specific Bulgarian universities.
Step 6: Accept Your Offer and Prepare for Enrollment
Accept your scholarship offer within the deadline specified in your notification letter. Begin preparing for relocation — apply for a Bulgarian student visa (Type D) through your nearest Bulgarian Embassy.
FAQ: Your Most Common Questions About Romania & Bulgaria Scholarships, Answered
Q1: Are these scholarships genuinely fully funded, or are there hidden costs?
The Romanian and Bulgarian government scholarships cover tuition, accommodation (in university dormitories), a monthly stipend, and health insurance. The primary cost not covered is international travel to and from Romania/Bulgaria. Additionally, the monthly stipend (€175–€220/month) may not cover all living expenses in full, particularly in larger cities like Bucharest. Budget for personal expenses, food, transportation, and supplies beyond your stipend.
Q2: Can African students apply directly, or do they need to go through their government?
For the Romanian Government Scholarship, you apply directly online through the Study in Romania portal — no government intermediary required. For the Bulgarian Government Scholarship, applications are typically channeled through the Bulgarian Embassy in your home country or through your national Ministry of Education. Check with your nearest Bulgarian Embassy for the exact process for your country.
Q3: Do I need IELTS or TOEFL for these scholarships?
Many programs do not require IELTS or TOEFL. If your previous education was conducted in English, a letter from your institution confirming this is usually sufficient. Some programs accept national English exams or conduct their own placement tests. This makes these scholarships particularly accessible to African students from countries where English is a medium of instruction. Always verify with the specific program you’re applying to.
Q4: Are Romanian and Bulgarian degrees recognized internationally?
Yes. Both Romania and Bulgaria are EU member states, meaning their universities operate under EU higher education standards (the Bologna Process). Degrees from accredited Romanian and Bulgarian universities are recognized across the European Union and in many countries worldwide. Medical degrees from institutions like the Medical University of Sofia are recognized in numerous African and Asian countries — but always verify recognition in your specific home country with the relevant licensing authority.
Q5: Can I work part-time while studying on these scholarships?
As an international student with a valid student residence permit in Romania or Bulgaria, you are generally permitted to work part-time (typically up to 20 hours per week during the academic term). Regulations may vary — verify with your host university’s international student office once enrolled.
Q6: What is the competition like? What are my chances?
Competition varies significantly by program and country of origin. Government scholarship quotas are often set per country, meaning you may be competing with a limited pool of candidates from your nation. For highly sought-after programs like medicine in Bulgaria, competition is notably higher. Strong academic records, compelling motivation letters, and well-prepared applications significantly improve your odds.
Q7: Can I pursue a PhD through these programs?
Absolutely. Both the Romanian and Bulgarian government scholarships explicitly include doctoral (PhD) level funding. This is a significant opportunity for career-focused postgraduate students looking to pursue research and academia at a European institution.
Q8: What happens if I fail academically during my scholarship?
Scholarship continuation is typically conditional on satisfactory academic performance. Most programs require you to pass your examinations and maintain good academic standing. Failing multiple courses or not meeting minimum GPA requirements can result in scholarship suspension or termination. Take academic preparation seriously before and after arrival.
Common Mistakes to Avoid When Applying
Even excellent candidates lose scholarships to avoidable errors. Here are the most common pitfalls:
❌ Missing the deadline by days (or hours)
Scholarship portals often close at midnight on the deadline date — sometimes the midnight of the host country’s time zone, not yours. Submit at least 5–7 days early to account for technical issues, document upload failures, or last-minute corrections.
❌ Submitting uncertified or untranslated documents
Official scholarship programs require certified copies of academic documents, sometimes with certified translations. A photocopy without proper certification will get your application rejected.
❌ Writing a generic motivation letter
Your personal statement should explain specifically why Romania or Bulgaria, specifically why your chosen university and program, and specifically how this aligns with your career goals. Generic letters are immediately recognizable and are among the most common reasons otherwise strong candidates are rejected.
❌ Applying for the wrong program level
Make sure your academic qualifications match the level you’re applying for. Applying for a master’s scholarship with only partial undergraduate credits, or for a program in a field that doesn’t match your bachelor’s, will result in disqualification.
❌ Ignoring the stipend reality
The monthly stipend is real — but it is modest. Students who don’t budget carefully find themselves financially stressed. Research the cost of living in your specific city (Bucharest vs. Cluj-Napoca vs. Sofia vs. Plovdiv costs differ meaningfully) and plan supplementary savings.
❌ Not verifying degree recognition in your home country before applying
Particularly relevant for medical students: confirm before enrolling that your target degree will be recognized by the relevant licensing authority in your home country. Don’t assume — confirm in writing.
