The New Policy: Differentiated Fees Become Mandatory
France's Higher Education, Research and Space Minister Philippe Baptiste announced a pivotal shift in April 2026, mandating that public universities charge differentiated tuition fees to most non-EU students starting the 2026/27 academic year. Previously optional under a 2019 law, these fees—€2,895 annually for bachelor's programs (licence) and €3,941 for master's (master)—were largely waived, with around 90% of non-EU students paying the base rates of €178 and €254 respectively. Now, exemptions are capped at 10% per institution, prioritizing scholarship recipients and those in hardship, with 60% of grants directed to priority fields like AI, biotechnology, quantum sciences, health, environment, energy, space, food security, IT, and communications.
This change aims to inject €250 million yearly into university coffers once fully implemented, covering just a fraction of training costs while the state subsidizes the rest. Doctoral students remain unaffected at €397 per year, and current enrollees are grandfathered in. The policy disrupts mid-cycle applications for 2026/27, prompting urgent clarifications from Campus France.
Historical Context: From 2019 Law to Widespread Exemptions
The 2019 'Welcome to France' law introduced differentiated fees to fund public universities amid budget strains, but universities exercised autonomy to exempt most non-EU students, fostering diversity and research collaborations. Non-EU students, numbering 443,500 in 2024/25 (15% of total enrollment, up 3% YoY), contribute €1.35 billion net economically per Campus France data. Africa supplies 25%, Asia 22%, Europe 17%. Reversing exemptions aligns with global trends but clashes with France's humanistic tradition of accessible education.
France Universités notes exemptions aligned with local strategies, boosting Francophone ties and excellence in fields like engineering, where France lags in attracting top talent despite ambitions for 500,000 international students by 2027.
Government Rationale: 'Choose France for Higher Education' Strategy
Embedded in the 'Choose France for Higher Education' initiative, the hike targets 'high-quality' recruits for strategic sectors facing 40,000 engineer and technician shortages annually. Minister Baptiste deems fees 'competitive' versus UK (£40,000 master's) or US ($50,000+), predicting no deterrence as UK saw +60% foreign master's despite hikes. The strategy enhances visa pathways for master's-to-PhD transitions and prioritizes excellence over volume, countering France's shrinking working-age population threatening innovation.
University Leaders and Unions Push Back: Autonomy Under Threat
France Universités decries the policy as a 'blow to university autonomy,' arguing centralized priority lists ignore local strengths and risks bureaucratic bloat from scholarships. Implementation by fall 2026 is 'unrealistic,' disrupting ongoing recruitment. SNESUP-FSU union labels it 'xenophobic' and 'extreme right signature,' reneging on no-hike pledges pre-2027 elections, planning May 1 protests. They warn of poverty exacerbation and selection by wealth over merit.
Photo by XAVIER PHOTOGRAPHY on Unsplash
Early Fallout: Strasbourg's 47 Student Expulsions
The University of Strasbourg leads enforcement, deregistering 47 non-EU master's students (mostly African) for unpaid €3,941 fees, treating them as never enrolled. Faculty petitions decry 'financial harassment,' demanding nationality transparency. This signals broader compliance, with risks of expulsions across France's 70+ universities.
Enrollment Trends and Projected Impacts
France's international enrollment grew 17% over five years to 443,500, but hikes may slow this, especially from price-sensitive Africa (e.g., Morocco fears sharp drop). Predictions vary: government cites UK's resilience; critics foresee diversification losses harming research (non-EU vital for collaborations). Revenue €250M helps deficits but ignores €1.35B economic input. Campus France reports highlight growth drivers like English programs.
| Year | Intl Students | YoY Growth |
|---|---|---|
| 2023/24 | 430,000 | +4.5% |
| 2024/25 | 443,500 | +3% |
Comparisons Across Europe: France Still Affordable?
Germany charges ~€300/semester admin fees; Netherlands/Denmark hiked non-EU fees recently (€2,000–€20,000). France post-hike remains cheaper than UK/Australia but pricier than Nordics/Germany. Shift to Germany possible for Africans/Asians. EU strategy balances revenue, talent attraction.
- Germany: €0 tuition + €300/sem fees
- Netherlands: €2,314 bachelor's
- Denmark: Up to €15,000 master's
- France (new): €2,895–€3,941
Student and Country Perspectives
Moroccan/Indian applicants alarmed; social media buzzes with alternatives like Germany. Priority scholarships may aid top talent, but low-income students hit hardest. Long-term: France risks Francophonie influence if enrollment dips.
Photo by Young Shih on Unsplash
Financial Boost vs. Broader Challenges
€250M aids deficits but dwarfed by needs. Unis seek state funding hikes. Policy tests 'excellence' recruitment amid autonomy erosion.
Outlook: Balancing Revenue, Diversity, and Competitiveness
2026/27 tests policy efficacy. Unis urge flexibility; government scholarships. Alternatives: Grandes Écoles (higher fees anyway), private unis. Watch enrollment data 2027.
For European HE, signals revenue push amid intl mobility shifts. Explore scholarships via Campus France.
