A guide for international students

Study at a public university in Italy — without getting lost in the paperwork.

Applications, degree recognition, scholarships, and the student visa, laid out as one clear dossier instead of twelve confusing tabs. Built for students applying from outside the EU.

97Public universities
€900–4,000Typical yearly tuition*
~€5,200+Avg. DSU scholarship*
Dossier N. IT-2026Pre-enrollment
Application
Record
AMMESSO STUDYIN ITALIA

The application dossier

Five steps, one visa

Every public university follows roughly the same sequence. Get these five stages right, in order, and the rest is just filing paperwork on time.

01·

Research programmes & check eligibility

Confirm your prior schooling qualifies for Italian university admission (generally 12 years of pre-university education) and whether your target course requires an entrance test — medicine, dentistry, veterinary and architecture use the national IMAT/TOLC exams.

Jan – May
02·

Pre-enroll through Universitaly or Uni-Italia

Non-EU applicants submit a pre-enrollment application via the Universitaly portal or, in many countries, via the Uni-Italia office, alongside a declaration of value or CIMEA statement of comparability for your existing qualifications.

Apr – Jul
03·

Receive your acceptance & embassy clearance

Once a university issues conditional or final acceptance, the Italian embassy or consulate in your home country verifies your documents and clears you to apply for the entry visa.

Jun – Aug
04·

Apply for the National (Type D) study visa

Book a visa appointment at your local embassy or consulate as soon as your acceptance letter arrives — this is usually the tightest deadline in the entire process.

Jul – Sep
05·

Enroll, get your residence permit & register

Within 8 working days of arrival, apply for your permesso di soggiorno at the local post office, complete university enrollment, and register with the national health service.

Within 8 days of arrival

Funding your degree

Two funding tracks worth understanding

Italian public universities keep tuition low by design, and stack that with regional and merit funding. Most students combine more than one of the following.

Track 01 — Need-based

DSU Regional Scholarships

Run by each region's Diritto allo Studio Universitario (DSU) body, these cover both need and merit, and are open to international students on the same terms as Italians.

  • Covers tuition waiver, a cash grant, and often free or subsidised housing and meals.
  • Based on the ISEE Parificato — an income assessment converted from your family's financial documents.
  • Renewed yearly if you meet minimum credit progress.
Apply through your region's DSU body shortly after enrollment — deadlines are usually in August.
Track 02 — Merit & institutional

University & tuition-based aid

Beyond DSU, most public universities set tuition on a sliding scale and run their own merit awards.

  • Public tuition is income-adjusted — many low-income students pay close to nothing beyond a fixed regional tax.
  • Individual universities and Italian cultural institutes abroad offer smaller merit and country-specific scholarships.
  • Some regions and consortiums fund full-ride awards for master's and PhD applicants.
Check your chosen university's "international students" or "diritto allo studio" office directly — offers vary a lot by institution.

The national visa

Type D study visa, decoded

If you're not an EU/EEA citizen and your course lasts longer than 90 days, you'll need Italy's National Visa (Type D), applied for at your local embassy or consulate — never inside Italy.

It's issued once, then converted into a residence permit (permesso di soggiorno) after you arrive, which is what actually lets you stay for the full length of your studies.

90+Days of study = Type D required
8 daysTo request residence permit
Visa document checklist07 items
Acceptance / pre-enrollment letterIssued by your university via Universitaly.
Valid passportCovering your full intended stay, plus blank pages.
Proof of financial meansBank statements or a sponsorship letter covering living costs.
Proof of accommodationLease, university housing confirmation, or host declaration.
Health insuranceValid in Italy for the full duration of your stay.
Academic qualificationsDiplomas/transcripts with declaration of value or CIMEA statement.
Visa application form & photosCompleted at your embassy or consulate appointment.

Common questions

Before you file anything

No. Many public universities offer full bachelor's and master's programmes taught entirely in English, especially at master's level. Italian-taught programmes usually require a B1–B2 language certificate or a placement test.

Universitaly is the official government portal every applicant eventually uses for pre-enrollment. Uni-Italia is a support network with offices in several countries that helps applicants prepare and verify documents before submission — using it is optional but often speeds things up.

Yes. International students on a study permit are generally allowed to work part-time, up to a capped number of hours per year, once they hold a valid permesso di soggiorno.

As soon as your acceptance letter is issued. Embassy appointment slots fill up fast in July and August, and processing itself can take several weeks, so this is usually the step that determines whether you make it for the fall semester.

Not automatically — DSU awards are capped and regionally funded, so meeting the income and merit thresholds makes you eligible, not guaranteed. Applying early and keeping your ISEE Parificato documents accurate improves your odds.