✅ Downloadable Application Checklist: Romania & Bulgaria Scholarships 2026
Save this checklist and tick off each item as you prepare your application. Screenshot it, print it, or share it with a fellow applicant.
Personal Documents
- Valid passport (minimum 1 year validity beyond program start)
- Birth certificate (certified copy)
- Recent passport-sized photographs (6–8 copies)
- Police clearance / certificate of good conduct (issued within last 6 months)
- Medical fitness certificate from licensed physician
Academic Documents
- High school diploma / leaving certificate (certified copy + certified translation)
- University degree certificate(s) (certified copy + certified translation)
- Official academic transcripts for all levels of study (certified + translated)
- Grading scale / transcript interpretation letter from your institution
Supporting Application Documents
- Completed scholarship application form (downloaded from official portal)
- Personal statement / motivation letter (tailored to specific program and country)
- 2–3 letters of recommendation (academic references preferred; on letterhead)
- Research proposal (for PhD applicants)
- CV / résumé (academic format)
Language Proficiency
- IELTS/TOEFL score report (if required by your chosen program)
- English Medium of Instruction (EMI) letter from your previous institution (if IELTS waiver applies)
Additional Items (as required)
- Proof of scholarship/funding application (embassy stamp or submission confirmation)
- Any country-specific documents requested by the Bulgarian Embassy in your country
Success Story: How Amara Got Fully Funded to Study in Bucharest
While individual names have been changed for privacy, this example is based on the typical profile and journey of African students who successfully secure these scholarships.
Amara, a 24-year-old from Lagos, Nigeria, had a strong academic record in biochemistry but had been rejected twice from highly competitive Western European scholarship programs. A friend mentioned the Romanian Government Scholarship. Initially skeptical — “I had never even considered Romania” — she spent two weeks researching the program on the Study in Romania portal.
What she found surprised her: a fully funded master’s in pharmaceutical sciences at the University of Cluj-Napoca, conducted in English, with a stipend and free dormitory accommodation. The application didn’t require IELTS because her undergraduate degree was taught in English.
She submitted her application in late March, wrote a highly specific motivation letter explaining her research interest in pharmaceutical formulation and why Romanian expertise in the field — she had found and cited actual faculty research from Cluj-Napoca — was her specific draw. Two months later, she received her offer letter.
“The living costs were genuinely manageable,” she notes. “My stipend covered basics, I supplemented with a small amount from my family for the first semester, and by year two I was assisting in a research project with a small additional payment. Romania changed my entire trajectory.”
Her story reflects a pattern: students who do their research, write targeted applications, and approach these scholarships strategically win them. The opportunity is real. The question is whether you’re prepared to pursue it.
Your Next Steps: Turn This Knowledge Into Action
You now have a comprehensive map of the fully funded scholarship landscape in Romania and Bulgaria for 2026. Here’s exactly what to do next:
This Week:
- ✅ Identify which scholarship(s) match your academic level and field of study
- ✅ Visit the official portals and note the exact 2026 deadlines when posted
- ✅ Download the application checklist above and assess which documents you need to gather or certify
This Month:
4. ✅ Contact your previous institutions to request official transcripts and English Medium of Instruction letters
5. ✅ Contact the Bulgarian Embassy in your country to request application forms and confirm the 2026 cycle timeline
6. ✅ Begin drafting your motivation letter — give yourself at least 3 full drafts before submitting
Before the Deadline:
7. ✅ Have a trusted advisor or mentor review your personal statement
8. ✅ Submit your application at least 5 days before the posted deadline
9. ✅ Save all confirmation numbers and correspondence
📌 More Resources on ScholarCareer.com:
Final Thoughts: Europe Is More Accessible Than You Think
The narrative that a European education is only for the privileged or the supremely connected is simply not true — not in 2026, not with programs like the ones you’ve just read about. Romania and Bulgaria have opened real, substantive, government-backed doors for international students, including from Africa, who are willing to research carefully and apply strategically.
The key isn’t just knowing these scholarships exist — it’s preparing with enough lead time, tailoring every document to the specific program, and treating the application process with the same seriousness you’d bring to your actual studies.
Your European future is not a pipe dream. It’s an application away.
Did this guide help you? Share it with a friend who’s scholarship hunting — you might change someone’s academic trajectory today. Bookmark this page and check back as 2026 deadlines are confirmed and updated.
Drop your question in the comments below: Which scholarship are you applying for? What’s your biggest challenge right now? Our team reads every comment.
Last updated: 2025 | Sources: Romanian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Study in Romania Portal, Bulgarian Ministry of Education and Science, Erasmus+ Programme Official Site, Sofia University, Medical University of Sofia. All scholarship details subject to change — always verify at official portals before applying.
